When Sabrina Carpenter recently opened as host for NBC’s Saturday Night Liveshe didn’t hold back.
“Since you’re here, I want to clear up some misconceptions people have about me,” she said with a smirk. “Everyone thinks of me as this like, horndog popstar, but there’s really so much more to me. I’m not just horny, I’m also turned on and sexually charged.”
While some critics debate whether this is satire or self-degradation, beneath the punchline is something bigger: a statement about owning desire in a world that still tells women to tone it down.
Pop culture can be a powerful teacher, and Carpenter is rewriting the syllabus.
Her latest work is doing what few pop stars dare: reframing pleasure as power, and joy as a form of autonomy. Her albums deliver a clear message: embracing your sexuality and joy is a radical act of self-determination.
The framework of reproductive justice has always been about more than access to abortion or contraception. It’s about the right to have children, not have children, and to live freely in your own body. That includes the right to feel good in that body. To know it, to love it, and to experience pleasure without fear or shame.
And yet, pleasure is still treated like something scandalous. A 2024 study published in the Journal of Sex Research found that 18.11% of women reported faking orgasmscompared to 8.59% of men. The same year, a review in Sexuality Research and Social Policy examined how sexual shame—often stemming from sociocultural messages and body image pressures—negatively affects women’s arousal, desire, orgasm, and comfort. These numbers aren’t just statistics; they reveal how culture conditions women to doubt, hide, or minimize their pleasure.
Carpenter’s music flips that script. Songs like Tears, Espresso, House Tourand Taste are joyful, sensual, and confident—but they also reject the idea that pleasure needs to be hidden or earned.
She’s teaching that self-expression can be both fun and feminist.
By claiming pleasure openly, Carpenter mirrors the heart of reproductive justice: knowing your worth, asserting your choices, and celebrating your body without apology. Through her humor, her glitter, and her confidence, she makes sexual autonomy visible, playful, and proud rather than shameful. Watching her perform, you can feel it: the lesson that joy and agency are inseparable.
It’s easy to underestimate how radical that is. In a media landscape that still rewards women for being palatable and punishes them for being too much, Carpenter’s insistence on pleasure—without apology, without moralizing—is quietly revolutionary. It’s reproductive justice in motion: the right to live fully, love freely, and feel deeply.
Carpenter proves that reproductive justice isn’t just policy or protest it’s also the freedom to explore, enjoy, and assert your desires. She reminds us that claiming pleasure, embracing your body, and celebrating your agency is not only human—it’s necessary.
So let Sabrina Carpenter’s boldness be a reminder: pleasure isn’t shallow.
It’s a statement.
It’s power.
It’s yours.
About the Author: Ana Karen Flores is a first-generation Latina communications strategist who commands the narrative and drives real political change. She’s a Public Voices fellow with The OpEd Project and works alongside the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Justice and the Every Page Foundation. Catch her on Instagram @anaprgirl.


