AD
play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

Listeners:

Top listeners:

skip_previous skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
  • cover play_arrow

    94.3 Rev-FM The Rock of Texas | Where Texas Rocks

  • cover play_arrow

    99.1 The Buck Texas Country's Number 1 Country

  • cover play_arrow

    103.7 MikeFM Your Texas Hill Country Mix Tape

  • cover play_arrow

    KERV 1230 AM

  • cover play_arrow

    JAM Sports 1 JAM Broadcasting Sports 1

  • cover play_arrow

    JAM Sports 2 JAM Broadcasting Sports 2

Mike FM Music News

Same college, different fraternities: *NSYNC’s Chris Kirkpatrick talks ‘Larger Than Life: Reign of the Boy Bands’ doc

todayNovember 12, 2024

Background
share close
AD
Courtesy Paramount+

The documentary Larger Than Life: Reign of the Boy Bands is streaming now on Paramount+, and it puts the boy band phenomenon of ’90s/2000s into historical context, explaining how girls have been screaming for male groups since the days of The Beatles, The Jackson 5 and The Osmonds.

*NSYNC’s Chris Kirkpatrick, one of several boy banders featured in the doc, tells ABC Audio that at first, The Beatles weren’t taken seriously because “they had these girls coming in and screaming,” adding, “They were dismissed at first, too, as being these little fad mop top haircut guys that just appealed to young girls.”

Watching the doc chart the rise of New Edition, New Kids on the Block, Backstreet Boys, Hanson, *NSYNC and 98 Degrees, it shows that for the most part, the guys have all emerged relatively healthy and happy. Chris believes the group dynamic that made them stars also saved them.

“You fight like brothers, but you also support yourselves like brothers,” he explains. “You realize that, as dark as it gets or as sad as you are … there’s four other people going through the same thing.” 

And that’s created a bond among all boy banders, Chris says: “It was all like going to this really cool college together, but we were all in different fraternities.”

The doc also stresses how young girls’ musical tastes have, for decades, been the true driver of pop music — and Chris thinks some kind of *NSYNC reunion would be a nice thank-you.

“We have fans that are still diehards and still into it and still keeping our name alive, buying merch or whatever,” he says. “And for that reason, I definitely feel like it would be a great thing for the five of us to do something for fans.”

Copyright © 2024, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

AD

Written by: ABC News

Rate it

AD
0%