10 reviews
I had no idea that any of this happened and the documentary was very interestingm It even explains a few song lyrics that I've had questions about for years. However, the AI of Lou Pearlman is just so very creepy and unnecessary. If it were removed and just a voiceover of those parts was put in it would get a much higher rating from me. I actually hesitate to rate it this high because it really was a super distraction from the actual content I wanted to see. The only other complaint is the reoccurring dramatically colored face lighting shots were not clear in their meaning, so just distracting as well.
- maggielipham
- Jul 28, 2024
- Permalink
I knew nothing about this situation in spite of knowing these bands by name.
It's amazing that such a scam was ever allowed to happen.
Good documentary footage and coverage of the situation overall. Coherent story and explanations.
I could have used a little more variety of the people in the clips, but felt satisfied enough. (You can't get everyone to film, after all.)
My criticism is mainly that they took a good source--the book written by the criminal--and used AI to present it. First, why use AI? Second, why use it here and make the source have an "uncanny valley" vibe?
I'd recommend it as an easy watch.
It's amazing that such a scam was ever allowed to happen.
Good documentary footage and coverage of the situation overall. Coherent story and explanations.
I could have used a little more variety of the people in the clips, but felt satisfied enough. (You can't get everyone to film, after all.)
My criticism is mainly that they took a good source--the book written by the criminal--and used AI to present it. First, why use AI? Second, why use it here and make the source have an "uncanny valley" vibe?
I'd recommend it as an easy watch.
As Episode 1 of "Dirty Pop" (2024 release; 3 episodes ranging from 41 to 44 min.) opens, it is the early 90s and Lou Pearlman, inspired by the success of 80s boys band New Kids on the Block, decides to launch a bonus band himself, and recruits what came to be known as the Backstreet Boys. In 1993 they launch their first US tour of high schools as complete unknowns... At this point, we are less than 10 minutes into Episode 1.
Couple of comments: this is the latest from director David Terry Fine ("Legends Never Die: The Sandlot Story"). Here he examines the life and times of Lou Perlman, best know for two things: (a) he launched some of the best boys bands ever (Backstreet Boys, 'N Sync, O-Town), and (2) he turned out to be a con man of the highest order, embezzling hundreds of millions of dollars. This documentary focuses on the latter, more than on the former. So if you think you will get the ultimate insight scoop on the careers of these boys bands, you will surely be disappointed with this documentary. If on the other hand you want to understand how someone is able to embezzle millions upon millions in a massive Ponzi that went on for years and years, you will be enlightened by this documentary, PLEASE NOTE: this documentary is not titled "Dirty Pop: The Band Scam", as listed here on IMDb and other sources. It is simply titled "Dirty Pop", per the documentary's opening credits.
"Dirty Pop" started airing on Netflix in late July, and I just watched all 3 episodes in a single setting the other night. No idea why this is presented in 3 episodes, rather than a 2 hr. Movie, but whatever. Long story short, if you are interested in the rise and fall of Lou Pearlman (as opposed to getting the ins and outs of the boys band craze), I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is the latest from director David Terry Fine ("Legends Never Die: The Sandlot Story"). Here he examines the life and times of Lou Perlman, best know for two things: (a) he launched some of the best boys bands ever (Backstreet Boys, 'N Sync, O-Town), and (2) he turned out to be a con man of the highest order, embezzling hundreds of millions of dollars. This documentary focuses on the latter, more than on the former. So if you think you will get the ultimate insight scoop on the careers of these boys bands, you will surely be disappointed with this documentary. If on the other hand you want to understand how someone is able to embezzle millions upon millions in a massive Ponzi that went on for years and years, you will be enlightened by this documentary, PLEASE NOTE: this documentary is not titled "Dirty Pop: The Band Scam", as listed here on IMDb and other sources. It is simply titled "Dirty Pop", per the documentary's opening credits.
"Dirty Pop" started airing on Netflix in late July, and I just watched all 3 episodes in a single setting the other night. No idea why this is presented in 3 episodes, rather than a 2 hr. Movie, but whatever. Long story short, if you are interested in the rise and fall of Lou Pearlman (as opposed to getting the ins and outs of the boys band craze), I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
- paul-allaer
- Aug 16, 2024
- Permalink
I watched this so-called "documentary" until halfway through the third episode, and I'm baffled. If you asked me what it's about, I'd struggle to answer. The basic premise seems to be "Lou Pearlman is bad," but beyond that, there's no real story to follow. Nothing happens, the narrative doesn't progress, and no significant revelations are made. The documentary just circles around, fixating on trivial details that either have nothing to do with the main point or everything to do with it-honestly, it's impossible to tell.
Who is Lou Pearlman? Where did his money come from? How did he connect with so many important people? What are they actually uncovering, and where's the proof? It feels like they had a thin story that could have been told in under 30 minutes but decided to stretch it into a series with no substance. There's simply not enough material for whatever it is they're trying to convey. What a waste of my time-I won't be finishing the series.
