Unstoppable
by Sia

Album: This is Acting (2016)
Charted: 28
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Songfacts®:

  • This swopping ballad finds a defiant Sia affirming her resilience. She confidently asserts:

    I'm unstoppable, I'm a Porsche with no brakes
    I'm invincible, I win every single day
    I'm so powerful I don't need batteries today
    I'm so confident that I'm unstoppable today


    The notoriously camera-shy songstress is an overcomer and she feels ready to face the world.
  • Sia recorded a remixed version of "Unstoppable" to accompany Gillette's 2016 Olympic "Perfect Isn't Pretty" ad campaign. The made-for-Rio reboot features a verse from Pusha T and percussion from Afro-Brazilian marching band Olodum.

    The commercial features four elite athletes:

    Neymar - Brazilian soccer player
    Ashton Eaton - American decathlete
    Ning Zetao - Chinese swimmer
    Andy Tennant - English cyclist

    We see them go through their gritty training regimens as they work tirelessly toward their Olympic dreams. And also, they shave.
  • The updated version was crafted by producer Ariel Rechtshaid, who has also helmed tracks by Vampire Weekend, Haim and Brandon Flowers. Rechtshaid told Billboard magazine that he picked chords to fit the visuals of the commercial, and adjusted them to match the key of the Sia song. 'I've been a fan of [Olodum] ever since I was listening to my parents' Paul Simon records," the producer said. 'Sia, who's a friend of mine, and then Pusha T came in towards the end because the song felt like it could use his edge and a verse on it."
  • Pusha's contribution came about after Ariel Rechtshaid contacted his management. The rapper recalled: "I came to LA and sat down with him as he played me visuals and pieces of the production he had done. He showed me the ambition in the visual Gillette put together -- super inspirational, super ambitious. A lot of it was about perseverance and struggle, and it showed the effects of working hard and reaching your goals, and that's what I got from it. He just made the sound that matched exactly what I was looking at."
  • The song entered the Hot 100 for the first time in July 2022 after it featured on TV ads for the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra.
  • "Unstoppable" logged up its 100th week on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart dated May 11. Only three other songs had previously registered at least 100 weeks on the listing:

    1999 "I Knew I Loved You" by Savage Garden (124 weeks)
    1997 "Truly Madly Deeply" by Savage Garden (123 weeks)
    2000 "I Need You" by LeAnn Rimes (104 weeks)

Comments: 5

  • Crystal C. from TexasThe last three lines in the second verse - I know, I've heard that to let your feelings show/It's the only way to make friendships grow/But I'm too afraid now. I’m glad to see that I’m not the only one who sees it
  • Maya from VaThank you Dan, I thought the whole world had caught the zombie mindless for a second there. She flat out says, “fool this town”, “tell you what you want to hear” (lying), hides her tears, puts on “armor” (self-aware about her mask). I agree with you, one of her best heart-wrenching songs of not being truly seen, “you’ll never see”, “I’m too afraid”, because she’s soooo powerfully hiding the pain. Maybe it takes one to know one, and even her song fools everyone. That “empowering” chorus, she’s being ironic.
  • Dan from MassachusettsDavidm is right. This isn't an empowerment song, it's a cry for help. The song is in F# minor, and in the chorus drops to the VI chord, D major, giving a burst of hope and then to A as the dominant V/VI chord (e.g. "I'm a Porsche with no brakes, I'm invincible"), but then it goes to very tense C# minor and back to the sad F# minor. Coming from the minor key verses, it creates an arc of someone trying to brighten up, rising to a peak, and then stumbling and falling back into a minor key - i.e. depression.

    This is also paralleled in the bridge sections ("I put my armor on, show you how strong I am; I put my armor on, I'll show you that I am") - the progression is D major, rising to E major, but then collapsing back to C# minor and returning to D major. This isn't a strong, armored line, but one that's trying to convince itself it's strong. It's also there in the lyrics - note the change between "show you *how strong* I am", and "show you *that I am*." The former is a challenge or a declaration... The latter is a hope that she'll be seen *at all*.

    Put together, this is a heartbreaking song, as are many of Sia's best works. This is a "go curl up sobbing in the corner" type of song, done masterfully.
  • Donna Lee from Bc CanadaAbsolutely agree w Davidm
  • Davidm from VirginiaNot to disagree, but I'm totally gonna. Song's refrain is totally empowering, great run music. However, read the full lyrics, listen to the slower parts and even look at the album cover: "This is acting". The song's not about empowerment, it's about the front she puts on while inside she's feeling alone, powerless, unheard and in pain. No one seems to know HER and she's even having problems building friendships because she's afraid to show the real her. So she puts her armor on and lives this false front day and night, meanwhile, pain. Song's quite possibly about one of those people who suicide while everyone around them is like "She was such a strong person, had everything going for her, it's always the quiet ones."

    I've a teen daughter who's awesomesauce, and this song made me pay more attention to her to make sure that she's got what she needs for the inner HER. Listening even random thoughts and ideas, being with her during study even if I'm not helping (she's smarter than I) just so she knows she's not alone, making sure she knows that absolutely nothing she says could possibly make me love her less. No issue, I really was already there for her, but it made me double-check. Sia, thank you!
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