Country artist Bri Fletcher returns this Friday with the official video for her single “New Her,” a reflective, emotionally grounded visual that brings the song’s message of growth and self-acceptance into focus.
New Her” by Bri Fletcher plays like a quiet reckoning with the past — and its music video turns that reflection into something you can actually see, feel, and hold onto.
The video opens with Bri driving up to her old house, but almost immediately, the past begins to live alongside her. As she steps into that space, she sees little her inside — playing, imagining, growing — and instead of staying separate, Bri moves through those memories with her. The timelines blur naturally, as if memory and present-day emotion coexist.
That gives the opening lyric, “I found myself driving by that house / was a right wrong turn accident,” a deeper weight. What feels like an accidental return becomes something more intentional. And when she sings, “swear I could see my silhouette peeking / through those sheer ivory curtains,” the video makes it literal — she’s not just remembering, she’s standing face-to-face with who she used to be.
As the song unfolds, we see her alongside two versions of herself — a child and eventually her early-20s self — and what stands out is how she shows up for each of them. She isn’t distant or observational; she’s present, guiding, and gentle in every interaction.
At the height of the chorus in the first half of the video, that connection crystallizes in a striking image: she and her younger self reach for the same dandelion, their hands touching and blurring together as one. It’s delicate but powerful — a shared action that bridges time, symbolizing innocence, wishes, and the quiet passage of growing up.
But the most emotional moment comes later. As the video shifts to her early-20s self — a version of her clearly overwhelmed — Bri holds her while she cries, softly singing as if to reassure her that everything will be okay. It’s intimate and deeply human. Instead of pushing past that version of herself, she stays, comforts, and carries her through it. It transforms the idea of growth from something distant into something compassionate.
That emotional weight is carried directly by the lyrics. “trying to catch a dream running 12-hour days” and “naive me on the balcony, praying away,” reflect the pressure and hope of those years, while “just for a second, swept up in a flashback / I fell into a little piece of my past” becomes something we actively watch unfold.
So when she reaches “’cause I loved her, but outgrew her, I really knew her / but now I’m a new her,” it lands with a quiet sense of resolution. We’ve seen that love — in the way she walks beside her younger self, in the shared moments, and especially in the way she holds her 20-something self through her pain.
“New Her” doesn’t dramatize growth — it cares for it. And through the video’s blending of timelines — the house, the living memories, the shared dandelion, and the quiet act of holding herself through heartbreak — it becomes something more than a reflection. It’s a gentle, powerful reminder that every version of who she was deserved understanding, and more importantly, love.

ABOUT BRI FLETCHER:
Bri Fletcher is a Fort Worth, Texas–born country singer-songwriter now based in Nashville. Her sound blends country roots with R&B and pop influences, giving her music a soulful, modern edge while keeping storytelling at the center.
She gained national attention on Season 25 of The Voice, earning a spot on Team Chance the Rapper and standing out for her raw delivery and depth as a vocalist. Since then, she’s collaborated with artists including Sammy Arriaga and Jake Hoot, and her debut EP Chapter One has surpassed 3.5 million streams.
Fletcher has performed at Nashville staples The Bluebird Cafe and Whiskey Jam, and she’s also a regular performer with Song Suffragettes, the city’s premier all-female songwriter showcase highlighting emerging artists. Her music has received strong support from several Spotify editorial playlists, and she’s been featured by outlets including Holler, American Songwriter, and Taste of Country. Her music videos have also premiered on CMT.



