The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - Tearin' Up My Charts: How MTV's 'Total Request Live' (and Pop-Culture Democracy) Got Rigged
Episode Date: March 12, 2024Prepare yourself for the warm glow of late-'90s nostalgia: In the era of boy-band supremacy (and a little Korn), the 'TRL' countdown was America's high-school cafeteria — a daily election of cool fo...r youth culture. Until one fateful day in music history, twenty five years ago this week, when a chain letter set off a movement to hack the vote. Correspondent Yourgo Artsitas examines whether MTV's shadow government was protecting the the sanctity of our culture... with a lie. Learn more: https://trolldoc.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi there, my name is Alameen Abdel Mahmoud.
I am the host of the CBC Podcast commotion.
You need to drop by, okay, because that's where we talk about all things pop culture.
We talk about what people are watching, what people are listening to, like how the Smiths
got on a Trump rally playlist, or how Elmo became the internet's therapist, or how
DadTV got so darn popular. Comotion with Alameen Abumahmoud,
available now on Spotify.
Welcome to Pablo Torre, finds out I am Pablo Torre,
and today we're gonna find out what this sound is.
Today's show folks, brace yourselves.
If there's a railing or a wall or a post
of some kind for you to hold on to,
I urge you to do so. Right after this ad.
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So, we haven't done this before.
I feel like this is the first.
Ring the studio to the middle of Times Square.
Drag me out of the studio to go on a pilgrimage.
That's right.
And what was the language you used to describe where we're headed?
A landmark of democracy.
And the reason why I wanted you, Bradley Campbell,
noted public tory finds our correspondent.
Hello.
The reason I wanted you to be doing this episode is because I wanted you, Bradley Campbell, noted public to find that correspondent, hello.
The reason I wanted you to be doing this episode
is because I wanted to do an episode about democracy
and sports democracy in specific because it's an election year
and the power of the vote in sports is a story.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so I had this meeting, those sorts of meetings
that I have about ideas, you were there, Cortez was pitching something about Pat Riley.
He was hitting his ooze tanker in the corner.
Yeah.
I'm just vaping.
But the thing about it is I immediately went to just like NBA All-Star voting.
Yes.
Because there are some amazing stories about just democratic movements to get
guys into the All-Star game.
And this is my favorite NBA All-Star voting story.
2016, another presidential election year.
Okay.
Zaza Pachulia becomes the subject of an internet movement
to make him an NBA All-Star.
You may recall Bradley...
Tower of Tbilisi from the Republic of Georgia.
Yeah.
Big man, then with the Dallas Mavericks.
It's kind of insane that he would be an NBA All-Star.
He's not that good.
But what happens is all of these like Vine stars
and the actual president of the Republic of Georgia,
even Wyclef Jean gets in on it.
What?
He composes and performs a song about getting out the vote
for Zaza Pachulia.
Oh God.
Wow, it's insane. Vote Zaza Pachulia, yeah.
For the whole Star Game.
And the way all Star Voting works in 2016
is the top three vote-getters make the team.
OK.
And so number one, Kobe Bryant.
OK.
Obviously. Kevin Durant one, Kobe Bryant. Okay.
Obviously.
Kevin Durant, right behind him.
Number three, Kawhi Leonard.
Number four, Zaza.
Zaza, f**king patchouli.
He came so close that the next year, they changed the rule.
So it wasn't fan voting for All-Star starters anymore.
It was 50% fan voting,
25% media voting, 25% player vote. And so they changed it because of the Zaza Patrulia Democratic
Uprising. I did not know that because like when we were talking in the in the pitch mean itself,
we brought up Jon Scott. There's a surprise leader in fan voting for the upcoming NHL All-Star game
and his name is, yeah, John Scott, seriously.
The Coyote's tough guy has no goals in only 38 minutes of ice time this season.
A hockey player.
Yeah, NHL Enforced, who actually did get into the All-Star game, actually proved that he
could skate.
And did well, but like so many people told that story.
