Plastic Box
by Jade

Album: That's Showbiz Baby (2025)
Charted: 44
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Songfacts®:

  • "Plastic Box" is a buoyant, introspective pop song about the jealousy that can bubble up when thinking about your partner's romantic past.

    "It's about that irrational and toxic insecurity within us," Jade explained, "when we think about our partner's previous relationships, even though we know everyone has a past. It's a happy-sad pop song, and one of my favorite songs I've ever written."
  • Can I have your heart in a plastic box?
    Never used, fully clean, untouched
    Like I'm the only one you've ever loved


    In the chorus, Jade longs to possess her partner's heart as if it were brand new: untouched by others, unscarred by history. But plastic doesn't hide much. It's transparent and, under pressure, not especially durable. The image captures the bittersweet contradiction at the song's core: the knowledge that our insecurities are irrational, and the simultaneous need to have them soothed anyway.
  • Jade Thirwall began dating Jordan Stephens from the hip-hop duo Rizzle Kicks in 2020. When she wrote "Plastic Box," the relationship was still going strong, though that didn't stop Thirlwall from using her own emotional twitchiness as songwriting fodder. She has, in fact, admitted to writing another song inspired by a dream in which Jordan cheated on her.
  • Jade Thirlwall penned the track with:

    Lauren Aquilina, a pop singer-songwriter whose CV includes cuts for Becky Hill, Rina Sawayama, two tracks ("Love (Sweet Love)" and "Cut You Off") for Thirlwall's group, Little Mix, and Jade's solo hit "It Girl."

    Daniel "GRADES" Traynor, a British producer who's worked with Young T & Bugsey ("Don't Rush") and Nathan Dawe ("Way Too Long").

    Oscar Görres, a member of Max Martin's Wolf Cousins production team. Görres' credits include Sam Smith's "Diamonds" and Ariana Grande's "Supernatural."
  • Görres and GRADES also handled the production. Though rooted in insecurity, the song plays with an upbeat, catchy sound, adding contrast between its tone and theme.
  • The India Harris-directed music video shows Jade trapped behind glass while watched by others, reinforcing the sense of being boxed in by one's own insecurities and the pressure of external scrutiny. There are visual nods to Madonna's iconic "Don't Tell Me" video, particularly around the 1:36 mark.

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