Becky G launched a new Instagram account this week, and it has nothing to do with her music career. The new page is called “Mazzy and Me,” and it exists entirely because of how much she films her pet.
The Latin pop star made the announcement on her main Instagram profile. “I take enough footage of Mazzy and Me to warrant us having our own @,” she wrote, inviting her following to give the new account a look. She described Mazzy as “a darlin” and asked her followers warmly to check it out.
The premise is simple and sweet. Becky G films Mazzy constantly. There’s enough material to fill a dedicated account. So now there is one.
It tracks for anyone who’s ever scrolled through their phone and found half the camera roll is their pet doing something perfectly ordinary but completely irresistible. The footage accumulates. At a certain point, it needs its own home. That’s where this account came from.
Celebrity pet accounts have grown into their own category of social media content over the years. Some celebrities treat them like a side project, posting regularly and building a following that rivals their main page. Others keep things casual, using the account as a low-key space for overflow content. Becky’s reasoning sounds firmly in that second camp. Those accounts tend to be the more enjoyable ones to follow. There’s less pressure. That usually means more personality.
Becky G has been one of Latin pop’s most consistent names for more than a decade. She grew up in Inglewood, California, and started uploading song covers to YouTube in her teenage years. Those videos built a genuine following. That early attention led to a record deal and her 2014 debut single, “Shower.” The song crossed over well beyond its original audience.
Her discography kept growing. She collaborated with Bad Bunny on “Mayores” in 2017 and with Natti Natasha on “Sin Pijama” in 2018. Both tracks were major hits across Latin radio and streaming platforms. She also played the Yellow Ranger in the 2017 “Power Rangers” film.
Throughout all of it, her online presence has stayed personal. She shares music updates, but also talks about family, faith, and everyday life. The “Mazzy and Me” account fits right into that. Becky didn’t frame it as a brand move. She said she already had the footage and wanted a place for it.
The account is live now, and Becky has pointed her existing following toward it. As for Mazzy, she arrives with a glowing personal endorsement from the one person who knows her best. That’s a pretty good start.