Who is Lou Pearlman? Where did his money come from? How did he connect with so many important people? What are they actually uncovering, and where's the proof? It feels like they had a thin story that could have been told in under 30 minutes but decided to stretch it into a series with no substance. There's simply not enough material for whatever it is they're trying to convey. What a waste of my time-I won't be finishing the series.
- samarabdulla
- Jul 29, 2024
- Permalink
I have followed the story of Lou Pearlman and the boy band phenomenon through various podcasts and other sources over the last few years, so I was already somewhat familiar with the events. However, seeing it visually brought a whole new dimension to the narrative.
The documentary does a fantastic job of weaving together archival footage, interviews, and some cleverly used CGI to alter Lou's video, which added a creative twist to the storytelling. It was also incredibly powerful to hear directly from the members of the bands themselves, providing insights and perspectives that only they could offer. Growing up in the '90s, I had no idea any of this was happening behind the scenes, so learning about it now feels both shocking and enlightening.
The documentary captured the rise and fall of an era that defined a generation, making it a must-watch for anyone who lived through the boy band craze or is interested in the complexities of the music industry.
The use of CGI, in particular, stood out to me as an innovative way to narrate the complexities of this story, making it not just a retelling, but an engaging visual experience that enhances the impact of the story being told.
The documentary does a fantastic job of weaving together archival footage, interviews, and some cleverly used CGI to alter Lou's video, which added a creative twist to the storytelling. It was also incredibly powerful to hear directly from the members of the bands themselves, providing insights and perspectives that only they could offer. Growing up in the '90s, I had no idea any of this was happening behind the scenes, so learning about it now feels both shocking and enlightening.
The documentary captured the rise and fall of an era that defined a generation, making it a must-watch for anyone who lived through the boy band craze or is interested in the complexities of the music industry.
The use of CGI, in particular, stood out to me as an innovative way to narrate the complexities of this story, making it not just a retelling, but an engaging visual experience that enhances the impact of the story being told.
- kristentwarner
- Aug 9, 2024
- Permalink
I love Netflix docu mini-series. I saw many of them, maybe even most of them. But this one.. it bothered me all the time I was watching. As usual, I did not know anything before I started to watch and after the first episode, I was asking myself, why are they still going in circles and never telling things normally? What happened?? They were dancing about it all the time. It was so annoying. So, they are making documents, because they thought the audience is smart enough to be interesting, but suddenly is not smart enough to tell things honestly and intellectually interestingly. So they chose to take all of the audience's dignity. Since when is quantity better than quality? It is obvious they do not have enough material to make top quality 3 episodes so they took the cheap way. Really disappointed.
- lildevil-sk
- Jul 24, 2024
- Permalink
- silverstone78
- Jul 23, 2024
- Permalink
This doc is absolutely terrible. It's suppose to cover 'the boy band scam' however up until half way through the series the topic is merely brushed over.
Half way through the series and they have basically only covered completely random points. The first episode spends a lot of time covering back stories, of Lou mixed with random stories about him with little evidence, no real point to these stories. Many make him out to be this great guy.. His childhood friend that was fawning over him making fake ID was particularly bad. They talk about previous scams but with no proof and no real judgement on what ended up happening. Did he maybe rip those people off? Wink and a nod.. In a documentary? So realistically they don't cover a single backstory well, they all feel 'touched upon', and the information they do focus on is incomplete and without a point really.
They cover the backstory of the two most famous bands he is affiliated with but in a very poor way. They cover certain artists backstories but not others. The impression I got was that they are really trying to make these boy bands out to be the biggest losers ever. Obviously boy bands did not age well.. but it's like they selected the most cringe worthy clips surrounding boy bands to really hammer the point home. You get the feeling of 'why were these dorks even popular', whereas there is surely some more flattering clips of them out there. They never really cover their rise to super stardom or really show what that super stardom even looked like. They're talking about sums of $200M but haven't or have barely even showed them performing sold out arenas. Like where did that money come from? You never showed the 'rise' part.
Then you have the adult boy band members who are basically on par in cringe with their earlier selves. They either dress like they think they are still a popstar or have extremely inflated opinions of themselves. Leather jackets and spiked hair on 40+ year old dudes is not a good look. Can only imagine the smells that would come off them if you grouped them all together in a room.
Then they talk about how Lou was screwing them in the most traditional way every manager screws their artists.. Their really is not a single 'scam' that was talked about, unless they're waiting right until the end to disclose it. An episode an a half in and their isn't a single point of how Lou is doing anything 'different'. What Ponzi scheme?
After Lou and the bands settles in court, it shows Lou in an interview saying these boy bands needed him, that he built them - That they couldn't do it on their own. Scene jumps to several members scoffing at the idea until one jokingly says 'except for justin timberlake' who literally was the only one of the dozens of members that ever had a successful solo career. It's probably the highlight of irony in this show. I don't even know the names of the guys that are responding to the comment, that is how right Lou was.