And I remember I was sitting there and we were thinking of Democratic votes and I was
like, oh, oh, I got one and
involves somewhat serious level of Democratic corruption
A story that I'm kind of my past is familiar. I do want to establish that
You are a guy who's done serious journalism about actual democracy. We did like stories on the volney
Brexit rise of Boko Haram Isis. Yeah, just some casual light reads.
It really makes you believe in humanity's capacity for love.
This one, though, involved the actual corruption
of a democracy.
Yes.
And there was a hack that happened
and involved a group of computer scientists
who successfully altered a national vote.
And it started in the early days of the internet.
And I remember pitching to you guys,
what do you think about that?
I was in, as soon as you said,
computer scientists hacking an election.
Oh God, and all of a sudden it was like that podcast trope of.
And the more I started to investigate it Pablo,
the more I realized that what I thought I knew
was actually wrong.
And the story itself was so much more wildly corrupt
than anything that I could dream
that it actually became a nightmare.
That is disturbingly accurate.
Your public radio voice is actually one
that has done those stories.
I feel like.
It has done those stories.
I feel like it wasn't that much of a reach.
But anyway, the whole reason why we're out here is because originally, you know, I was
like, we got to go to this landmark.
We even found a journalist who told this story, who'd been working on it for years.
A story that involves what used to be, what, the largest democracy in American pop culture?
Bigger than sports.
I want to make this very clear.
We've gone beyond sports.
Beyond sports.
Into where?
The institution known as Total Request Live.
The show is Total Request Live.
The channel is MTV. So, Yorgo, I am so glad you're here.
I need to make this about me for a second.
Because your odyssey, your personal odyssey into this story, which I'm so excited about,
reminded me of the way that my life intersects with it.
So this is Yorgo Architas.
He is a journalist, a filmmaker, a stand-up comic.
He's the guy that Bradley connected me with after he met Yorgo deep inside the very same
electoral rabbit hole while on a side from me.
Yorgo had spent years of his life, it turns out, reporting a passion project, a forthcoming documentary out this fall entitled,
Troll, New Kids on the Block, Total Request Live,
and the chain letter that changed the internet.
And when I watched this doc, I got a sneak peek,
I realized that not only does it capture my sensory memory
of the late 90s in a way that is just perfect,
it also is necessary for our investigation here. Because Yorgo happens to be the key to telling you the untold story of what the f*** actually happened on a momentous day in American pop culture
exactly 25 years ago this week. But what I first needed to do was just tell Yorgo all about how I was born and
raised right here in New York City where this entire thing takes place.
And I distinctly remember one day when my older sister, Tracy,
who's four years older than me, did something that had never happened in our
family, which
is she skipped school. Okay. To go to Times Square. Yeah. To go watch a show called Total
Request Live. I cannot tell you how many people are outside. Insync fans? I mean, it's absolutely
insane. Insync TV is about to get underway. Please welcome in.
They're performing the number one video on Total Request Live.
It's Insync doing Tenor Not My Heart.
Guys?
So my ears are actually hurting from the streets.
That was... you could break glass.
Actually painful in terms of just the sound of hundreds,
thousands of girls screaming for in sync.
And they were there to be celebrated on MTV in front of New York City and America.
They're really popping at that point.
It's tearing up my heart when I'm with you.
But when we are apart.
So the things that I am already like staggered by rewatching this with you in 2024, like
how perfectly late 90s, everything about this is.
Oh, the fashion looks like an old Navy commercial.
Look at it.
J.C.
Chazet, who's singing right now is wearing an orange button down with a sweater vest
over it.
It's the silliest thing you can imagine.
And then you got Chris Kirkpatrick.
Oh my God, wearing overalls and goggles
and has blonde dreads somehow.
Look at Justin Terbalek with the wet ramen hair.
Yes. Look at that.
The blonde curls just like piled the top.
I mean, they're crushing it though.
This is a terrific debut.
Everybody is eating out of the palm of their hand.
And they're the center of the world on MTV.
And my sister is in this studio.
And I know this.
There she is on the left.
Kind of looks like me.
Right there?
Yep, in the gray.
All the way back there?
Yes.
No way, have on that.
