Five Years of Trying, One Montage
G Flip spent five years pushing at the door of the American and European music markets. Shows, releases, touring cycles – none of it moved the needle the way a single four-minute scene in a hockey romance series did. When Off Campus dropped and Episode 4’s montage between Hannah Wells and Garrett Graham hit streaming platforms, G Flip’s song “Bed On Fire” went with it – and the numbers shifted immediately.
Streams skyrocketed. Followers surged.
The Australian musician, who has been a fixture in the domestic scene for years, describes the response as something that has genuinely changed the trajectory of their career. Not bumped it. Changed it. That’s a specific word choice, and G Flip uses it deliberately when talking about what the Off Campus placement has meant – not just for streaming figures, but for what doors are now open that weren’t before.

The Scene Itself
The montage in question runs through the entire song. That detail matters, because sync placements in television are often clipped, faded under dialogue, or cut short when editing priorities shift. The Off Campus music team let “Bed On Fire” breathe across the full sequence, which intercuts Hannah and Garrett’s intimacy with mundane domestic moments – including, as G Flip noted directly, making lasagna. The tonal contrast is exactly what makes the scene land: heat and ordinariness folded together, and the song sitting underneath all of it without apology.
G Flip’s reaction on first watching was blunt: “I was like, oh my lord, I haven’t seen this much heterosexual sex in a long time.” They followed that immediately with a genuine compliment – “it was hot” – and credited the intercutting structure as the reason the sequence worked as well as it did. There’s no false modesty in how G Flip talks about the placement. They know it’s the best scene in the series, they’re glad their song got it, and they said so.
“Bed On Fire” was written from G Flip’s own experience with a woman. The fact that it was placed over a heterosexual sex scene raised an obvious question – whether that felt strange – and G Flip addressed it with the same directness they brought to everything else in the conversation. The song’s emotional architecture doesn’t depend on the gender of who’s in the room. That’s precisely why it worked for the scene, and why the Off Campus music team reached for it.

What Chrishell Stause Thinks, and What Comes Next
G Flip is married to Selling Sunset‘s Chrishell Stause, which means the professional win landed inside a household that already understands what it means to have a moment go wide on streaming platforms. G Flip describes Stause as proud – genuinely proud, not performatively so. That personal context adds texture to what might otherwise read as a straightforward career story. Off Campus has drawn attention for how seriously it handles its subject matter, and the show’s cultural footprint is large enough that being embedded in it carries real weight.
G Flip said yes to the placement because it made sense – creatively, tonally, and in terms of what the show was building toward. The montage is the emotional payoff of an entire season’s worth of tension between Hannah and Garrett, which meant “Bed On Fire” wasn’t being slotted into throwaway content. It was carrying the most-watched moment in a show the whole world is currently talking about.
Now G Flip wants a cameo in Season 2. Not in a joking, offhand way – they framed it as something they would do anything to make happen. Whether the Off Campus production takes them up on that is unknown. What isn’t unknown is that the ask is coming from someone who just watched a single television scene accomplish what five years of conventional industry work couldn’t.

The lasagna detail keeps surfacing in how people describe Episode 4 – the domestic absurdity of it, the way it punctures and deepens the intimacy at the same time. G Flip’s song is now permanently attached to that image, to that episode, to the specific cultural moment Off Campus is having in 2026. If Season 2 happens and the cameo doesn’t, G Flip will still have the scene. But the fact that they’re pushing for more suggests they know exactly what they’re standing on.









