Lipstick Killer Releases “Have A Nice Day” Music Video
On January 23, Lipstick Killer released her new EP Cigarettes & Heartbreak Vol. 1 as a raw document of emotional fallout and self-reclamation. The five-track project includes previously released fan favorites “Who Dat,” “Delaware Ave,” “Darkness,” and “Have A Nice Day,” alongside the new track “Real.” Together, the songs trace the collapse of a five-year relationship Lipstick Killer once believed would end in marriage, moving through betrayal, rage, and survival with little interest in resolution for anyone but herself.
Alongside the EP’s release, Lipstick Killer dropped an official music video for “Have A Nice Day (feat. Zaydamane).” Where earlier tracks sit inside the wreckage, “Have A Nice Day” documents the moment of emotional departure—the instant when grief gives way to clarity.
The song’s chorus cuts straight to the point: “Found out you are really a snake / I’m good, love, have a nice day.” In the video, that metaphor becomes literal. Lipstick Killer is seen holding a snake, transforming betrayal into something visible, and no longer threatening. The image reads as control. Elsewhere, the tone loosens. She’s smiling, vibing, visibly unburdened.
Visually, the video also marks a shift in presentation. Known for her platinum blonde hair, Lipstick Killer introduces subtle streaks of color woven through the blonde—shades of red, blue, etc. It mirrors the emotional posture of the song: changed, not undone.
“I chose me and kept it moving,” Lipstick Killer wrote in one post promoting the video. In another, she added: “Friendly reminder: protecting your peace is a flex.” Both captions were shared via her official Instagram account alongside the video’s rollout.
Within the broader arc of Cigarettes & Heartbreak Vol. 1, “Have A Nice Day” functions as a turning point. Tracks like “Delaware Ave.” freeze betrayal into place, while “Darkness,” written by Lipstick Killer and produced by Greg Zola, dwells in obsession and emotional collapse. “Have A Nice Day,” by contrast, is about release—not forgiveness, not closure, but distance.
The EP speaks to women choosing themselves after betrayal; “Have A Nice Day” makes it final.


