by SOFIA ISELLA · 2024
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The song “Everybody Supports Women” by SOFIA ISELLA is about the hypocrisy and societal jealousy women face, especially when they succeed or confidently love themselves, highlighting how support for women often disappears when a woman surpasses others or breaks expectations.
This song has been Shazamed over 171,167 times. As of this writing, Everybody Supports Women is ranked 169
Everybody Supports Women’ by SOFIA ISELLA is a song about how people say they support women, but sometimes get jealous or mean when a woman is successful. We’re going to look at what this song really means and why so many people relate to it. ⬇️
️ The song lives in a whirlwind of contradictions—its world feels both supportive and sharp-edged, filled with smiling faces hiding judgmental whispers. The mood flips from sweet to sour in an instant, as if the lyrics themselves are side-eyeing you while dancing to the beat.
The chorus hits like a truth bomb: “Everybody supports women / Until a woman’s doing better than you.” We hear the familiar rallying cry for women’s empowerment, but then—wait—there’s a twist, a crack in the foundation, a spotlight on the envy that seeps in when someone’s star rises too high. Suddenly, we realize we’re not just singing along; we’re wincing at how easily celebration turns to suspicion and support curdles into spite.
In the verses, Isella’s words sharpen into satire: “I’m not like her!” echoes the desperate need to separate oneself from the successful woman, while “Say that you hate yourself and self-criticize” exposes the twisted rules women are forced to play by. There’s a snarl behind every compliment, a hidden dare behind every cheer, and the bridge’s haunting “We burn her name in the back” makes it clear that adoration can quickly turn to collective condemnation. Even the refrain—”What a waste, what a shame”—drips with regret, envy, and a strange sense of loss for the friendship that could have been, had ambition not gotten in the way.
️ Isella doesn’t just tell us about jealousy—she lets us feel the sickly sweetness of performative support, the venom of subtle sabotage, and the ache of wanting to belong while quietly tearing others down. The lines blur between loving someone for who they are and loving them only if they make us feel better about ourselves, all while the public’s gaze turns admiration into ammunition.
The heart of the song? It’s a mirror, forcing us to confront the uncomfortable truth that sometimes, our loudest cheers for other women are drowned out by our own insecurities and silent rivalries.
Writer(s) of Everybody Supports Women: