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"Pretty Girl" is a song by American singer and songwriter Maggie Lindemann. It is her first major-label single, and was released on September 30, 2016, through 300 Entertainment . [ 5 ] The song was written by Lindemann, Sasha Sloan , and Sean Myer, with the production being handled by Jayson DeZuzio.
Clairo wrote and produced "Pretty Girl" using GarageBand and a small keyboard in about two hours. It is a bedroom pop, [7] [4] [8] and synth-pop [3] song inspired by 1980s pop music and written by Clairo about her feeling pressured to change her identity, silence herself, and conform to societal beauty standards for a past lover.
Pretty Girl or Pretty Girls may refer to: Pretty Girl, a 2008 EP by Kara, or the title track; Pretty Girls, a 1979 album by Lisa Dal Bello, or the title track "Pretty Girls" (Britney Spears and Iggy Azalea song), 2015 "Pretty Girl" (Clairo song), 2017 "Pretty Girl" (Ice Spice song), 2023 "Pretty Girls" (Iyaz song), 2011
Lydia Corbett (born Sylvette David, 14 November 1934) [1] is a French-English artist and former artist's model known for being "the girl with the ponytail" in Pablo Picasso's Sylvette series of paintings [2] and a 1970 sculpture.
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A Pretty Girl Milking Her Cow (Cailin Deas Crúite na mBó in the Irish language) is a traditional 18th-century Irish ballad. The English version is attributed to Thomas Moore (1779–1852). [ 1 ] Originally sung in Irish Gaelic, the song was popular through the early 20th century.
"Pretty Girls" received mixed to positive reviews from contemporary music critics and fans. Jason Lipshutz of Billboard gave the track a positive review, saying "pop and pop-rap fans are likely to swarm this slick slice of electro-hop, which pulls off the blonde-bombshell pairing by playing to each of its artists' strengths," adding that Spears "sounds more animated in her two minutes of ...
In "Mirror Magic", Canter gets Juniper a job as a movie usher at the Canterlot Mall out of pity. She soon comes across a mirror enchanted with Equestrian magic and sees herself as a famous movie star. Keeping the mirror for herself, Juniper becomes obsessed with it to the point of vanity, even discovering that she can trap things inside of it.