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Sabrina Carpenter’s ‘Such A Funny Way’ Gets Festive Drop

Sabrina Carpenter Masters the Art of Laughing Through Heartbreak on 'Such A Funny Way'
By Alex HarrisDecember 28, 2025
Sabrina Carpenter's 'Such A Funny Way' Gets Festive Drop

Sabrina Carpenter knows how to deliver a Christmas gift. On 25th December 2025, the pop sensation surprised fans by releasing ‘Such A Funny Way’ to streaming platforms, complete with an official lyric video.

Originally appearing as a vinyl-exclusive bonus track on her seventh studio album Man’s Best Friend (released 29th August 2025), the song briefly surfaced for digital download in September before vanishing again.

Now, this Jack Antonoff-produced gem has finally found its permanent home across all platforms.

Co-written by Carpenter, Antonoff and Amy Allen, ‘Such A Funny Way’ stands as one of the sharpest examinations of romantic self-deception in Carpenter’s discography.

The track chronicles the painful mental gymnastics of convincing yourself that neglect equals affection, that breadcrumbs constitute a feast.

When Red Flags Look Like Rose Petals

The opening verse immediately establishes the narrator’s willful blindness: “Must be that you want me so much that you don’t have the words / Keep me far from friends and family, baby, that’s just one of your quirks.”

It’s a masterclass in dramatic irony. We, the listeners, recognise these isolation tactics instantly, but our protagonist reframes them as endearing idiosyncrasies.

The second verse escalates the absurdity beautifully. When her sweater gets returned with a “Don’t contact me again” message, she interprets this clear dismissal as “what a lovely sentiment.”

The chorus delivers the song’s central thesis with devastating simplicity: “You have such a funny way of sayin’ ‘I love you’ / Forgettin’ me more every day, it gets me every time.”

That final phrase cuts deep. She’s not just fooling herself once but recognising the pattern whilst remaining trapped within it.

By the bridge, the facade begins to crack. “Funny how I do this every single time / So funny that I have to laugh just so I don’t cry” reveals the coping mechanism beneath the delusion.

This line encapsulates what Carpenter told Zane Lowe about the track: “I interpret humour obviously in a light way, but it’s also used to cover something, and it’s used to sort of definitely cope with things, and not always in the best way.”

Production That Mirrors Emotional Revelation

Antonoff’s production perfectly mirrors the song’s narrative arc. The track opens with his signature twelve-string acoustic guitar, creating an almost wistful atmosphere that matches the narrator’s rose-tinted perspective.

But listen closely to how the arrangement shifts. The first chorus fades out slowly before building into a production and tempo switch for the second verse, creating an unsettling quality that reflects the growing cognitive dissonance in the lyrics.

This production choice makes the listener feel the exact moment self-awareness begins seeping through the denial.

The instrumentation grows more layered and complex as the narrator’s situation becomes harder to ignore, culminating in that gut-wrenching bridge where everything finally clicks into focus.

Carpenter’s vocal performance deserves particular praise. She maintains a light, almost playful tone through the verses, selling the character’s desperate optimism.

It’s only in the bridge that her delivery shifts, allowing genuine pain to surface. This restraint makes the emotional payoff hit harder than any vocal acrobatics could achieve.

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The Perfect Man’s Best Friend Companion

Fans have noted how ‘Such A Funny Way’ shares thematic DNA with other Man’s Best Friend tracks, particularly ‘My Man On Willpower.’

Both songs explore the psychology of loving someone whilst wilfully ignoring their obvious disinterest.

Carpenter excels at these portraits of romantic delusion, but what separates her work from similar pop confessionals is her refusal to let her narrators off the hook.

The bridge’s admission of repeated patterns shows a character who knows exactly what she’s doing to herself but can’t quite stop.

Announcing the streaming release on Christmas Eve, Carpenter described it as supplying “whoever needs a cathartic christmas crashout song,” and she’s not wrong.

There’s something perfectly timed about releasing a song about emotional denial during the holidays, when we’re all meant to maintain our cheerful facades regardless of what’s actually happening beneath the surface.

The track proves once again why Carpenter’s songwriting deserves serious critical attention. She takes a scenario we’ve all witnessed (or lived through) and renders it with such specificity and wit that it feels simultaneously universal and deeply personal.

The song works as both a character study and a mirror, allowing us to laugh at the absurdity whilst recognising our own capacity for similar self-deception.

‘Such A Funny Way’ confirms what Man’s Best Friend already demonstrated: Sabrina Carpenter has fully come into her own as a songwriter capable of balancing humour and heartbreak, self-awareness and delusion, wit and genuine emotional vulnerability.

It’s the kind of pop songwriting that lingers long after the final chorus, making you laugh whilst quietly devastating you. And isn’t that such a funny way to describe a perfect pop song?

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