Here’s What Carly Rae Jepsen Is Working on With Netflix

Clear out you Wednesday; our queen may be coming to Netflix. Last night (February 12) Carly Rae Jepsen — ’80s pop goddess in a Millennial body, “Call Me Maybe” superstar, Tom Hanks bestie — teased that she’s working on something big with the streaming service.

At exactly 6:06 p.m. ET Netflix’s official account tweeted at Jepsen, saying that it couldn’t wait for tomorrow. If that wasn’t mysterious and exciting enough, Jepsen replied by saying “when should we NoTIFY them?!” with an adorable monkey emoji. As fans have now figured out, Jepsen wasn’t just having fun with capitalization. Shortly after the Twitter conversation, lyrics for an unreleased Jepsen song titled “Now That I Found You” appeared on the website Genius. That’s right — seems like we’re getting new music, CRJ fans.

We’ve known for a while now that 2019 would bring more from our sugary relationship queen. On November 1, 2018 Jepsen released the single “Party for One” as the lead single from her fourth studio album. Yes, it was a delightful song about owning your single life but also being trapped by exes past, and yes she looked amazing in a killer blonde bob. So what exactly does Netflix have to do with all of this?

It turns out that Carly Rae Jepsen’s latest song “Now That I Found You” has been previewed ahead of Queer Eye Season 3, which will launch on Netflix March 15. At the moment it’s unclear if the new bop will be Queer Eye‘s new opening song or used in the series, but it could happen. After all she recorded Fuller House’s remixed opening song “Everywhere You Look.” You can listen to upbeat song here:

More and more musical artists have appeared on streaming. Beyoncé notoriously turned to HBO when it was time to unveil her masterpiece Lemonade, and just last year Ariana Grande released her autobiographical docuseries Dangerous Woman Diaries on YouTube Premium. Streaming is becoming a safe place for big-name singers, and with Netflix’s premiere of Taylor Swift’s Reputation Stadium Tour it’s clear that this is a space the streaming giant is quickly interested in owning.

And as far as singers go, partnering with Jepsen seems like a good bet for Netflix. Though she’s best known for heavily parodied ear-worm “Call Me Maybe,” the Canadian singer and songwriter has gained an intense and earnest fan following thanks to her albums Kiss and her third studio album Emotion. Praised for being a near-perfect ’80s pop album released in 2015, Emotion has gone a long way into turning Jepsen into the pop icon she deserves to be.

We couldn’t wait for Queer Eye Season 3 before, but now we’re extra pumped. Bring out the dancing Pikachus!

This article has been updated.

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