Maisie Peters Has Moved On From Mid Men
5/21/202657 min
British pop star Maisie Peters first came to Australia supporting her friend (and boss), Ed Sheeran. Since then, she’s released one of the most beloved breakup albums in modern pop, toured with Taylor Swift on the Eras Tour, gone viral for reasons both good and brutal, and built a fiercely devoted fanbase drawn to her razor-sharp songwriting about love, heartbreak and, yes, “mid men”.
Now, Maisie is back with a new album, Fluorescence — a record that feels softer, happier and more grounded than the chaos of The Good Witch.
In this conversation with No Filter Executive Producer Bree Player, Maisie opens up about the “mid men” who inspired her biggest songs, the online backlash that followed her viral Eras Tour moment, what it was like recovering from serious vocal issues behind the scenes, and how falling in love changed the way she writes music.
They also talk about songwriting as emotional archaeology, growing up online, why happiness is actually harder to write about than heartbreak, and the surprisingly healthy reality of being in a relationship while still performing songs about exes night after night.
Plus: Ed Sheeran as a boss, secret boyfriends with emoji faces, and why Maisie Peters considers all of Australia her hometown.
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CREDITS:
Guest: Maisie Peters
Host: Bree Player
Group Executive Producer: Naima Brown
Executive Producer: Bree Player
Assistant Producer: Coco Lavigne
Audio and Video Producer: Josh Green
Social Media Producer: Olivia Colman
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Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsMaisie Peters· Guest0:00
It was a funny thing. It was obviously the best day of my life, the Eras Tour. And so to also experience such huge amounts of hate, which is what it was.
Bree Player· Host0:11
Yeah.
Maisie Peters· Guest0:11
It was ... There was varying levels, but there was a lot of just sort of blatant hate, and it was a crazy thing to experience.
Bree Player· Host0:18
[gentle music] Hi, it's Bri Player, the executive producer of No Filter. Today, our host and my friend, Kate Langbroek, has very kindly vacated her seat because she felt I was the right person to sit down with today's guest. I first met British pop star Maisie Peters in 2022 when she came to Australia supporting her friend and boss, Ed Sheeran. I remember watching her perform and being instantly struck by how sharp and emotionally intelligent her songwriting was. The way she wrote about relationships and heartbreak felt so funny and specific and painfully relatable. Afterwards, I asked Maisie what inspired so many of her songs, and she said, completely deadpan, "Mid men. Average men. Men who absolutely do not deserve the caliber of song being written about them." And yet somehow, those men inspired The Good Witch, which is one of my favorite pop albums of the last few years. So today, to celebrate the release of Fluorescent, Maisie's new album, I'm sitting down with a slightly different version of Maisie Peters, one who's in love, more settled, and genuinely happy. In this conversation, we talk about heartbreak,