Yes.
That is Tracy Torre, skipping school, total delinquent to worship at the altar of Peek
Boy Band.
Have there.
Wow.
Sister Torre.
I mean.
Making television.
So that was September 1998.
That was the first month of this show's existence.
Yes.
NSYNC was king and the show itself became like the thing astride like music and pop culture.
TRL was a countdown show, daily countdown show.
They do top 10 videos and the whole idea was born out of, hey, we need to have some kind
of programming for children.
And so it's a top 10 list, which is like not a new foreign concept.
No. But how are they doing
it differently?
They were making sure that it was voted on by the audience and that it was going to
be a daily meritocracy of popularity.
Yes.
And every single day.
Democratic process.
Yes.
And in this democracy, who is getting elected? Primarily boy bands and pop bands.
Their fame got to be the point where not only were these teenage girls like and young people
across America, very familiar with them as these icons, but the people hosting the show,
the VJ. I mean, Yorgo, explain the VJ for people.
So the VJ is a video jockey. I remember when I was in elementary school, everybody either
wanted to be a veterinarian or they wanted to be a VJ when they grew up.
Yes.
And a lot of these VJs got massively, massively popular. Number one was obviously Carson Daly.
He got plucked from a radio station and just rose to this astronomical fame.
He was the guy introducing NSYNC in the top of the video we just played.
Yes, it's wild to me that nobody would know Carson Daly, but I guess I'm very old.
But he's on the Today Show now.
That's right.
But then there was other VJs, like there was like, I spoke to Dave Holmes.
He got very, very popular from that.
When it's a teen pop band, specifically when it's a boy band,
the teen specifically girls go crazy.
And suddenly it just had this snowball effect.
Every day at three o'clock,
like traffic in Times Square shut down
so that 13 year old girls could skip school
and come directly into Times Square and yell at a window This was an economy
Like the business of this the effect it had on music itself was real and sinks no strings attached comes out
It definitely had the biggest one-week sales of all time
And I think it might have eclipsed 2 million in a week, which is a bananas amount of units to be pushing
They're obviously on MTV every day as the number one or number two video occasionally.
It's basically NSYNC TV also is MTV at this point.
They had to make a rule where you'd retire a video
after 65 days.
The I drive myself crazy music video
where they're just in an insane asylum
because a woman was too hot.
I lie awake, I try myself crazy.
All five of them. A tale as old as time. Yeah, a tale as old as time. I'm a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little
bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little
bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little
bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little
bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a little Aguilera, Britney Spears, 98 degrees, Backstreet Boys,
and both Backstreet Boys and NSYNC,
there was kind of a rivalry, both from Florida,
and they both would just shut down Times Square.
And the funny part is that like the boy band supremacy
of 98, 99, it resulted, I remember like in,
in like running jokes about how no one can
possibly unseat them to the point where like the number three slot on the show
Was like a running joke. Yes, the number three spot was the corn spot with a K
Freak on a leash
Yes, is a terrific song and it holds up and a terrific music video like this is what's so crazy is like the n-sync videos were
Good backstreet videos were fine, but then you have like Freak on a Leash,
where there's a bullet dart through everything.
Like it's animated and it's live action
and couldn't beat Baby One More Time or whatever.
Could never just do it, could never beat God,
must spend a little more time on you.
Yeah, just-
Always number three with a bullet.
Always number three with a bullet.
Yeah.
Eminem was a major player in this era.
He's big because of T-ara.
He was a person, I mean, frankly,
who was palatable as a hip hop artist
to make it onto a mainstream show at that point.
Limbiscuit also, of course, on the countdown.
Very big.
Kid Rock, there was like the alternative people
for kids who had divorced parents who were like,
okay, we need some real stuff.
And there were the people who lived in the suburbs who were like, my crush doesn't like
me.
I need to listen to NSYNC or whatever.
Then Puff Daddy just showing up like running on a treadmill.
Probably imagining allegations are chasing him.
I think he was PDD at that point.
And then it was of course like Beyonce and Destiny's Child era.
Yes.
