Troye Sivan is Kelly Clarkson's latest muse — sort of.
The "Angel Baby" singer, 27, posted two videos to TikTok after he listened to Clarkson's new song "Mine," in which she sings, "Sabotage, your choice of art? / Who the hell do you think you are?"
"What did I do to upset Kelly Clarkson?" Sivan asks in his first video, which he captioned "@Kellyclarkson, drop your location im ready to fight."
Since Clarkson, 40, released the song, fans have mistaken her lyric "your choice of art" for "Troye Sivan."
@troyesivan @kellyclarkson ♬ original sound - Troye Sivan
"This part kinda slays though. Like imagine I make this my theme song where every time I walk out somewhere, they have to play this part?" Sivan said in his TikTok post, before playing another clip of Clarkson, this time singing only "your choice of art."
@troyesivan 😍😍😍 @kellyclarkson ♬ original sound - Troye Sivan
Clarkson dropped "Mine" as part of a two-song release in the lead-up to her new album Chemistry, out June 23.
The second song, titled "Me," speaks to the self-empowerment one can feel after a breakup, while "Mine" reveals more of the emotional side to a split.
"We decided to release 'mine' and 'me' at the same time because I didn't want to release just one song to represent an entire album, or relationship. There are many stages of grief and loss on this album. Each song is a different stage and emotional state," Clarkson explained in an Instagram post.
Last month, Clarkson opened up about her divorce from ex-husband Brandon Blackstock, 46, with whom she shares two children — son Remington "Remy" Alexander, 7, and daughter River Rose, 8½.
During an appearance on Angie Martinez's IRL podcast, Clarkson acknowledged the difficulties of navigating a breakup in the public eye.
"I think the thing about divorce — especially having it publicized, and people thinking they know the whole thing — the hardest part of that is, like, it wasn't an overnight decision," the "Because of You" singer added.
"Anyone that's been divorced [knows]. That was years in trying to make — not make it work, 'cause I never wanted to be part of something to 'make it work,'" added Clarkson. "I wanted to make it beautiful. I wanted to make it awesome. I wanted to make it everything it possibly could be, and sometimes that just doesn't happen."