Sabrina Carpenter has officially announced the release of her seventh studio album, ‘Man’s Best Friend’, due on August 29. The news broke during an Instagram Live session where the pop star flipped through vinyl records by Donna Summer, ABBA, and Dolly Parton, before revealing the cover of her upcoming LP. The artwork—depicting Carpenter on all fours while an off-screen figure grabs her hair—has already sparked discussion across social media platforms.
The album follows last year’s breakout project ‘Short n’ Sweet’, which sold over 10 million copies globally and earned Carpenter six Grammy nominations, winning Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Pop Solo Performance for ‘Espresso’. ‘Manchild’, the album’s lead single, released in June, was written with longtime collaborators Jack Antonoff and Amy Allen, and pairs cheeky lyrics with country-tinged pop production. Its cinematic music video sees the singer hitchhiking through a desert full of “manchild” archetypes.

The album’s title and artwork have fueled a wave of interpretations—some praising the satire and feminist lens, others questioning the visual choices. While the image has been called ironic, it’s also been critiqued for potentially reinforcing the same gendered dynamics it seems to critique. Carpenter reflected in a Rolling Stone interview: “I’m at a point where I’m choosing what feels right creatively instead of following expectations”.
‘Man’s Best Friend’ will coincide with the second leg of Carpenter’s ‘Short n’ Sweet Tour’, which kicks off in October and includes five nights at Madison Square Garden and six shows at LA’s Crypto.com Arena. With this new chapter, Sabrina Carpenter doubles down on bold visuals, biting lyrics and pop craftsmanship, reaffirming her position as one of today’s most culturally resonant pop voices.

