The music video, directed by Conrad herself alongside frequent collaborator Ari Weller, amplifies the song’s themes tenfold. Shot entirely in blue and black gradients, it features Conrad in a series of waterlogged settings: a bathtub overflowing into a motel room, a car wash at midnight, a beach during a gale. There’s a notable shot of her lying face-up in a puddle on a city sidewalk, rain pelting her open eyes—she doesn’t flinch. It’s unsettling, vulnerable, and magnetic.

Fashion in the video is equally deliberate: soaking wet denim, translucent white tank tops, smudged mascara. Nothing is accidental. Every drip is a visual metaphor for emotional saturation.

Teal sits between blue and green on the visible spectrum (wavelength ≈ 490–500 nm). In colour psychology, teal is associated with:

In contemporary fashion, teal has been reclaimed as a gender‑fluid hue, challenging traditional “masculine” blues and “feminine” pinks (Baker, 2022).

At 26, Teal Conrad has built a career on refusing to dry off. Her previous EPs—Cracked Porcelain (2022) and Sink or Swim (2023)—explored themes of mental health and toxic recovery, but “Wet All Over” marks a turning point. It’s not about survival. It’s about immersion.

In interviews, Conrad has described writing the song during a week-long power outage after a hurricane in her hometown of Savannah, Georgia. “I sat on my porch and watched the rain just… keep coming,” she told NME. “I realized I wasn’t afraid of the water. I was afraid of never feeling that alive again. The song wrote itself in one night.”

A multimodal discourse analysis was performed on 173 online occurrences of the phrase (collected via the CrowdTangle API, Reddit API, and Instagram public posts, Jan‑2024–Mar‑2026). Each instance was coded for:

| Code | Dimension | Examples | |------|-----------|----------| | C1 | Visual context (image, video) | Teal‑colored backgrounds, water imagery | | C2 | Narrative role of “Conrad” | Named character, user handle, metaphorical stand‑in | | C3 | Wetness indicator | Literal water, metaphorical “dripping” emojis, “soaked” adjectives |

Quantitative frequencies were complemented by close reading of 12 high‑engagement posts to capture interpretive variance.