The Story
Why it exists.
This one came from the community. The people spoke, the brand listened, and Bitch, Please landed in 2020 as part of a broader wave of fragrances with names that refuse to whisper. Confessions of a Rebel's model has always been crowd-sourced, tens of thousands of Scentbird members voting on accords, packaging, everything, and the community wanted something that could walk into a room and not ask permission. Blackcurrant wasn't the safe pick. It rarely is when you're building something for a crowd that wants to be heard.
If this were a song
Community picks
Bad Decisions
Sylvan Esso
The Beginning
This one came from the community. The people spoke, the brand listened, and Bitch, Please landed in 2020 as part of a broader wave of fragrances with names that refuse to whisper. Confessions of a Rebel's model has always been crowd-sourced, tens of thousands of Scentbird members voting on accords, packaging, everything, and the community wanted something that could walk into a room and not ask permission. Blackcurrant wasn't the safe pick. It rarely is when you're building something for a crowd that wants to be heard.
There's a reason blackcurrant anchors this one. It's darker than most fruits, denser, with a tartness that doesn't apologize for itself. That depth carries through the drydown, which is where this fragrance earns its attitude. The jasmine adds warmth, but the real story is in what holds it together: sandalwood, musk, and a whisper of oakmoss that keeps everything grounded. Classic perfumery materials doing something that feels anything but classic. The powdery woody base is what makes 'calm and completely unbothered' actually land, it's the difference between a scent that announces itself and one that just exists, confidently, in the space around you.
The Evolution
The opening hits first, blackcurrant's tartness arriving sharp and dark, raspberry adding a quick brightness that doesn't linger. Within minutes, jasmine takes over: sweet, almost intoxicating, wrapping itself around whatever fruit is left. The sandalwood arrives later, smoothing the edges into something soft. Then the drydown settles. Musk and oakmoss work together here, creating a powdery, skin-close effect that stays intimate. Projection is moderate from start to finish, this fragrance doesn't announce itself, it pulls you in. Lasts a full workday on most skin types, with the drydown holding into the evening. On some skin, that first hour projects more than expected before it settles into its closer, more personal register. Spray in the morning, and there's a good chance you'll still catch it on yourself by the next day.
Cultural Impact
Bold-fragrance names have always sparked conversation, but Bitch, Please landed in a moment when people wanted their scents to say something. The fragrance itself earns the title. It's not trying to be safe, and that refusal has found an audience. The jasmine-blackcurrant pairing gives it a distinctive character that stands apart from sweeter fruit florals or heavier white florals. It's the kind of fragrance that works as a statement, a conversation piece, and a genuinely wearable scent, all at once.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 2015
Jean & Len is a niche fragrance house that blends classic European aromatics with contemporary twists. Since its first launch in the late 2010s the label has built a modest catalogue that includes Highland pine accords, citrus‑spiced blends and garden‑inspired florals. The brand positions each scent as a small, wearable story rather than a grand statement, inviting collectors to explore subtle shifts over time.
If this were a song
Community picks
A track that carries itself without asking permission. Playful enough to keep things light, confident enough to hold the room.
Bad Decisions
Sylvan Esso












