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Today’s guest is one of the most quietly enduring artists in modern pop — a songwriter and performer who’s spent over a decade growing up in public, learning how to separate perception from identity.
She was discovered online as a teenager and quickly thrust into an industry that had already decided who she was.
But behind the headlines, she was doing the real work — writing, refining her sound, and slowly building a career on her own terms.
This is a conversation about perception vs reality, creative control, and what it actually takes to become yourself in an industry that benefits from misunderstanding you.
And The Writer Is… Madison Beer!
What you'll learn:
• What it actually feels like to grow up in the public eye
• The gap between how artists are perceived vs who they really are
• Why longevity in music requires emotional resilience
• How Madison developed her sound and creative identity over time
• The pressure of early success — and rebuilding from it
• Why being misunderstood can either break you or sharpen you
This episode is brought to you by the NMPA — supporting songwriters and protecting the value of music.
And by Splice — the world’s largest library of sounds and samples, built for creators.
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
1:42 Madison’s favorite songs of hers
3:00 Lyrics or melody first?
4:30 Ross meeting Madison at 13
6:00 Madison’s childhood, early memories
7:00 Going through parent’s divorce in early childhood
9:45 Why singing the national anthem is hard
10:00 Her family’s early encouragement
11:00 Madison’s first song
13:00 Starting her career at 10
18:40 Getting discovered overnight from a Justin Bieber tweet.
19:11 Contracts in music industry
19:58 Meeting Justin Bieber
21:46 Why getting dropped is a blessing
24:00 Struggling with early music identity
26:00 Why she felt she couldn’t fight back on creative control early on
28:00 finding her power through social media
31:55 Reclaiming creative control
33:50 writing reckless
35:28 Home with you
36:25 the importance of your collaborators
39:12 the original demo to Reckless
41:13 being easier to write dark songs than happy songs
41:40 the challenge of writing her new album
41:54 NMPA
42:36 Splice
43:26 Going back into the label system
45:00 her first tour in lockdown
46:50 Madison’s touring non negotiables
52:00 the story of Home to another one
53:41 Writing darker songs while in a happy relationship
55:55 Setting boundaries for mental health
56:55 “Showed Me” as an interpolation
58:37 Her mental health struggles and path to healing
1:01:54 How her album locket Freed her
1:03:25 the unlikely story of bittersweet
1:05:30 what writing a song with strangers is like
1:09:00 loneliness and missing out on a normal childhood
1:12:00 Dealing with constant criticism and how she manages it
1:12:47 Surviving the lowest point of her life
1:16:30 how she currently manages her mental health
Hosted by Ross Golan
Produced by Joe London and Jad Saad
Edited by Jad Saad
Post Production VFX by Pratik Karki
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By And The Writer Is4.9
10241,024 ratings
Today’s guest is one of the most quietly enduring artists in modern pop — a songwriter and performer who’s spent over a decade growing up in public, learning how to separate perception from identity.
She was discovered online as a teenager and quickly thrust into an industry that had already decided who she was.
But behind the headlines, she was doing the real work — writing, refining her sound, and slowly building a career on her own terms.
This is a conversation about perception vs reality, creative control, and what it actually takes to become yourself in an industry that benefits from misunderstanding you.
And The Writer Is… Madison Beer!
What you'll learn:
• What it actually feels like to grow up in the public eye
• The gap between how artists are perceived vs who they really are
• Why longevity in music requires emotional resilience
• How Madison developed her sound and creative identity over time
• The pressure of early success — and rebuilding from it
• Why being misunderstood can either break you or sharpen you
This episode is brought to you by the NMPA — supporting songwriters and protecting the value of music.
And by Splice — the world’s largest library of sounds and samples, built for creators.
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
1:42 Madison’s favorite songs of hers
3:00 Lyrics or melody first?
4:30 Ross meeting Madison at 13
6:00 Madison’s childhood, early memories
7:00 Going through parent’s divorce in early childhood
9:45 Why singing the national anthem is hard
10:00 Her family’s early encouragement
11:00 Madison’s first song
13:00 Starting her career at 10
18:40 Getting discovered overnight from a Justin Bieber tweet.
19:11 Contracts in music industry
19:58 Meeting Justin Bieber
21:46 Why getting dropped is a blessing
24:00 Struggling with early music identity
26:00 Why she felt she couldn’t fight back on creative control early on
28:00 finding her power through social media
31:55 Reclaiming creative control
33:50 writing reckless
35:28 Home with you
36:25 the importance of your collaborators
39:12 the original demo to Reckless
41:13 being easier to write dark songs than happy songs
41:40 the challenge of writing her new album
41:54 NMPA
42:36 Splice
43:26 Going back into the label system
45:00 her first tour in lockdown
46:50 Madison’s touring non negotiables
52:00 the story of Home to another one
53:41 Writing darker songs while in a happy relationship
55:55 Setting boundaries for mental health
56:55 “Showed Me” as an interpolation
58:37 Her mental health struggles and path to healing
1:01:54 How her album locket Freed her
1:03:25 the unlikely story of bittersweet
1:05:30 what writing a song with strangers is like
1:09:00 loneliness and missing out on a normal childhood
1:12:00 Dealing with constant criticism and how she manages it
1:12:47 Surviving the lowest point of her life
1:16:30 how she currently manages her mental health
Hosted by Ross Golan
Produced by Joe London and Jad Saad
Edited by Jad Saad
Post Production VFX by Pratik Karki
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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