Just for Me
Just for Me is an American hair care brand specializing in products designed for children with curly, coily, and textured hair, including chemical relaxers, detanglers, conditioners, and natural hair care lines such as the Curl Peace collection.[1] Launched in the early 1990s by Renee Cottrell Brown under her family's Pro-Line International company, the brand targeted young African American girls with at-home relaxer kits marketed as gentle and easy to use, often accompanied by instructional cassettes and celebrity endorsements.[1][2] The brand emerged from a three-generation legacy in Black hair care innovation, beginning with Renee's father, Comer Cottrell, who founded Pro-Line in 1970 and popularized the Jheri curl style before expanding into children's products.[1] Just for Me quickly became a household name in the ethnic beauty market, emphasizing manageability and reduced breakage through formulas incorporating ingredients like coconut milk, shea butter, and sunflower oil.[3] Over time, ownership transitioned through acquisitions: Pro-Line was sold to Alberto-Culver in 2000, which was then acquired by Unilever in 2010, before Strength of Nature purchased Just for Me along with sister brands like Soft & Beautiful and Motions in 2015; Strength of Nature was acquired by Godrej Consumer Products in 2016.[4][5][6] In recent years, Just for Me has shifted toward natural and protective hair care amid growing awareness of health risks associated with chemical relaxers, such as potential links to uterine cancer and scalp burns from ingredients like lye and endocrine disruptors.[7][2] This evolution reflects broader industry trends and family involvement, with Renee's daughter, Autumn Yarbrough, leading Nu Standard—a separate Cottrell family venture focused on transparent, bond-building treatments—while advocating for accountability in hair relaxer formulations.[1] The brand remains widely available at retailers like Walmart and Target, continuing to serve diverse hair needs for kids with an emphasis on nourishment and detangling.[8][9]Background and production
Development
The Just for Me brand emerged from the Cottrell family's multi-generational involvement in Black hair care, beginning with Renee Cottrell Brown's father, Comer Cottrell, who founded Pro-Line International in 1973 to address needs in the ethnic beauty market during the natural hair movement of the era.[1] Pro-Line initially focused on products like oil sheens for afros, but by the early 1990s, Renee Cottrell Brown led the development of Just for Me as a dedicated line for children, targeting young African American girls with textured hair.[1] The brand's core innovation was at-home chemical relaxer kits designed to be gentle and user-friendly, incorporating no-lye formulas to minimize scalp irritation and breakage, along with accompanying instructional materials such as audio cassettes and booklets to empower parents and children.[7] Development emphasized accessibility and safety, drawing on Pro-Line's expertise in formulations suited for coily and curly hair types. The kits included conditioning agents like coconut milk and shea butter to promote manageability, reflecting a shift from professional salon treatments to affordable home use. This approach was influenced by the broader cultural context of the 1990s, where chemical straightening gained popularity amid limited options for children's hair care, though later scrutiny highlighted health concerns with ingredients like endocrine disruptors.[1][2] The brand quickly established itself as a staple, with early marketing featuring celebrity endorsements to build trust and appeal.Formulation and production
Just for Me's products were formulated and produced under Pro-Line International's facilities, initially in Dallas, Texas, where the Cottrell family oversaw quality control to ensure consistency for sensitive young scalps. The production process involved blending chemical relaxers with natural emollients such as sunflower oil and shea butter, prioritizing reduced processing time—typically 10-15 minutes per application—to make it suitable for children.[7] Early formulations avoided lye-based systems in favor of guanidine carbonate alternatives, aiming for milder effects, though subsequent research as of 2024 linked such products to health risks including uterine cancer.[2] Production scaled with the brand's growth, transitioning through ownership changes that impacted manufacturing: acquired by Alberto-Culver in the mid-1990s, then by Unilever in 2010 following its purchase of Alberto-Culver, and finally by Strength of Nature in 2015, which relocated production while maintaining the core lines.[4][5] By the 2010s, the brand evolved to include natural hair care options like the Curl Peace collection, with formulations updated for detangling and hydration without chemicals, produced in facilities adhering to evolving safety standards. As of 2025, products continue to be manufactured with an emphasis on transparency, influenced by family members like Autumn Yarbrough's advocacy through Nu Standard.[1][7]Composition
Music
