Sabrina Carpenter fans can soon find themselves blocking their phones in their concerts after the recent comments that the singer and composer made to Rolling Stone.
“This honestly will go to my fans, but absolutely,” Carpenter said when asked about the possibility of requiring the concert attendees to drop their phones in bags during their shows.
The “Espresso” singer said that her opinion about having phones at concerts changed after she attended a Silk Sound Silk concert in Las Vegas in which she had to block her own phone.
“I have never had a better experience in a concert,” Carpenter said.
“I really felt that I was back in the seventies, I wasn’t alive. I really felt that I was there. They all sing, dance, looking at each other. Really, he really felt so beautiful.”
Appearing on the last cover of the magazine, Carpenter intervened in a variety of songs, including why he released a new album as soon after “Short N ‘Sweet”, her new single “Manchild”, which debuted at number 1 in Billboard Hot 100, as well as the intense scrutiny that she and many other women face.
“I do not want to be pessimistic, but I really feel that I have never lived in a time when women have been separated more and written in all things. I am not only talking about me. I am talking about all the female artists who are doing art at this time … we are at such a strange moment in which you think it is a power of girls and women who support women, but in reality, the second one you see an image of someone who watches a dress in a dress in a Everything you have to say in the whole, you have to say everything, what you have to say everything.
Carpenter’s last album, “Man’s Best Friend,” recently appeared in the headlines of his provocative cover, which was launched on June 11. The image represents the singer of “Bed Chem” with a black dress, on all fours next to a man’s leg, with his hand grabbing his hair.
Fans went to the Internet to evaluate, and some called “disturbing” and “not a very empowering image for women.” However, others saw the cover of the album as a wink to “how women are considered by certain men.”
As constantly online, Carpenter told Rolling Stone: “When you go down, the little burrow of the rabbit is really when people start commenting on you as a person or you physically. All those things you are already thinking about day. You don’t need a Arkansas stranger to remind you.”