Remi Chauveau Notes
A tender dive into Styleto’s universe, where Louise Aubery’s InPower safe‑space energy meets an EP that turns vulnerability, sisterhood, and soft strength into a shared refuge.
Entertainment 🎯

✨ Styleto x InPower Podcast — Discussion on Sorority and the Release of 🧃💖 Styletto’s Vibrant New EP 💅

23 March 2026
@styleto 🎺❤️🎺❤️🎺❤️ #NewMusic ♬ La fille qui a plus mal - Styleto

🌺 When the Chaos Sounds Like Us

In “problème problème”, Styleto captures that swirl of tiny dramas and emotional spirals that every girl knows too well — the moments where everything feels “trop”, yet somehow still tender. The song mirrors the heart of the following article: the idea that sisterhood isn’t about having perfect lives, but about recognizing ourselves in each other’s messiness. It’s the soundtrack of shared chaos, whispered confessions, and the relief of realizing you’re not the only one navigating contradictions. In the world of La fille qui a plus mal, this track becomes a playful, honest reminder that our problems don’t isolate us — they connect us, soften us, and make the safe spaces we build together even more precious.

🎶 🌸 🎧 💕 🎤 ✨ 🤍 👯‍♀️ 📀 🌙 🌷 💖 🫶 🔊 problème problème - Styleto




🎙️ InPower x Styleto — “La fille qui a plus mal,” a Manifesto of Sisterhood

Solidarity often begins quietly — in the way people show up for one another, in the gestures that ask for nothing in return, in the communities that form around care rather than competition.

It’s a thread that runs through many artistic journeys today, and Styleto’s path is no exception. Her participation in Les Enfoirés, a project rooted in generosity and collective energy, reflects a sensibility that also pulses through her music: the belief that we rise higher when we rise together.

🌿 Reimagining Sisterhood

La fille qui a plus mal feels less like a traditional EP and more like a declaration. Styleto didn’t want to release “just music”; she wanted to build a refuge. For her, sisterhood begins with redefining what it means to stand together. Not identical, not interchangeable, but aligned in care. Tracks like “Problème problème” and “DSL pas dsl” expose the messy, contradictory parts of young womanhood without shame. “Sisterhood,” she says, “is saying: your story isn’t mine, but I’m here with you anyway.”

👯‍♀️ Listening as a Political Gesture

Songs like “Skincare” and “HS” are built like whispered confessions — fragile, unguarded, and deeply human. For Styleto, listening is not passive; it’s a political act. It’s how women reclaim space in a world that constantly interrupts them. The EP doesn’t shout. It holds. It makes room. It teaches us that listening — truly listening — is a form of solidarity.

🌸 Vulnerability as Resistance

One of the most striking aspects of the project is its embrace of vulnerability. “La fille qui a plus mal isn’t the girl who suffers the most,” Styleto explains. “She’s the girl who finally stops pretending.” The track “Solitude”, featuring Yoa and Solann, becomes the emotional core of this idea. Instead of portraying loneliness as a personal failure, the song turns it into a shared landscape. “If you’re alone,” she says, “then we’re alone together.” Vulnerability becomes resistance — a refusal to hide, a refusal to compete in silence.

✨ Celebrating Each Other as Power

There is also joy in the EP — not naïve joy, but the kind that grows between women who choose to uplift one another. With “Tout passe”, Styleto captures that moment when you look at your friends and realize you’ve survived another storm together. Celebration becomes a collective muscle — one that expands instead of compares. “Sisterhood,” she says, “is cheering for someone without shrinking yourself.”

🤝 Rituals That Build Collective Strength

Sisterhood, for Styleto, lives in small rituals. A voice note. A shared coffee. A recommendation. A hand on your back when you’re too tired to stand. The EP itself was built through these rituals — collaborations with Ade, Zélie, Yoa, Solann. Each track is a gesture of care, a reminder that creativity is rarely solitary. The title track, “La fille qui a plus mal”, becomes the final anchor: a girl who no longer carries everything alone. A girl who understands that healing is a collective practice. A girl who knows that sisterhood isn’t an ideal — it’s a way of living.

💖 Why This EP Matters

La fille qui a plus mal is worth your attention because it speaks to something universal: the desire to feel less alone in what we carry. Styleto offers not just songs, but a language for emotions we often struggle to name. Her collaborations expand the project into a shared experience, reminding listeners that strength grows in connection, not isolation. This EP is tender, modern, and quietly radical — a soundtrack for a generation learning to support one another with honesty and softness. Listening to it feels like joining a circle where everyone finally gets to exhale.

#SisterhoodGlow 💗 #GirlsWhoFeel 🌸 #PopConfessions 💕 #EmotionalGirlEra ✨ #TogetherWeRise 🤍

InPower x Styleto

The Power of Safe Spaces and Soft Voices
What makes InPower so magnetic is the way Louise turns every conversation into a sanctuary. Her questions aren’t just smart — they’re intuitive, gentle, and deeply attuned to the person sitting across from her. She knows how to guide a guest toward honesty without ever pushing, how to open doors without forcing anyone to walk through them. That emotional intelligence is the heart of the podcast: a safe place where artists, creators, and thinkers feel seen, understood, and free to be vulnerable. It’s this atmosphere of trust — warm, feminine, and quietly powerful — that makes the content resonate long after the episode ends.

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