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00:00Pop star Sabrina Carpenter is the latest artist to clash with the White House over unauthorized
00:04use of her music. The controversy erupted after the White House posted a 21-second video on its
00:11official X account showing ICE agents detaining people set to Carpenter's viral hit, Juno. The
00:16post was captioned with Carpenter's lyrics, have you ever tried this one and bye-bye. In response,
00:22the singer fired back, telling the White House, this video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever
00:27involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda. Fans quickly rallied behind her. One wrote,
00:33sue them queen, and another stated, I chose to love and support the right woman. But not everyone
00:38agreed with the pop singer. Steak for Breakfast wrote, cry harder, they're all going back. And
00:44Pedro's mustache explained, there is nothing she can do about it, referring to Carpenter's masters
00:49being owned by Island Records, who theoretically could sue the White House for the unauthorized
00:54music use. And Carpenter isn't the only artist clashing with the White House. This exchange is
00:59the latest in a growing trend of musicians objecting to political use of their songs without
01:04permission. According to reports, Kenny Loggins demanded his iconic Top Gun track, Danger Zone,
01:10be removed from a true social video of Trump in a fighter jet. And Olivia Rodrigo similarly condemned
01:16the White House for using her song in a self-deportation video calling it racist, hateful propaganda.
01:22But the White House doesn't seem to be backing down. According to Entertainment Weekly,
01:27a spokesperson told the outlet, quote, here's a short and sweet message for Sabrina Carpenter.
01:32We won't apologize for deporting dangerous criminal, illegal murderers, rapists, and pedophiles from
01:37our country. Adding, quote, anyone who would defend these sick monsters must be stupid or is it slow?
01:44A reference to lyrics from Carpenter's hit Manchild. At this time, it's unclear if Sabrina or her team
01:49will push legal action, similar to Isaac Hayes, who once got a judge to grant a temporary order
01:55requiring the Trump campaign to stop using the song, Hold On, I'm Coming, at events. But what do you
02:00think? Should the White House stop using music without the artist's permission? Share your thoughts
02:05and follow us everywhere at What's Trending.
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