Remi Chauveau Notes
An intimate, free‑flowing conversation with Mika, guided by Alice Underground, where he speaks with warmth and quiet honesty about the inner landscapes that shape him and the way he continues to create and dream.
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🦄✨ “Our responsibility as adults is to fulfill our childhood dreams.” — Mika 🐻🍭🐝

14 January 2026
@aliceundergroundpodcast « Je pense qu’il y a un problème… parce que la chanson s’appelle Popular et elle est chantée par la conn*sse. » Mika nous révèle les dessous de son feat le plus iconique. Alice Underground avec Mika, c’est disponible maintenant sur toutes les plateformes 💚 @alicemoitie @nouvellesecoutes #aliceunderground ♬ son original - AliceUnderground

Golden Pulse : Youth Electricity

Mika’s We Are Golden threads itself beautifully into the following article because it carries the same radiant message: the fierce, imaginative glow of youth that refuses to dim with age. The song was born from Mika’s desire to reclaim the chaotic, emotional electricity of adolescence, drawing on memories of dancing alone in his bedroom and on literary influences like Angela Carter’s The Magic Toyshop, which explores the turbulence and awakening of teenage identity. He described the track as “big sounding and aggressive, but in a good way,” powered by a gospel choir and a kids’ choir shouting rather than singing, embodying the raw, unfiltered energy of growing up. It’s an anthem of self‑worth forged from the confusion, rebellion, and vulnerability of being young, shaped by Mika’s own experiences of bullying and the desperate need to believe he was “special” despite everything.

🎶 🐻 ✨ 🕺 🌻 🌳 🌈 🧸 🐝 📚 🎨 💛 🌬️ 🔊 We Are Golden - MIKA




“Our responsibility as adults is to fulfill our childhood dreams.” — Mika

The thought arrives softly in the middle of the conversation, but it lands with the weight of a personal philosophy. In a few words, Mika reframes what it means to grow up: not a slow distancing from imagination, but a return to it, a commitment to carry forward the desires, obsessions, and inner worlds that shaped us long before adulthood set its rules. His vision suggests that the dreams we once whispered to ourselves aren’t meant to fade; they’re meant to guide us, to become the architecture of the lives we build. This idea becomes the thread running through his stories, his creative choices, and the way he understands home, art, and identity.

How the artist turns imagination into a lifelong compass

For Mika, imagination isn’t a childhood artifact to be stored away but a navigational tool that continues to shape his adult life. He speaks about creativity as something instinctive and deeply rooted, a force that guided him long before he understood it and that still directs him today. The characters he adored, the sounds that fascinated him, the emotional landscapes he built as a child have become the raw material of his artistry. Rather than outgrowing them, he treats these early visions as coordinates, returning to them whenever he needs clarity or direction. In his world, imagination isn’t an escape; it’s a map.

🐻 Childhood Dreams as a Life Philosophy ✨

In his whimsical forest‑side conversation with Alice Underground, Mika expands on this belief with disarming sincerity. Dressed as a giant bear facing an apiarist, he explains that growing up shouldn’t mean abandoning the inner child but protecting it, nurturing it, and giving it the tools to thrive. For him, adulthood is the moment when early fascinations can finally take shape—when what once felt impossible becomes tangible, lived, and shared.

🍯 The Bear Suit, Winnie the Pooh, and the Characters We Carry 🎭

The bear costume isn’t a joke—it’s a symbol. Mika recalls being obsessed with Snoopy and Winnie the Pooh as a child, and he sees in the Hundred Acre Wood a map of human complexity. Each character—Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore, Owl—lives inside us, he says, and adulthood is about learning to let them coexist. The softness of the bear, the melancholy of Eeyore, the exuberance of Tigger: all these emotional textures shape his artistry. Even his bond with animals, especially his horses Power and Arès, stems from a childhood dream he finally made real as an adult.

🎧 From Rejection to Revelation: The Making of an Artist 📚

Mika’s path to music was anything but linear. Rejected by every major conservatory in London, he literally waited outside the Royal College of Music to beg for a second chance. Once inside, he spent countless hours in the listening library, discovering vinyls that “exploded his brain”—from Steve Reich’s early tape loops to obscure jazz and electronic pioneers. These chaotic, serendipitous discoveries shaped his musical identity far more than algorithms ever could. For Mika, creativity thrives in randomness, curiosity, and the willingness to get lost.

🏡 Rebuilding Home, Rebuilding Self 💛

One of the most touching threads of the interview is Mika’s relationship to home. Having lost several houses during his childhood, he grew up with a fragile sense of stability. As soon as he could, he bought a beautiful house—only to realize it felt empty without the chaos, warmth, and people that filled his family home. So he sold it and bought back the house of his childhood, transforming it into a creative sanctuary with studios, workshops, and a giant kitchen. It’s not just a home—it’s a living archive of his past, rebuilt to host new dreams.

🎶 A Life Built on Color, Curiosity, and Connection 🌈

Throughout the interview, Mika weaves stories of Amy Winehouse, Pharrell Williams, Ariana Grande, and the golden era of 2007 pop, but the underlying message remains the same: art is a place where childhood and adulthood meet. It’s about sincerity, candor, color, and emotional truth. Mika believes that fulfilling our childhood dreams isn’t selfish—it’s a way of staying alive, vibrant, and connected to others. And in the forest, between honey jars and memories, he reminds us that growing up doesn’t mean letting go of wonder. It means giving it room to grow.



Mika’s new album Hyperlove opens a bright new chapter in his universe, blending theatrical pop, emotional clarity, and the playful sincerity that defines his work. It’s a project full of color and surprise, shaped by collaborations across genres and anchored in the imaginative spirit he’s carried since childhood.

Let yourself wander into Mika’s new universe and drift through the colors of his latest album Hyperlove: 👉 https://mika.store/products/hyperlove-cd

#Wonder 🌟 #Imagination 🌈 #Origins 🐻 #Creativity 🎨 #Continuity 🔗

Dream Continuum

Where Childhood Dreams Become the Architecture of a Life
Mika’s story reveals a quietly uplifting truth: his devotion to childhood dreams isn’t about fixing what was broken, but about expanding what was beautiful. The rebuilt childhood home, the bear suit, the affection for characters like Pooh and Snoopy, the serendipitous musical discoveries, the bond with his horses—all of it forms a joyful ecosystem where early fascinations become lifelong sources of energy. What could have remained fragments of the past instead becomes fuel for creativity, connection, and emotional clarity. In this light, fulfilling childhood dreams isn’t a retreat into innocence; it’s a way of carrying forward the brightest parts of who we were, letting them evolve into purpose, color, and confidence. It’s Mika’s way of proving that imagination doesn’t just survive adulthood—it can illuminate it.

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