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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=90TT2013>
<title>
July 30, 1990: Pop Stardom For Fun And Profit
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 30, 1990 Mr. Germany
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MUSIC, Page 68
Pop Stardom for Fun and Profit
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The New Kids on the Block ride a hot new trend: success and
salesmanship as part of the act
</p>
<p>By Jay Cocks--Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland and Kathryn
Jackson Fallon/New York and Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> "Growing up in Boston and dancing in the streets," says
Danny Wood, "you see a lot of things." Nothing like this,
though. Not even in Boston.
</p>
<p> It's as if the concert stage were a reef in some Sargasso
Sea of raging teen hormones. Wood and his four pals,
collectively known as the New Kids on the Block, dance, sing,
break and rap together while thousands of mostly pre- and early
pubescents trip over their own ecstasy. The audience shrieks.
Screams. And clutches at its authorized New Kids T-shirts
($20). Jangles its authorized New Kids buttons (three for $8).
Finally departs, hoarse, sweaty, satisfied and somewhat lighter
in the purse. This group has found the perfect place for
contemporary pop icons: close to the heart and close to the
cash.
</p>
<p> Milli Vanilli. Madonna. Paula Abdul. You can't be a pop star
these days if you don't dance. And what keeps you on your toes
isn't just a choreographer and a trainer; it's the sheer
momentum from all the money out there to be made, not by
performing but by succeeding. Success can't be separated from
impact anymore. Marketing and merchandising are integral parts
of the pop machine, just as a movie's box-office receipts
become part of its cachet. Show business is the latest American
spectator sport, and the number of weeks a tune stays at No.
1 is as critical as a batting average for anyone who wants to
stay in the game.
</p>
<p> By those standards the New Kids are heavy hitters. To date
they have sold a cumulative and commanding 17 million albums
in the U.S. alone and have had five Top Five singles, of which
three have made it to No. 1. Step by Step, their new album,
went No. 1 in the second week of its release. A new single,
Tonight, is on the way. So far, the three collections of New
Kids videos have turned over 3.3 million copies, setting a
sales record that surpasses even Michael Jackson's. Paperback
band bios have occupied the No. 2 and No. 3 positions on
best-seller lists simultaneously, even though both are
officially "unauthorized." "I looked through one of them," says
Jordan Knight, 20, the hunk of the bunch. "It's not good, but
it didn't put us down or anything." A glossier and more
expensive "authorized" biography has just been released.
</p>
<p> Marketing and merchandising have always been important. But
never have they been so prominent as they are today, and never
so smoothly subsumed into the performing personality. There is
a little debate about exactly how live the New Kids show is (is
it real, or is it lip-synched?), and quite a bit more about how
slickly the New Kids have been packaged and sold. The financial
phenomenon of the New Kids is part of the total experience. As
performers, Knight and his brother Jonathan, 21, Wood, 21,
Donnie Wahlberg, 20, and Joseph McIntyre, 17, are as sleek,
nimble and nifty as a pair of Air Jordans. The audience,
overwhelmingly white female, is invited to enjoy their moves
and their music. But their stage show, which has charm and
vitality, is an unabashed commercial celebration of making it
big.
</p>
<p> Commercial calculation is crucial for pop survival and
establishing a persona. Madonna sheds images like snakeskins:
the bad-girl boytoy; the sassy feminist; the confused pseudo
penitent; the ambisexual flirt; the wistful sex bomb, Marilyn
Monroe reborn from a peroxide bottle with a genie inside,
snuggling up to Dick Tracy. She is craftier and more gifted
than anyone else playing the game right now, but all her
identities have one quality in common. They are teasingly,
patently artificial. They insist on their own calculation. They
revel in it and induce the audience to do the same.
</p>
<p> Madonna can get away with this because she knows how to draw
on her reserves of mystery without tapping them out. Other
performers have no mystery at all, but that--at least in the
short term--seems to be no problem. An all-female group
called En Vogue looks to have lifted its name from the same
putative dance craze from which Madonna borrowed the title of
her most recent hit single. They also sing a kind of wax-slick
dance music that seems less written than cloned. Nevertheless,
they have a No. 5 hit of their own, Hold On, and an album
called Born to Sing, currently residing at No. 23.
</p>
<p> Milli Vanilli has so far survived the hilarious barbs of
Arsenio Hall, almost unanimous critical disdain and its own
supercilious egotism to score a total of five Top Five singles.
Even the hotly debated rumor that they don't do their own
singing in live performance doesn't diminish their commercial
luster. "If I'd heard the first Milli Vanilli record, I would
have signed them," says Geffen Records president Ed Rosen
blatt. Notes Jeff Gold, a vice president at Warner Bros.
Records: "They may not be what I listen to when I go home, but
they have good looks and dancing ability that appeal to the
kids. The same goes for the New Kids."
</p>
<p> Indeed, the New Kids are a paradigm of pop's renewed stress
on success and salesmanship. At their appearances, vendors
hawking New Kids merchandise will help pull in an estimated
$400 million this year. Giant video screens keep the crowd
engaged during intermission with New Kids multiple-choice
trivia contests (Q.: Who is Jordan's favorite singer? A.: Frank
Sinatra) and with repeated, insistent references to McDonald's,
which has pitched in a bundle to sponsor the group's U.S. tour.
