Sabrina Carpenter just released a new music video on April 6, a cinematic short called “House Tour” co-directed by Carpenter and Margaret Qualley and starring Madelyn Cline alongside Carpenter herself. This is a bold pop-music moment that doubles as a miniature caper — and it arrives right before Carpenter headlines Coachella next weekend. One industry note: high-concept, actor-driven videos like this increasingly function as festival-ready visuals that amplify streaming and ticket demand.
The video was posted to Carpenter’s official YouTube channel Monday and shared across her verified X and Instagram accounts, where the singer billed the clip as the third visual from her platinum-certified album Man’s Best Friend. It opens with the trio letting themselves into a Los Angeles mansion after finding a key under the welcome mat, then proceeds into gleeful theft: jewelry, a Grammy on the mantle, wine, diamond-studded handguns and a surprisingly ornate samurai sword collection are all put to use.
Carpenter, Qualley and Cline play the Pretty Girls Clean-Up Crew — outfits are retro-chic and slightly ambiguous — and they treat the house like an over-the-top playground. At one memorable beat Carpenter changes shoes on a marble stairwell before a bathtub jam session, while the three raid closets and poolside loungers. Near the end, police arrive but too late; Qualley and Carpenter drive off in a pink van marked “Just Robbed a House,” with Cline following in a purloined sports car. The final frame: a handwritten thank-you note left on the kitchen counter.
“Do you want the house tour?/ I could take you to the first, second, third floor,” Carpenter sings in the track — a lyric that anchors the video’s playful lawlessness. “House Tour” follows visuals for Man’s Best Friend singles “Manchild” (which hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100) and “Tears.” The album, released in August, has been a commercial centerpiece for Carpenter’s evolving pop identity.
Fans and industry observers were quick to react online, praising the chemistry between a pop star and two actors known primarily for film and TV work; clips shared on social platforms accumulated engagement within hours. The choice to cast Margaret Qualley and Madelyn Cline — both of whom have sizable entertainment followings — also extends the song’s reach into crossover audiences, blending music, film and streaming-era fandom in one tidy stunt.
What’s next: Carpenter is scheduled to headline Coachella on April 10 and again on April 17, dates where the new video is likely to factor into her set and festival promotion. For now, the video serves as both a promotional push for Man’s Best Friend and a reminder that pop visuals can function like mini-films — showing up on playlists, feeds and festival stages with equal impact.
Who needs to clean up, anyway? The Pretty Girls Clean-Up Crew clearly prefers to leave with the silverware and a good story.