The documentary style is overall just creepy - with many clips that either feel misleading or specifically places to be creepy. Like the scene with the kids and Lou on the boat, or outside the courthouse a bunch of younger and singular older woman leading a creepy prayer circle. Or when those two girls come up to Lou and are basically crying saying 'Keep doing what you're doing' -presumably because they are obsessed with the boy band members they perceive he created. Even many comments directly relate Lou and his antics to the Beatles but then never make any mention of it. Examples being: Starting their careers in Germany, referring to himself as the 6th member and others.
The only thing that seemed to be news was Lou Pearlmans previous business venture and more specifically his desire to work with a former Nazi. That story was basically the problem with this documentary in a nutshell. "We heard he got insurance money" "He moved to florida after". Like zero completion to the story, zero confirmation any scam took place, and just conjecture about why he would have done what they haven't proven he did..
Half way through the series and they have basically only covered completely random points. The first episode spends a lot of time covering back stories, of Lou mixed with random stories about him with little evidence, no real point to these stories. Many make him out to be this great guy.. His childhood friend that was fawning over him making fake ID was particularly bad. They talk about previous scams but with no proof and no real judgement on what ended up happening. Did he maybe rip those people off? Wink and a nod.. In a documentary? So realistically they don't cover a single backstory well, they all feel 'touched upon', and the information they do focus on is incomplete and without a point really.
They cover the backstory of the two most famous bands he is affiliated with but in a very poor way. They cover certain artists backstories but not others. The impression I got was that they are really trying to make these boy bands out to be the biggest losers ever. Obviously boy bands did not age well.. but it's like they selected the most cringe worthy clips surrounding boy bands to really hammer the point home. You get the feeling of 'why were these dorks even popular', whereas there is surely some more flattering clips of them out there. They never really cover their rise to super stardom or really show what that super stardom even looked like. They're talking about sums of $200M but haven't or have barely even showed them performing sold out arenas. Like where did that money come from? You never showed the 'rise' part.
Then you have the adult boy band members who are basically on par in cringe with their earlier selves. They either dress like they think they are still a popstar or have extremely inflated opinions of themselves. Leather jackets and spiked hair on 40+ year old dudes is not a good look. Can only imagine the smells that would come off them if you grouped them all together in a room.
Then they talk about how Lou was screwing them in the most traditional way every manager screws their artists.. Their really is not a single 'scam' that was talked about, unless they're waiting right until the end to disclose it. An episode an a half in and their isn't a single point of how Lou is doing anything 'different'. What Ponzi scheme?
After Lou and the bands settles in court, it shows Lou in an interview saying these boy bands needed him, that he built them - That they couldn't do it on their own. Scene jumps to several members scoffing at the idea until one jokingly says 'except for justin timberlake' who literally was the only one of the dozens of members that ever had a successful solo career. It's probably the highlight of irony in this show. I don't even know the names of the guys that are responding to the comment, that is how right Lou was.
The documentary style is overall just creepy - with many clips that either feel misleading or specifically places to be creepy. Like the scene with the kids and Lou on the boat, or outside the courthouse a bunch of younger and singular older woman leading a creepy prayer circle. Or when those two girls come up to Lou and are basically crying saying 'Keep doing what you're doing' -presumably because they are obsessed with the boy band members they perceive he created. Even many comments directly relate Lou and his antics to the Beatles but then never make any mention of it. Examples being: Starting their careers in Germany, referring to himself as the 6th member and others.
The only thing that seemed to be news was Lou Pearlmans previous business venture and more specifically his desire to work with a former Nazi. That story was basically the problem with this documentary in a nutshell. "We heard he got insurance money" "He moved to florida after". Like zero completion to the story, zero confirmation any scam took place, and just conjecture about why he would have done what they haven't proven he did..
Or boy too heavy ... well no puns intended. And we won't be doing any shaming here - well in reviewing the show that is. Because there are some "shots" fired - especially from a former N'Sync band member. Now I am not writing his name - because I forgot it, but even more so, because most wouldn't know who it is anyway. Most only know Justin Timberlake (and not just because of his drug problem lately - I think it was DUI, but I don't follow that stuff closely anyway).
Now the documentary show does take its time ... and I understand if some have issues with that. It is a bit long and yet it won't give you backstories on every band member we get to see here ... for that it is too short. Still give it time and it will deliver its points! Watching this halfway through won't really give you the full picture! That said, if you get bored easily it's ok to not "waste your time" ... just don't tell others what to do with their time - especially do not buy into the scheme. Big Poppa - yes he did "good" things ... and yes music would not be the same today without him ... still we should be able to separate the two things and be able to judge him on different levels ... now that will be up to you the viewer of course ... a lot of questions remain unanswered ... still!
Now the documentary show does take its time ... and I understand if some have issues with that. It is a bit long and yet it won't give you backstories on every band member we get to see here ... for that it is too short. Still give it time and it will deliver its points! Watching this halfway through won't really give you the full picture! That said, if you get bored easily it's ok to not "waste your time" ... just don't tell others what to do with their time - especially do not buy into the scheme. Big Poppa - yes he did "good" things ... and yes music would not be the same today without him ... still we should be able to separate the two things and be able to judge him on different levels ... now that will be up to you the viewer of course ... a lot of questions remain unanswered ... still!