Merry Christmas, Please Don't Call

Album: released as a single (2024)
Charted: 65
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Songfacts®:

  • "Merry Christmas, Please Don't Call" is Jack Antonoff's idea of a holiday card: handwritten, a little crumpled, and very much not asking you to come over for eggnog. Instead of goodwill to all, Antonoff offers something closer to a cease-and-desist order. The title line doubles as the melancholic song's thesis, chorus, and boundary: yes, Merry Christmas, and no, absolutely do not pick up the phone.
  • Antonoff said the song is "for anyone who has come to realize someone's been chipping away at them and does not intend to stop," and that it grew out of "something that happened to me a few years ago." It didn't feel right for a standard Bleachers album, he explained, so it became "an island... like a Christmas song."

    Antonoff framed the song in universal terms rather than tying it to a specific ex, friend, or family member and has declined to confirm any fan theories about who, exactly, is being sent straight to voicemail.
  • Antonoff premiered early versions at the 8th Ally Coalition Talent Show in December 2022, and the song continued to evolve across live performances before finally settling into its finished form in late 2024. In an Instagram post announcing the release, he admitted it "took a long, long time to finish writing this. Years."

    He said fans who heard earlier versions would recognize how the lyrics shifted between hope and despair. "Can be hard to tell the story of someone you don't want around and still find a reason to tell it," he wrote, suggesting the delay was less about perfectionism and more about finding a way to "hold the hope of rearranging one's life."
  • Produced and written by Antonoff, the song bears the familiar Bleachers fingerprint: synth-washed and atmospheric. The drum beat swells after the chorus, adding tension as the song progresses, while on the bridge Antonoff's vocals recede into the mix, creating literal sonic distance that mirrors the lyrical desire for separation.
  • The accompanying video, directed by Clare Gillen, places Antonoff amid winter imagery, performing the song as falling snow blankets the instruments. Gillen, a Los Angeles–based director who has also worked with King Princess, Julia Michaels, and Willow Smith, keeps the visuals simple and stark, letting the cold do most of the talking.

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