"Just for Me" is a 2-step garage track that blends elements of UK garage, pop, and a new nostalgic style evoking early 2000s club sounds.[10][11] Its production draws from 1990s and 2000s garage influences, similar to Sweet Female Attitude's "Flowers," through a lo-fi aesthetic that emphasizes intimacy and retro appeal.[12][13] The song employs a condensed verse-chorus structure lasting 1:55, consisting of an intro, two verses, a repeating chorus, and a fade-out outro.[14] This format prioritizes brevity and repetition, aligning with TikTok's short-form video culture while maintaining a traditional pop framework.[15] Key sonic elements include a bouncy 2-step rhythm at 133 beats per minute, light synth melodies, and sparse instrumentation that creates an airy, ethereal atmosphere.[16][17] The track is composed in C major, featuring simple repetitive motifs built around chord progressions like C-Am-C and occasional G chords for subtle variation.[14] This minimalism enhances the lo-fi quality, allowing the rhythm and vocals to dominate without overwhelming density.[18]Lyrics
The lyrics of "Just for Me" center on themes of unrequited love and obsessive infatuation, depicted through the narrator's intimate, almost intrusive fixation on a love interest.[19] The song portrays this obsession via personal artifacts like a diary repeatedly inscribed with the object's name, evoking a sense of delusional hope for mutual affection.[20] Key lines such as "I found the street of the house in which you stay / And my diary's full of your name on every page" underscore a stalking-like intensity, blending vulnerability with boundary-crossing desperation.[19] This narrative unfolds from a first-person perspective, serving as a confessional plea for reciprocation, where the singer questions whether everyday actions—like wiping tears or holding hands—are performed "just for me."[19] The song's structure reinforces its emotional rawness, with verses building the obsessive backstory and a repeating chorus amplifying the yearning. In the second verse, lines like "I followed you around, I wrote a song about you / And I hope that one day you can hear me sing it to you" escalate the infatuation into a meta-commentary on creation itself as an act of longing.[19] At just 1:56 in length, the track's brevity aligns with the short-form video format of TikTok, where it originated as a viral sound, allowing its cyclical structure to loop seamlessly in user-generated content.[21] PinkPantheress's songwriting draws from confessional, diary-like traditions in pop and R&B, using personal revelation to connect raw emotion with relatable heartache.[22] Poetic devices enhance the lyrics' hypnotic pull, including heavy repetition in the chorus—"Do you wipe them just for me? (Me, me, me, me)"—to mimic obsessive rumination and build emotional urgency.[19] A simple rhyme scheme, such as the AABB pattern in "stay/page" and "me/me," keeps the language accessible and chant-like, prioritizing rhythmic flow over complexity to evoke youthful, unfiltered desire.[19]Release and promotion
Release
"Just for Me" was released on August 13, 2021, as a single by British singer PinkPantheress through Parlophone Records.[23] This release represented her transition from independent TikTok uploads to a major label output, following a rising deal with Parlophone fueled by her platform buzz.[24] The track was distributed exclusively under Parlophone's license and made available in digital download and streaming formats, accompanied by minimalist single artwork. A snippet had previously gained viral traction on TikTok in July 2021.[25] The single was later incorporated as the fifth track on PinkPantheress's debut mixtape, To Hell with It, issued on October 15, 2021, via Parlophone and Elektra Records.[26] Positioned after "Passion" and before "Noticed," it sat amid other short-form tracks like the opening "Pain" and closing "Break It Off," emphasizing her distinctive clipped song structures.[27]Promotion
The promotion of "Just for Me" heavily relied on social media virality, particularly TikTok, where PinkPantheress first teased a snippet of the song in July 2021, leading to its rapid spread among users.[28] The clip quickly gained traction, soundtracking over 1.5 million videos by late summer, fueled by its catchy UK garage-inspired beat and relatable lyrics that resonated with Gen Z audiences creating content around themes of infatuation.[28] This organic buzz prompted cross-promotion efforts, including shares on Mura Masa's social channels, amplifying the track's reach ahead of its official release on August 13, 2021.[29] Following the TikTok surge, Parlophone Records capitalized on the momentum by securing placements on major streaming playlists, such as Spotify's New Music Friday, which helped the song accumulate over 10 million streams within its first week on platforms.[29] The label also pushed for radio airplay, with BBC Radio 1 featuring the track prominently, including a high-profile cover by Coldplay in their Live Lounge session, further embedding it in mainstream rotation.[30] These efforts transformed the pre-release hype into sustained post-launch visibility, positioning "Just for Me" as a breakout hit. The song's early buzz manifested in widespread TikTok trends, including dance challenges that mimicked its upbeat rhythm and lip-sync videos emphasizing its emotional chorus, which collectively boosted PinkPantheress's profile and contributed to her winning BBC Radio 1's Sound of 2022 poll.[31] Promotional interviews during this period highlighted the track's roots in UK garage, with PinkPantheress discussing her influences from 2-step and drum and bass in outlets like BBC Newsbeat, underscoring the nostalgic yet fresh appeal that drove its marketing narrative.[29]Music video
