▼ Music Video Star Jenna Raine is coupling up, breaking up and let- ting it all out on TikTok. BY ALEX GONZALEZ O n her latest single, “Not Again,” 18-year-old Jenna Raine confidently kisses off an ex who comes around af- ter she finds her own happi- ness. In the song’s accompanying music video, the Southlake native dances against a white screen as memeable video clips are screened to her side. One of the clips is captioned with “When your ex breaks up with you before your va- cation and now you’re planning one for yourself.” Another sees Raine crying, and is captioned with “How my life was,” which then transitions to a clip of her dancing, which reads, “How my life is now.” The mu- sic video is a tribute to TikTok, the place where it all began for Raine. She wrote “Not Again” with songwriter Casey Smith following a session in which they were bouncing ideas back and forth. “She was like, ‘Hey, tell me about what you’re going through,’ and I was just literally talking her ear off, trying to get some song info out for the day,” Raine says. “... There was a guy that I liked a long time ago, and he had reached out. I was like, ‘He wants me back. Oh no, not again. He was just a guy that liked me who tried to make this whole ro- mantic thing, while I was with my friends out having fun, and it was just very annoying and irritating. And even though I kind of liked him when I was younger, I just knew I was completely over it, and he just wasn’t taking a hint.” Hot off a freshly signed deal with Warner Music Group, Raine is a killer songwriter gear- ing up to be a pop star. She grew up in Texas, and her love of music began when she was 4 years old, when she and her older sister, who was a high school senior at the time, would drive around town listening to Taylor Swift. She and her family attended Gateway Church, and Raine wanted to be a worship leader. But she decided to shift in a new di- rection in the third grade, when she sang Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep” at her school’s talent show. “I think my mom just about had a heart attack when I told her I was going to sing,” Raine says. “Nobody in my family really had any musical talent, so it caught everybody off guard. But I loved sing- ing at church, and I loved listening to the radio with my older sis- ter growing up. That’s where it all started.” There was no deny- Caity Krone “We grew so close being in that group to- “I WAS DETERMINED TO MAKE SOMETHING POP OFF ON TIKTOK. I WAS LIKE, ‘I’M GONNA MAKE THIS A CHALLENGE, MAKE THIS KIND OF A SERIOUS THING.’” - JENNA RAINE ing that Raine had vo- cal talent, and her parents signed her up for lessons at Septien Entertainment Group. When she was 10 years old, Raine briefly joined a girl group called L2M, which was short for “Listening to Music.” She landed the gig through a casting call looking for a group to perform a song for the Lego Friends movie. Producer Tim Bird had plans to make the girls pop stars, and they released several stand-alone singles. L2M has since dis- banded, and Raine says she still has nothing but love for her former bandmates. gether,” she says. “It was one of my biggest blessings, getting to meet some of my closest friends, especially in this industry, because sometimes it can be a harsh world. But meeting people like them just makes it just so memorable and so beautiful. We’re all in different parts of the country, so it’s really hard for us to meet up. But last year, I flew out two of them and we all hung out and we binge watched the sec- ond season of Outer Banks together. That was so fun.” Raine began acting and has gotten a few small film roles. She’d taken songwriting les- sons from songwriter and producer Jonathan Camacho shortly be- fore he left Septien Mu- sic Group. In the eight weeks she was able to work with him, he challenged her to write 100 songs. “He told me that before I could write 100 songs, I wouldn’t be a decent songwriter,” Raine says. “It would take 100 songs to be- come a decent songwriter — not even good, but decent. And during quarantine, I really had nothing else to do. I was in the middle of filming a movie with songwriter Ryan Ted- der, so I couldn’t release music. I was deter- mined to make something pop off on TikTok. I was like, ‘I’m gonna make this a Jenna Raine found stardom on TikTok. challenge, make this kind of a serious thing and do what Jonathan told me to do three years ago, and write 100 songs.’ So that’s ex- actly what I did.” After posting song clips on TikTok, Raine garnered a large following. Her song “See You Later (Ten Years)” was a game changer. According to Raine, this was the 46th song she wrote of the 100-song challenge, and she wrote it after someone had commented on one of her videos challenging her to write a song about falling in love with the right per- son at the wrong time. The song went viral, which was some- thing Raine says she didn’t fully get to process at the time as she was in the middle of filming a movie called Camp Hideout. But she re- members coming home from filming and friends telling her that their friends knew all the words to “See You Later (Ten Years)”. Raine drew from real experiences when writing the song, which is about her boy- friend of two years. He is not the same guy from “Not Again.” “We were kind of doing that ‘talking’ thing,” Raine says of her new muse, “and we didn’t really get a full shot at becoming a couple, because we were so young, and I knew he was the right person at the wrong time. I had personally gone through that. So I went back into those feelings, because I wasn’t going through it at the moment, but I could just go back a year and a half before- hand, and take those emotions and put it into the song. So this one in particular is very close to my heart.” Raine recently graduated from high school. She has plans to move to California at the end of the summer, but in the mean- time, she enjoys having time to play some sand volleyball and pickleball with friends and family, getting her fix of all things Texas before heading west and focusing on music. But before she locks into album mode, Raine plans to give fans a preview of what she’s been working on over the past year. “I can say there’s going to be an EP com- ing towards the end of the summer, which is very exciting,” she says. “I’ve been wait- ing to put out a bit of a bigger project for a very long time, but I’m trying to be very conscious about what songs come out and what makes sense with the songs that I’m thinking of releasing. I’m excited to talk to people about what songs I’m going to choose, and I’m kind of going to let TikTok decide for me.” since 1978! Mon- Wed 5PM-12AM Thurs-Fri 5PM-2AM We’re open! 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