Tom Cruise would show up because everybody showed up to go speak directly to the youth of America.
It got to the point where T.R.O. was so popular that they could be like,
hey, Tom, Tuesday doesn't really work.
Can we move you to Wednesday?
Like that's how much leverage they had.
Right.
So this place, this studio, which was glass windows up above Times Square,
like the second floor or so, you could see in front of you,
just like this teeming mass of humanity who would just show up to be a part of the show.
Also, because it's pre-social media and cameras, being on television meant a lot,
even for just two seconds. Like it was cool to be on TV.
I know you've been on television for a decade, you don't care.
But a lot of people actually do care about
just having a one moment and screaming
hi mom at the camera.
That doesn't exist anymore.
Nobody screams hi mom.
Hi, my name is Michelle Marks and I came all the way
from Gaithersburg, Maryland to impress corn.
Freak on a leash because they're my favorite band
and I love when the bullet goes into the poster.
Woo!
The stakes of this show are now obvious, right?
This is an economic juggernaut that was capturing a genuine cultural zeitgeist when it came
to young people mattering financially in terms of cultural influence, in terms of all of
this stuff.
What that meant was that these elections, the Democratic election of who was going to
be the number one video, the number two video, all of that stuff really mattered.
I spoke to a TRL co-creator, Adam Freeman, about this,
is that they played off it mattering to children
and the fact that children and teenagers
have no control in their life over anything.
They have to find out when they go to school,
everything's very regimented
and all their decisions are made for them.
But when it comes to fandom
and who gets to be on this television show,
they got the opportunity to program it. And that was very intoxicating for them.
Well, TRL, we were all about connecting the kids with their idols. This was pre-Twitter,
pre-Instagram. You know, you couldn't just vlog onto Twitter and see what Britney Spears was wearing that
morning.
If you wanted to know something about your favorite artist or you wanted to make a connection
with them, you needed a place like TRL to give you access.
So in terms of the high school cafeteria that is American music at this point, embodied
by TRL.
100%.
If NSYNC is, you know, prom king, who's now like uncool?
Who do you not want to be associated with?
As of this point, I would say in 1999,
boy bands that were not cool would be boy bands
who are now like teenage to like young adult men bands.
And it's very uncomfortable to like watch them age
in that way.
And so with that being said,
the biggest boy band of the late 80s and early 90s
was New Kids on the Block.
They were what we now think of Nickelback and Imagine Dragons.
They were that in 1999.
New Kids on the Block by this point.
I remember them also from the time my sister was into them.
How old was she then?
So my sister was born in 81.
Okay, yes.
The New Kids on the Block. Like was born in 81. Okay, yes. I'm the new kids on the block.
Like they were in her locker for a time.
Step one, one, one.
We can have lots of fun.
Step two, two, two.
They were very, very big.
And they were all about talking about how tough they were.
And that did not seem like something that you'd want
to just think is cool 10 years later.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
By this point in 98-99,
it was essentially like watching something in black and white. They were the dinosaur
that everybody was off of because they were now entranced by the new shiny stuff.
They were just the old antiquated version of what we were watching now, and that just
seems lame. That's like, it's like my space to, to TikTok now.
Nuggets on the block also, they started off very squeaky clean, please
don't go girl, the right stuff, etc. And then as they went on they started to get
more street, you know, and they would do the overalls with one thing undone and
and you know interesting facial hair and tattoos and things of that nature. So
they got a little they got a little tougher as they went on.
And so the first boy band commits the cardinal sin of aging.
They betray the very premise of their brand.
They are now old and uncool.
Yes.
And this is all to say that they weren't on TRL.
No, which made them the perfect band
to do what ended up happening.
And I spent quite a bit of my life trying to get to the bottom of this silly story.
I would call it a catalytic moment in trolling history.
A chain letter starts going around.
I think we got to explain what a chain letter is.
A chain letter is a thing where people would write out just these screeds and just forward them
And then they would most the time threaten that all your family would die if you didn't forward it
And so in your subject line it would go forward forward forward forward forward forward forward forward
And then a whole all caps like you're reading Kanye West tweets
Please don't delete this yet!