The music video for "Just for Me" was released on September 9, 2021, via YouTube.[32] It was co-directed by LAUZZA and PinkPantheress, with production handled by the London-based company Compulsory and executive production by Kiran Mandla.[32][33] The video adopts a low-resolution, DIY aesthetic shot in 480p quality, featuring soft edits, vignettes, and a lo-fi vibe that mirrors the track's nostalgic production style.[33] PinkPantheress appears in all-black attire consistent with her signature look, including bleached eyebrows, set against a simple studio environment.[34] This visual approach evokes an early-2000s nostalgia, blending raw, intimate framing with subtle visual effects to enhance the song's intimate, bedroom-pop origins.[33] Narratively, the video presents an abstract portrayal of isolation and daydreaming, centered on PinkPantheress performing the song on stage before a crowd of morose, baggy-clothed teenagers who appear deeply melancholic.[34][33] Intercut with dreamlike fantasy elements—such as spooky chase scenes, visual effects, a tarantula, and a burning house—these sequences underscore themes of longing and emotional detachment, syncing closely with the lyrics' exploration of unhealthy obsession.[33][34] A DJ supports the performance by playing a CD single, adding to the DIY, performative intimacy of the piece.[33]Critical reception and legacy
Critical response
"Just for Me" garnered widespread critical acclaim for its concise structure, revival of nostalgic UK garage elements, and PinkPantheress's endearing, breathy vocal delivery.[35][36] Reviewers highlighted the track's under-two-minute runtime as a strength, allowing its shuffling 2-step rhythm and gentle guitar plucks to loop infectiously without overstaying its welcome.[35] The song's wistful portrayal of obsessive infatuation, paired with Mura Masa's sample-free production, was lauded for capturing a dreamy, puppy-love essence that resonated with Gen Z audiences.[36][37] Prominent outlets recognized the track as a standout of 2021. The Fader crowned it the best song of the year, praising its "light, wistful, and slightly dazed" vocals over a beat evoking early-2000s garage pioneers like Artful Dodger.[35] NPR included it in their 100 best songs list at No. 28, commending its innovative fusion of bedroom pop with charming 2-step electronica and its viral appeal through the doe-eyed chorus "When you wipe your tears, do you wipe them just for me?"[36] Billboard featured it among the 100 best songs of 2021 for blending confessional lyrics with crushed-out drum 'n' bass influences.[38] NME ranked it No. 19 on their 50 best songs of the year, noting its savvy internet-era origins and futuristic twist on nostalgic UK sounds via playful vocals and a '00s-style beat.[39] Pitchfork placed it at No. 24 in their best songs list, describing PinkPantheress as a "one-woman time machine" for her confessional style over 2-step rhythms.[37] The consensus positioned "Just for Me" as a pivotal bridge between classic UK garage and contemporary pop, significantly elevating PinkPantheress's profile as an emerging artist.[36][37]Accolades and cultural impact
The success of "Just for Me" played a pivotal role in PinkPantheress being named the winner of BBC Radio 1's Sound of 2022 poll, selected by over 130 industry experts and artists including Billie Eilish and Elton John for her breakthrough via TikTok-viral tracks like this one.[31] The song's inclusion on her debut mixtape To Hell with It also contributed to the project earning spots on multiple year-end lists, such as Variety's Best Albums of 2021 at number two, highlighting its role in defining the year's innovative pop releases.[40] "Just for Me" received notable covers that amplified its reach, most prominently an acoustic rendition by Coldplay during their BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge performance on October 26, 2021, where the band transformed the track's garage-infused energy into a delicate, piano-driven arrangement.[41] While no official major remixes were released, the song inspired widespread fan edits and recreations on TikTok, where users layered it over personal videos, extending its viral lifecycle beyond the original snippet's two million uses as of October 2021.[42][43] The track's explosive TikTok virality in 2021 exemplified a broader cultural shift toward short-form, platform-native music, symbolizing the year's pivot to bedroom pop and sample-driven hits that bypassed traditional industry gates.[43] PinkPantheress pioneered the TikTok-to-mainstream pipeline for a garage revival, reintroducing 1990s UK club sounds like 2-step and drum 'n' bass to a new generation through concise, nostalgic tracks that influenced subsequent artists in blending underground genres with viral accessibility.[44] This impact helped propel To Hell with It to a strong debut at number 73 on the Billboard 200 as of November 2021, marking her first charting project and underscoring the song's foundational role in her rapid ascent.[45] In the long term, "Just for Me" contributed to PinkPantheress's recognition for music innovation, tangentially supporting her receipt of an honorary Doctor of Music degree from the University of Kent in July 2025, awarded for her transformative influence on digital-era pop.[46]Commercial performance
