Bart Peeters turns your screen into a mirror. In “Smartphone,” the witty Belgian singer admits he bought the ultimate modern toy only to discover that it pushes him to stage a flashy, glamorous life online. He scrolls through a cycle of selfies, food pics, animal videos, and carefully filtered happiness, all in the hope of racking up more followers. The catchy tune pokes fun at how easily we trade authenticity for a dopamine-charged thumbs-up, making us feel like stars even while we sit alone on the couch.
But nostalgia keeps ringing in the background. Peeters remembers the era of clunky, wall-tethered phones with fondness, contrasting their honest simplicity with today’s swipe-and-scroll culture. Whether he is getting lost on Instagram, fibbing on Tinder, or chatting with strangers over Skype, every app drives home the same message: when happiness becomes just another icon, real life can start to feel “nep” – fake. The song is a playful yet pointed reminder to look up from the screen and make sure our lives are more than just a feed.