And then you like-
This is a disturbingly accurate summary of what would occasionally populate my America
online inbox.
Oh yeah.
And finally, America Online started putting into spam, but it was like-
But it was like, essentially threats.
If you don't forward this along to however many other people, bad things will happen
to you.
It was like making people retweet with a knife to their throat.
A superstitious knife to their throat.
Correct.
I actually had Dave Holmes read the letter for us.
Hello, all.
This is a chain letter that I am starting.
Hear me out.
There's nothing I loathe more than chain letters well, except for the teenage, obsession, and
recent success of such male quintuplet vocal acts as the Backstreet Boys in sync 98 degrees and 5.
The idea struck me like a truck while I was watching TRL yesterday. TRL, for those of you
who don't know, is the abbreviation for the showcase of Carson Daily Witticisms that is
total request live on MTV. MTV itself being an abbreviation for music television. He's done his research. Here's what we all must pull together and do. Send this email to as many people as possible.
The message is simple. On March 10th, 1999, everyone who has received this email will
get online and before the airing of Total Request Live. Cast their vote for the new
kids on the block. Epic music video. Hang' Tough. You in turn will not reap that misspelled life long rewards and benefits if you do,
but you will laugh your ass off if it works.
It is the ultimate insult to popular culture.
We can make this happen.
It's just a pure goofy troll.
Just like, yeah, let's just thumb the nose at the people in power.
And so the thing that they want to infiltrate the Democratic machine that is TRL with,
the thing that is in control of music and culture in 99,
is specifically this music video for this song, Hangin' Tough.
Because you gotta be Hangin' Tough, Hangin' Tough.
It's not my favorite NKOTB song.
Hanging Tough is kind of like the perfect encapsulation of like a time that I'm not familiar with.
Yes, the late 80s.
This is what I think of when I think of 88, 89, 10 years early.
Just big McGruff the crime dog energy.
100%.
Seeming like, and this would be a thing that became very popular in the 90s, was it seemed
like they might have been posers.
You just barely got chin hair and you know, your voice is cracking because you're going
through puberty.
What the hell do you know about punching somebody with brass knuckles?
We have lines shaved in our hair.
We have rat tails. We have dist shaved in our hair. We have rat tails.
We have distressed denim.
We have early hot topic t-shirts.
We have fedoras.
We have dangling jewelry.
And so this chain letter, in so many words, is taking off.
Yes. It started, I think in like January-ish
to get to like the first ever thing
is impossible because it's through emails.
Well, who wrote the initial email?
Well, it is signed by a guy named James Vaughn
and it is impossible to find that man
because there is no saying whether or not
it's a pseudonym or not.
God, this is some V for Vendetta.
The voting mechanism though of how you participate in the democracy of MTV and
TRL. My sister would call up the hotline and vote for the options presented,
vote for NSYNC all the time.
You could vote by phone, which they had a third party that could that would collect
all the data for them and fax it over.
But there were other mechanisms of democracy.
Yes, you could also do it online if you went to mtv.com
and just there was a whole bunch of options
and then there was other
and you could type in what you wanted to see
and that's what they did.
And so this is where our producer Bradley Campbell
brought me an angle on the story,
which was about how there were these computer scientists.
This is how big the chain letter movement got apparently.
Yes.
That there are these computer scientists at a university that we cannot legally name apparently.
But they basically engineered this algorithm, this program that hacked the vote by repeatedly
voting for other and new kids on the block hanging
tough on the website over and over and over and over and over again to the point where
like this was now something of a movement and a movement to take over Total Request Live.
It was also public that you could see on the website how much the percentage was going
and it was starting to get to the like the high 60s for other.
So there's documentation across the internet now that this is a thing that there's a movement
forming. There are people who are cheering on the revolution and when do the people who run
Total Request Live and MTV realize this? When did they begin to take this seriously?
A younger person on staff goes up to the bigger head honchos and goes, listen, on the message
boards they're saying that there's no way they'll ever play it and to frankly stop sharing
the chain letter because it's a waste of our time.
