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Camille Lellouche serves a sharp-tongued pop punch with Fumette, a song that feels like a humorous but fiery wake-up call. Over a bouncy, urban groove, she tells an unreliable lover, âArrĂȘte la fumette, ça te rend bĂȘteâ (Stop the weed, it makes you dumb) and mocks his never-ending disquettes â little lies and excuses. Her repeated âJâvais pas mâcasser la tĂȘteâ shows she refuses to waste brain-power on his drama, turning the chorus into an unforgettable chant of self-respect.
Beneath the playful beat, the lyrics paint a picture of a relationship full of empty promises, hidden agendas, and victim-playing theatrics. Camille exposes the guyâs contradictions (âTu mâaimes Ă la folie⊠puis tu tailles comme un petitâ) and calls him out for dodging responsibility. In the end, Fumette celebrates honesty, boundaries, and a no-nonsense attitude: if someone keeps clouding the truth, you can simply dance away and leave the smoke behind.