Camila Cabello was attentive to the Golden Globes 2018 like all of us and was excited when "Coco" took an award as Best Animated Film. The "Havana" hit maker was super excited when the Disney-Pixar was honored for their work and took to Twitter so share her thoughts. "Everybody watch this movie," she wrote. "OMG it made me feel so connected with my roots and I'm so happy they made a movie that so beautifully shows Mexican culture. Viva Mexico."
Camila Cabello also expressed support for the Time's Up movement. "I stand in solidarity with women everywhere who have been silenced by abuse, harassment and fear," she wrote. "I am inspired by the many brave women who have spoken up #TimesUp and thank you Oprah for this incredibly inspiring speech."
Camila's album was originally titled "The Hurting. The Healing. The Loving," but the singer is now explaining why it's simply called "Camila". "I decided to call it by my name, because this is where this chapter in my life ended," she wrote. "It started with somebody else's story, it ended with me finding my way back to myself."
In an interview with Zane Lowe, Cabello said that her album is not only having a title change, but the tracklist will be different as well as she has a different vision for it now. "Everything that I talked about it in an interview, it just made it really difficult to really move on," she said. "I don’t want to give that power over somebody else — that the whole first album revolves around them and this bad situation. It's giving that too much power." She also added, "I think that everything happens in a parallel way, where it was me taking power over the title and control over what the album was about and me just taking power over my own life.”
She also said: "I feel like it’s important for me as a new artist, and especially people hearing ‘Havana’ and more people kind of knowing who I am, I think that it’s really important that the message is, like, super consistent."
In an interview with Glamour magazine earlier this year, she said that she wanted to write songs for immigrants. "Right now I’m in the process of writing about our whole journey," Cabello told the publication. "I want to make a love song for immigrants. That word, immigrant, has such a negative connotation—I can just imagine all the little girls who have dreams of coming here and feel unwanted. It inspires me in my music to do my best to give [them] the light that I have. I want to be what people think of when they think of America—a person who, no matter what her first language was or what her religion is, can see her dreams come to life if she works hard enough."
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