But on the polls, it's very, very high.
So we need to do something about that.
And then after this conversation, they start really hunkering down and figuring out what
they're going to do.
We gave the kids the power, so if we somehow gave them the impression that they didn't have any power,
what are we standing on?
So, Yergo, this brings us to the fateful day in question. This is 25 years ago this week.
It is March 1999.
What a time to be alive.
And who was hosting TRL that day?
Dave Holmes was hosting TRL that day.
My number one goal was just to not burn
it all down when the regular host was out of town. But also make sure that before and
after every commercial, tease that something special is coming. Today's show folks, brace
yourselves. If there's a railing or a wall or a post of some kind for you to hold on
to, I urge you to do so. We have your top ten requests as always. Two big debuts in the top 10 today, one of which is absolutely going
to throw your mind. It's freaking us out over here.
And they tease this over and over and over again.
A debut video that's going to blow you away and we're going to send one lucky and sick
fan to their show. It's all coming. Oh yeah, that's how I know is because I just sat there nine years old just so excited.
Oh, I had to give me anything.
And we haven't even gotten to our big debut of the day.
Once you see that, you'll understand what I'm talking about.
All right, welcome back.
It's also just like this episode rewatching it is it just bathed me with a warm glow of
late 90s nostalgia
100% the turn of the century aesthetic that we we love so much
But right now let's get into the request. You ready to get into the request folks?
Let's start at number 10. Shall we?
We're turning to the countdown at number 10 today. It's sugar-ray with every morning
Now these guys are touring with Everlast right now
They're bringing down the house everywhere they play. They hit Seattle tomorrow night.
And making a dive on today's show down two spots
to number nine, it's the offspring.
Why don't you get a job?
Quite a contrast.
They debuted on a Tuesday show at number five,
came in like gangbusters.
Now they're already down to number nine.
What gives, folks?
And then number eight,
Dess, Fatboy Slim.
Fatboy Slim, praise you.
Yes. Fatboy Slim.
Fatboy Slim, praise you.
I have a crazy feeling.
Terrific music video.
Oh, just like VHS camcorder, almost like found footage, handheld style.
Of them doing kind of a flash mob, an early flash mob in a mall.
Number seven.
Yes.
Eminem.
Hi, my name is.
My name is.
My name is Lady. Hi, my name is. My name is. Hi, my name is.
Huh?
Yep.
Just, just gleefully white trash.
They switch over to number six.
Number six, Orgy.
Orgy, Blue Monday.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah. I love that song.
Stop making orgy sounds.
No, I used to love it and it was so awkward to go up to my mom and be like, I love orgy.
I really want an orgy CD.
Well, it was a great juxtaposition with number five.
Yes.
One of the most iconic songs, would say in American history. I mean, I went through puberty not just simultaneous to this song, I would argue because of this
song.
It's weird now to say this, but first crush ever.
It's actually mesmerizing as an artifact.
It's the schoolgirl outfit, which is the biggest thing.
Those lockers, that hallway.
At one point, she's holding a basketball.
And it's just not, it's simply not hyperbolic to say that it is one of the
biggest and most influential songs of American history.
Yes, fully agree.
And so TRL that day goes from that into...
All right, let's get back into the content, shall we?
Let's check in with 98 degrees.
They drop a spot to number four today.
Here they are with the hardest thing.
Oh, yeah.
The hardest thing, I think it's a boxing music video
where Nick Lachey wanted to get jacked.
It's very dissonant because the visuals are boxing.
Yes.
And the music is something that a boxer
would never want to hear before a fight.
And then, number three, in their slot.
In their slot.
Back to number three today,
here is corn with freak on a leash.
Banger of a video.
There's still movie magic in it.
You still don't know how they do the bullet stuff?
Nope, still don't know. Unfortunately, they bullet stuff. Nope. Still don't know.
Unfortunately, they were stuck in their spot again.
Yes. As is their cosmic fate.
Plus, we have a new number one and a TRL Top 10 debut that had
our statisticians kind of scratch in their heads.
We can't figure it out.
