“Not My Fault” from the soundtrack to the film adaptation of Mean Girls: The Musical will arrive on Friday

Megan Thee Stallion and Reneé Rapp are the the Queens of the Plastics and the Queens of the Hotties on the single artwork for their forthcoming collaboration “Not My Fault.” The song, which will appear on the official soundtrack to the film adaptation of Mean Girls: The Musical, is set for release on Friday, Dec. 15.

The bright pink cover centers the rapper and singer looking back into the camera while wearing the same Regina George shade of blonde hair. The pair are surrounded by plastic mannequins and Rapp, who plays George in the new film out Jan. 12, is wielding a bright pink baseball bat. “Not My Fault” marks the first piece of original music to come out of this new version of Mean Girls, which didn’t have any indicators that it was actually a musical in its first trailer.

Megan Thee Stallion first teased the single over the weekend ahead of Rapp’s performance at TikTok’s live music event, In the Mix. “What’s up y’all? It’s Megan Thee Stallion, aka the Black Regina George, and I’m excited to introduce my girl to the stage,” the rapper announced in an Instagram video. “We have a new song coming out for Mean Girls. That’s right, give it up for the new fantastic plastic, Renee Rapp.”

Trending

The song will mark the first collaboration between the two musicians. Megan Thee Stallion recently made her solo return on the single “Cobra,” which followed her appearance on “Bongos” with Cardi B. And Rapp is gearing up to close out one pivotal year and enter another. The singer released her debut album Snow Angel earlier this year and officially departed the popular Max series Sex Lives of College Girls to pursue music full-time.

Rapp starred in Mean Girls: The Musical on Broadway when she was 19 years old, but only because she saw it as a stepping stone to the career she really wanted. “I told them, ‘I will only take this job if you promise to help me in my music career one day. I want to be a pop star. I do not want to do this forever,’” Rapp told Rolling Stone earlier this year about her conversations with producers Tina Fey and Lorne Michaels.



Source

See also  John Lydon and Public Image Ltd. Are Aiming for Eurovision Glory With New Song ‘Hawaii’