POP  CULT

Addison Rae’s DEVIANT Debut Due June 6

The former Tiktoker’s pop career has been proven to be a sinful, pornographic pursuit.

Here, one concerned Christian issues an urgent warning to God-fearing parents.

Aspiring pop star Addison Rae is due to drop her debut album Addison on June 6, 2025 — and God-fearing should be worried.

Rae made a name for herself as a Tiktoker, building a rabid fanbase with her racy dances to popular songs riddled with references to dangerous ideas like casual sex, drugs and self determination. Since making her debut as a pop star with her debut EP AR in 2023, Rae has injected these ideas into her own music, corrupting the youth of America in the process. The songs and music videos released ahead of her debut full-length album take her deviance to shocking extremes.

The first single, “Diet Pepsi”, is perhaps the most perverse. Not only do the lyrics tell a twisted tale of sexual promiscuity, but they also taint the purity of some of our great country’s most iconic imagery — springtime cherries, muscle cars and chemically-sweetened carbonated beverages. In the song, the cherries represent her flushed cheeks, her car is the site of her original sin and the pop she drinks is consumed while she writhes on her lover’s lap. At one point, she says her and her lover “break all the rules” and “fog up the windows in the parking lot” — clear references to SIN, including premarital sex.

As if that’s not enough, the music video features Rae dancing suggestively and spreading her legs while wearing skimpy lingerie, and feeding her male suitor whipped cream and cherries with her feet.

 

Later videos are even more vile. “Aquamarine” features Rae smoking not one, but TWO cigarettes in Paris, the city of LUST. Everyone knows contemporary Christians prefer more God-honoring nicotine delivery systems, like our slightly-imperfect discount vapes. And Paris isn’t just an epicenter of sin, but it’s a major landmark in the high-fashion world — a world that looks down on God-fearing Americans’ preference for patriotic retailers like Walmart and Temu, which offer well-made clothes suitable for both church and the casino at wallet-friendly prices. Also, she wears a DEMONIC mask in one scene.

 

Speaking of fashion, her third single “High Fashion” is more insidiously immoral. While most of the lyrics find Rae rejecting hard drugs in favor of designer clothes, the music video reveals the track’s gluttonous quality, featuring Rae greedily eating a pastry, seductively dancing in clouds of white powder that resemble cocaine and exhaling puffs of smoke.

 

There are traces of Rae’s immorality in the lyrics, too, with one line that references cigarettes and sexuality in one breath — instead of drugs, Rae wants “a cigarette pressed between my tits”. The cigarette references are bad enough, the sexual context is even worse — but to celebrate using the cigarette for something other than its intended purpose is a complete and utter abomination.

The video for the final single, “Headphones On”, plainly depicts the pornographic nature of Rae’s pop pursuits, featuring her frolicking on a beach in a see-through top and flashing her boobs in an unzipped hoodie. She also wears a long wig in an unnatural bright pink hue — showing no respect for her natural God-given hair color.

Addison features a total of 12 tracks and there’s no telling what other blasphemous themes she’ll explore on the eight unheard songs. AMERICA NEWS TIMES AND DISCOUNT VAPE EMPORIUM encourages concerned parents to stream the album on June 6 to find out for themselves — before letting your children be corrupted. Concerned fathers will also appreciate this exclusive investigative report on Rae’s most revealing photos.


BACK • NEWS MAIN • HOME