Yes, this song might be the biggest brave-empowering-honest-pure-unapologetic-lit-YASSS-etc., hit of 2018, but it’s also profoundly atypical and disconcertingly weird. Grande isn’t just calling her glass half-full. She’s doing a new kind of alchemy, transmuting trauma into Bubble Yum. And without blinking. It’s as if a singer at the height of her fame accidentally wandered into pop’s uncanny valley — a disconcerting gray zone between a superstar’s glazed image and the sentient being behind it.

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Shouldn’t we want all of our American idols be this real? Yes, but no. Over the course of our strange new century, we’ve been given reality shows that follow a script, and more recently, a reality show president who doesn’t. We crave what’s real, but sometimes we actually get it. But it’s different with pop music. The space between what’s real and what isn’t is where our imaginations get to play, and we start to lose something whenever that gap begins to close.

Republic Records

With “Thank U, Next,” Grande practically seals it shut. She and Davidson began dating in May, had gotten engaged by June, then went poof in October — with the media monitoring every 15 minutes of it. When Grande dropped her fourth album, “Sweetener,” in August, the only way to truly hear it was to break out a reliable measuring stick: How much would we care about this artist’s music without their celebrity, and how much would we care about their celebrity without their music?

Grande’s music has always been softly magnetic, even when it wasn’t all that great. It usually comes down to her voice, which remains as plush, clean, smothering and anonymous as a luxury hotel room pillow. And like any nameless coo that permeates so much of our communal airspace, hers sounds more and more human year after year. Maybe the blunt-force candor of “Thank U, Next” was an attempt to speed the process along.

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