He actually scratches his head because he crushes it.
Yeah. He really is a pro.
He's terrific. I'm still just dying to find this out.
Yeah. Because it's like, I'm in third grade and it I am
Are they gonna do it? Are they gonna what's where's the reveal?
Where's it be? It could be anything and so we get in the commercial break that he throws to a Jennifer Love Hewitt
Neutrogena commercial
Hard to reach areas
And when they come back from commercial, let's check out the totals for your number two request.
I'm telling you, this is going to rock your world.
Now, I got 38% of your emails.
That's the highest number ever, highest percentage ever for emails.
Twenty six percent of your phone votes.
Now, yesterday, we got a few calls for this video.
We had some people outside holding signs.
We're not sure what happened.
It looks like you people just mobilized and put somebody on the countdown today
that has never been on the countdown before.
New kids on the block. I'm I'm going on the countdown before. New kids on the block. I'm gonna say it again, new kids on the block, hey, you
know, you ask, we give.
Just a kind of irate groan. Rumbling through America's democracy.
It's just being upset at a surprise. Because you can hear in the video people go, oh, and then they start reacting.
They go, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, no.
Even the people who were aware of the NKOTB movement,
I mean, it was unclear until the very moment
they put them at number two, ahead of corn,
that they were actually gonna show this thing
that in reality, most of America didn't want.
Yes, but there was just a very small contingent that grew to be a bigger contingent on the
internet that just wanted it so bad just to say they did it, just for the goof.
So I should point out that them getting number two on the strength as Dave Holmes cited of
26% phone votes is impressive.
It would 100% be very impressive if it was true.
So explain the truth of this fateful day in music history.
So I spoke to one of the handful of people
who actually counted the votes
and they straight up said that that number could not exist because
it's impossible that new kids on the block would be an option on the phone voting.
Wait, so describe how it is that phone voting works. So you had all these options and sync is
you know dial one if you want to vote for NSYNC. Yes. And new kids was not an option at all.
When New Kids was not an option at all, it's impossible that they would have been. They didn't put New Kids on the phone voting like ballot.
They no, of course not.
It was the whole troll.
It was just birthed from a galvanizing campaign on the internet.
And honestly, they closed the online voting portion or the polls 12 hours before the show
came up.
Why are they presenting fake numbers?
What are they? What is MTV and TRL? What are they doing here?
It's the kind of stuff that I'm sure executives would proudly brag about at
cocktail parties.
So this is where I do need to jump in and take a breath
and just point out that these executives at these hypothetical cocktail
parties got away with something.
This whole fake 26% phone vote thing, these fake statistics that they'd put on a graphic
on that episode of TRL that they had had Dave Holmes read aloud, all of it was sloppy, clearly, and clearly a clue.
Because I need you to remember what the co-creator of TRL had told us earlier.
He had said, he had told Yorgo, that the reason these executives all started freaking out
about the new kid stuff was not because of the votes.
It was about perception.
We gave the kids the power.
So if we somehow gave them the impression
that they didn't have any power,
what are we standing on?
They were not concerned about the votes
flooding their system conspicuously,
thanks to chain letters
and Bradley's computer scientist hackers,
they were freaking out after people started talking, very publicly, on message boards
over and over again about how they were concerned that MTV probably wasn't even going to count
their votes.
And so it's finally time to find out the answer to that question, that last part, about what
TRL was actually standing on this entire time, beyond just the new kids' saga. Because, again,
these TRL executives were not freaking out because their electoral integrity was being
compromised by an organized army of trolls. No, they were freaking out
because people were questioning their system.
They were freaking out because of a secret.
A secret they would successfully protect and deny
despite a sloppy fake vote percentage
and made up statistics for 25 years.
And they would have gotten away with it.
But I talked to somebody who was on the daily beat of counting the votes and accumulating the list.
And his name was Kevin Hershey, and he kind of laid it out for me.
We definitely had to rewrite the rules for a request show because if we were...
You gotta remember this was such a behemoth and such a money generator and it was...
