Jealous Type

Album: Vie (2025)
Charted: 13 28
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Jealous Type" is a synth-pop track where Doja Cat confesses to being jealous of her romantic interest. The guy is vain and impatient, and he loves to bask in the attention he gets from other women.
  • The song starts with the chorus, where Doja details being caught in a relationship that could tilt either toward bliss or disaster. In the verses she admits she's green with envy, and though she tries to talk herself out of these jealous instincts, she can't ignore the fact that he never seems to want her around when he's with his friends - always a red flag. By the end, the decision is made. Doja simply isn't built to date someone who treats affection like a toy.
  • "Jealous Type" grew out of therapy sessions and reflections on past relationships when Doja confronted uncomfortable truths about vulnerability, insecurity, and her own youthful naivety in love. She told Apple Music that jealousy was often her instinctive reaction, but writing songs like "Jealous Type" allowed her to turn those raw feelings into something useful; music that doubles as self-exploration.
  • Doja wrote "Jealous Type" with:

    Y2K (Ari Starace), the LA producer who hit #55 on the Hot 100 with "Lalala" in 2019 and later supplied beats for Doja's Planet Her and Scarlet albums.

    Jack Antonoff, the fun. alumnus turned pop architect behind Taylor Swift, Lana Del Rey, and Sabrina Carpenter.

    They crafted a disco-tinged bop, which fans called a return to "Hot Pink Doja."
  • "Jealous Type" appeared in the Marc Jacobs Summer '25 pre-fall campaign, called "Staycation." Released in early May 2025, the campaign finds Doja Cat both starring in and soundtracking the promotional video, where she walks through city scenes in Marc Jacobs' new collection. The campaign gave fans an early preview of the song well before its official single release.
  • Doja debuted "Jealous Type" during her headline set at the 2025 Outside Lands festival on August 8, 2025. She released it two weeks later as the lead single her fifth album, Vie (French for "life").
  • The music video, directed by Boni Mata, plays like a fever dream of 1980s pop culture: campy outfits, water sprinklers drenching her mid-dance, and visual nods to the movies Flashdance and 9½ Weeks.
  • The Vie album is drenched in retro synths and lo-fi textures, in what Doja called in a V interview a "swim back upstream" to her pop roots. She told the magazine she wanted to capture the half-remembered nostalgia of childhood - sounds that echo the '80s without being pastiche. Vie, Doja explained, is about relationships in all their messy forms: with lovers, with the self, and with the future she hopes for.
  • Here's a sentence we didn't think we'd ever write: Doja Cat performed this song with Kenny G to open the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards. Kenny gave the song one of his signature soprano saxophone intros before ceding the stage to Doja, who was lowered down on a couch. The performance had a very '80s vibe, complete with keytars and breakdancing, which explains Kenny G's appearance (it was his first time performing on MTV).

    "Jealous Type" was nominated for Song Of The Summer but lost to Tate McRae's "Just Keep Watching."
  • The creative shift from Doja Cat's previous album, Scarlet, to Vie reflects Doja's emotional growth. "Scarlet was about fear, pain, and anger," she told iHeartRadio. "Vie is about joy, romance, and feeling sexy in a different way."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

David Paich of Toto

David Paich of TotoSongwriter Interviews

Toto's keyboard player explains the true meaning of "Africa" and talks about working on the Thriller album.

Rick Springfield

Rick SpringfieldSongwriter Interviews

Rick has a surprising dark side, a strong feminine side and, in a certain TV show, a naked backside. But he still hasn't found Jessie's Girl.

Bob Dylan Lyric Quiz

Bob Dylan Lyric QuizMusic Quiz

Think you know your Bob Dylan lyrics? Take this quiz to find out.

Gavin Rossdale of Bush

Gavin Rossdale of BushSongwriter Interviews

On the "schizoid element" of his lyrics, and a famous line from "Everything Zen."

Metallica

MetallicaFact or Fiction

Beef with Bon Jovi? An unfortunate Spandex period? See if you can spot the true stories in this Metallica version of Fact or Fiction.

Cy Curnin of The Fixx

Cy Curnin of The FixxSongwriter Interviews

The man who brought us "Red Skies" and "Saved By Zero" is now an organic farmer in France.