When Miley Cyrus meets Naomi Campbell, the result isn’t just a music video—it’s an event. In her latest visual drop for the track “Every Girl You’ve Ever Loved,” Miley teams up with the iconic supermodel in a dazzling piece that blends runway fantasy with emotional resonance.
Directed by the ever-unapologetic Nadia Lee Cohen, the video feels like a fever dream stitched from high fashion editorials, surreal symbolism, and raw pop energy. Cyrus commands the screen with a charisma that feels both polished and primal, while Campbell glides through the visuals with the kind of presence only decades of runway domination can produce.
From its first frame, the video throws out the rulebook. This isn’t just pop spectacle—it’s a stylish, provocative meditation on femininity in all its layers. Every shot feels intentional, every movement charged. It’s less about following a narrative and more about inviting you into a world where image, emotion, and performance collapse into one bold statement.
“Every Girl You’ve Ever Loved” is one of the standout tracks from Miley’s new album, “Something Beautiful.” The song pulses with the weight of memory and longing, channeling themes of love, loss, and self-empowerment. It sits comfortably alongside equally evocative tracks like “End of the World” and “Easy Lover,” each one painting a different emotional shade.
The release of this visual coincides with a bigger moment for Miley: on July 16, her new special, “Miley Cyrus: Something Beautiful,” premieres on Disney+ and Hulu. The project—first revealed at the Tribeca Festival on June 6—is a cinematic music experience featuring thirteen tracks, captured with lush visuals and elevated production design.
Through this chapter, Miley isn’t just releasing music—she’s curating a whole world. A world where vulnerability meets glamour, where experimentation trumps predictability, and where icons like Naomi Campbell don’t just appear—they amplify. Together, they turn a music video into a moving portrait of power, presence, and unapologetic womanhood.
“Every Girl You’ve Ever Loved” doesn’t simply aim for your ears. It hits your eyes, your gut, and your sense of awe.