If you allowed the other sort of category for true fans to just want their death metal bands to show up on TRL a group that we did want to program this show a
certain way. So that said, only certain genres perhaps were a part of the voting process.
That is a seismic revelation to me. Yeah, pretty wild that he said that.
And he's being very careful with what Allie's describing.
He used the word democratic to discuss the discussion
in the room of the executives who were deciding
what to put on TRL, which is a funny choice of word
because the definition of a closed door meeting
deciding the outcome of an election is anti-democratic in the big picture sets.
100%. They knew what they were doing the whole time.
Of course, yeah. They 100% knew what they were doing and they were being very selective
and kind of tipping the scales in any way they needed to in and so far as the democracy was...
Not a democracy.
No, no, not at all.
So just to connect all the dots here,
the reason why the show had this decision to make,
as we discussed when they were informed of the Democratic movement,
the grassroots effort,
they put new kids on the block on a TRL in some sort of high-ranking spot,
the reason they were so worried was not because
they were going to put uncool music onto their cool show.
Yes.
Because they had so many votes, they were worried because the foremost laboratory of pop cultural democracy in America was not actually a democracy at all.
There's no infrastructure to really, really count every single vote.
It's just a cloudy mess.
So, I wanted to say that I appreciate Kevin Hershey coming clean on this.
Oh yeah, I couldn't believe it.
We went over there, he was a sweetie, me and my terrific director of photography, Ben Brady,
we went over there and hung out with him.
He's like, I'm just going to serve you secrets, bro.
Just sit down and we're doing it.
Yes.
So his title was director of music and talent at MTV.
Yes.
The entire time, engineering what America's tastes were under the
guise of just reflecting the will of the people.
They were, in a a sense the shadow government
of pop culture.
And it gets even crazier than that.
They had certain data where they could go and look
and be like, oh, you know, Texas in the South
doesn't really like TRL that much.
So we should get Jessica Simpson, who was from the South
and put her on the style pad,
maybe put her even higher up, maybe one or two,
so you don't have to listen to the whole thing.
And then we're gonna kind of culturally gerrymander to make sure that this person
becomes a hit.
The reason why other music videos then were falling in the countdown was not because of
the meritocracy of votes, it was because there were decisions made that in this case seemed
to be finally and suddenly impacted by the fact that the conversation around new kids on the block being this movement were publicly documented.
Yeah, it's like it's quite an embarrassment if you just see everybody being like, oh, you guys are full of shit, and then you end up being full of shit.
You need to put them into the countdown. You have to, by all means necessary, figure
out a way to get there or else you're going to lose this idea of credibility that you
have and then you get the whole ruses up. Right. The whole thing's done. In my mind,
it's like, look, we never actually plugged in these voting machines, but now all of these
people are lining up at them and they're all leaving with the exit polls indicating they're all
voting for new kids on the block hanging tough. So if we don't put the most obvious exit poll
result into our countdown, people are going to wonder what about the voting machines?
Their decision-making process was the most fascinating part of this whole thing to me.
Why they decided to put it at number two. The reason why they put it at number two,
which is probably why they tease it so much, is because they wanted those people to watch as
much, the people that were trolling, watch as much as humanly possible, all the way, all the show,
and get all of those minute by minute ratings that are so crucial. And so they got it and they
decided to put them at number two. So then they kind of win, but they don't let the trolls fully win.
And then immediately after this,
and they get all the ratings for it,
which is just a brilliant plan for an executive.
I mean, also because I mean, of course,
like number one is going to be.
And sync, God must spend a little more time on you.
Yes, yes.
Always.
God must have spent a little more time on you. And it sounds like what they wanted to do Yes. Yes. Always.
And it sounds like what they wanted to do was manage this thing such that the people who were trolling them got some element of satisfaction, but not the full satisfaction that would have resulted in follow up reporting.
Which is what happened on the message boards afterwards where they were like, oh, okay, at least we know that TRL isn't totally rigged.
Right, yes.
What they did not count on was that 25 years later,
one of those kids watching TRL would be like,
what the hell's going on here?
Why the hell did that happen?
["Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy"]