Charts
"Just for Me" achieved moderate commercial success on international charts, primarily driven by streaming momentum from TikTok virality, where the track was featured in over 2.2 million user videos by October 2021.[43] The song entered the UK Singles Chart on 26 August 2021 at number 36, rapidly climbing to its peak position of number 27 the following week, and remained on the chart for a total of 12 weeks.[47] This marked the highest-charting position for any of PinkPantheress's singles released in 2021, surpassing "I Must Apologise" (peak #85) and "Pain" (peak #35).[48] In Ireland, the track debuted and peaked at number 49 on the Irish Singles Chart for the week of 26 August 2021.[47] On the New Zealand Hot Singles Chart, it reached number 5 but did not enter the main Top 40 Singles Chart. The song bubbled under in other markets without entering major national charts; it did not chart on the ARIA Singles Chart in Australia or the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, though it contributed to the streaming performance of PinkPantheress's debut mixtape To Hell with It, which peaked at number 73 on the Billboard 200.[45] In Europe, "Just for Me" garnered strong streaming activity, amassing over 46 million Spotify streams by late 2021 and appearing on regional Spotify Viral and Top 50 charts in countries such as Sweden and Germany.[43][49]| Chart (2021) | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| UK Singles (OCC) | 27 | 12 |
| Irish Singles (IRMA) | 49 | 1 |
| New Zealand Hot Singles (RMNZ) | 5 | N/A |
Certifications
As of September 2022, "Just for Me" has been certified Silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in the United Kingdom, denoting 200,000 units sold or streamed.[50] No certifications have been awarded by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) or equivalent bodies in other major markets such as Australia or Canada for the single as of 2025. The track's performance contributed to the certifications of its parent mixtape, To Hell with It, which achieved Gold status from the BPI on February 28, 2025, for exceeding 100,000 units in the UK.[51] The song's commercial success has been driven primarily by digital streaming, with no physical sales recorded due to its exclusive digital release through Parlophone and Elektra Records. By October 2021, "Just for Me" had surpassed 46 million streams on Spotify alone, reflecting its rapid virality following the August launch.[43] Global streams continued to grow, reaching over 213 million on Spotify by late 2025, underscoring its enduring popularity on the platform. Its dominance extended to TikTok, where the track was featured in more than 2.2 million user videos by late 2021, fueling organic promotion and contributing to its certification threshold despite initial sales figures of approximately 132,000 units in the UK by early 2022.[52][53]Credits and release
Personnel
- PinkPantheress – lead vocals, backing vocals, songwriter[54][55]
- Mura Masa – production, songwriter[55][56]
- Jonny Breakwell – mixing[57]
- Finn Howells – assistant mixing[57]
- Matt Colton – mastering[57]
- Songwriters: PinkPantheress, Mura Masa, Owen, Stephen Michael Holmes, Steven Joseph Lamos[55]
- Publishing: Sony Music Publishing / BMG Music Publishing Ltd.[57]
- A&R: Parlophone Records team (unnamed)[53]
Release history
"Just for Me" was released as a digital download and streaming single worldwide on August 13, 2021, by Parlophone Records.[55] The track was exclusively available in digital formats, with no physical releases issued.[54] It served as the fourth single from PinkPantheress's debut mixtape To Hell with It, which was released digitally on October 15, 2021, positioning "Just for Me" as its fifth track.[58] The single's rollout included a surprise low-resolution music video tie-in, directed by PinkPantheress and Lauzza, uploaded to YouTube on September 9, 2021.[32] As of November 2025, no re-releases or additional formats have been announced for the single.[55]| Date | Region | Format | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| August 13, 2021 | Worldwide | Digital download, streaming | Parlophone | Single release[55] |
| September 9, 2021 | Worldwide | Music video | Parlophone | Official video on YouTube[32] |
| October 15, 2021 | Worldwide | Digital download, streaming | Parlophone, Elektra | Included as track 5 on To Hell with It mixtape[58] |