"They're a very wholesome, all-American group that has the same
kind of family values that McDonald's has," explains David
Green, the company's senior vice president of marketing. "We
continue to search for new ways to get to the `tween' market:
a little too old for Ronald McDonald but a little too young for
the car keys."
</p>
<p> The New Kids are not at all defensive about being
in-betweeners. Unlike their musical elders, who might fret
about being corporately co-opted, these boys see sponsorship
as just another welcome token of their sudden, lavish success.
"Fans chasing me, McDonald's offering us endorsements--to me,
that's big," says Wahlberg, the group's offstage leader. "I
mean, I came from food stamps and nothing. I'm not going to
look at that and be, like, `Oh, get out of here, McDonald's.'
I'm like, `You want to work with me?'"
</p>
<p> At a New Kids show, everyone works hard. The boys sing (and
yes, sometimes lip-synch), slide and twirl around the stage in
a congenial mixture of old Motown precision choreography and
up-to-the-minute street-dance steps. Although they do some
occasional pelvis wiggling, the reaction they elicit is just
like their moves: high velocity but chaste. They would pass the
most stringent Tipper Gore litmus test. Manager Dick Scott
describes audience response this way: "These young girls, it
is the first time they are experiencing something called the
libido. The New Kids provide it, but in such a wholesome way
that it is refreshing. There is nothing lewd or vulgar or
frightening or threatening."
</p>
<p> With those time-honored rock-'n'-roll staples removed, the
New Kids stand revealed pretty much as they are: peppy,
ebullient popsters getting a big buzz off their success. If
they are pop product, they are product that gives good value.
As Michael Marsden, professor of popular culture at Ohio's
Bowling Green State University, points out, "You can't
manipulate an audience. You can take a group that's coming
along and you can package them. But if the audience is not
responsive to their music or to their style, you're never going
to force them down its throat." Says Warner's Gold: "It's
impossible to manufacture big acts that don't have something
big in their corner already."
</p>
<p> The big guy in the New Kids' corner is Maurice Starr, 36,
a Boston-based producer, songwriter and talent groomer with a
proven track record (New Edition). Starr put the New Kids
together in 1984, still writes or co-writes most of their
material and keeps a strong hand on the till as well as the
tiller. Starr's method was shrewd and had a notable precedent.
He scoured the streets of Boston to find a group of attractive
white kids. Then he forged a sound that borrowed liberally
from both black rhythm and straight-ahead pop, tutored the kids
in some moves and watched while...nothing happened.
</p>
<p> "It was a lot of letdowns in the beginning," admits Jon
Knight. The first album, released in 1986, stiffed. The second,
1988's Hangin' Tough, would go on to sell 11 million copies
worldwide, but, as manager Scott describes it, "not only did
it take off slowly, it almost died too." If Starr and Scott had
a formula in the New Kids, it wasn't working. The catalyst was
a disk jockey in Tampa who started to play Please Don't Go Girl
heavily. Then the New Kids hit the road, appearing as the
warm-up act for then teen-fave Tiffany. "All these young white
girls seein' us," laughs Knight. "I guess they fell in love
with us." Scott's analysis: "At first, Columbia Records tried
to make the Kids black, which is what made the act fail."
Success came, he says, only when "the pop people took over" and
the New Kids could become what they really are: "the perfect
Middle American group."
</p>
<p> The New Kids resent imputations that their show is canned
and that they continue to play Pinocchios to Starr's funky
Gepetto. Says Jon Knight: "I think we have a lot of
spontaneity, if there is such a word." Beefs Wahlberg: "People
don't give us credit. Janet Jackson sat down with her producers
and came up with the concept of Rhythm Nation. That's the same
thing we did with our album." If there is a unifying concept
behind Step by Step, it is one of forthright--indeed, brazen--commercial calculation, which is one thing that sets the
Kids apart from the Ninja Turtles and the Simpsons, who fell
into their fads and weren't made (or drawn) to order. "We
created a niche," Scott says. "And we filled a void."
</p>
<p> If that void should ever become vacant, lots of candidates
are waiting to fill it. "You can't take the New Kids and make
a clone," warns Capitol Industries-EMI president Joe Smith. But
Starr and Scott are way ahead of him. Starr's 12-year-old son
is opening for the New Kids as part of a trio called the
Perfect Gentlemen, whose debut album is titled Rated PG
(Senator Helms, take note). We may also look forward to the
re-emergence of Tiffany, whose album and merchandising are now
being handled by Scott. "We'll try to follow the same pattern,
make all the right moves for her," Scott says. "And we hope
that will create another profit center." There will also be an
album by Biscuit.
</p>
<p> This is not a singing dog. As any devoted fan can tell you,
Biscuit is a security guard for the New Kids. He is, Scott
swears, "a huge guy who, it turns out, is a great artist. All
the fans know him. He's going to be in the New Kids cartoon
series, he's going to be in the New Kids comic books. So it's
built in. People are going to think I'm a genius. But it
doesn't take a genius to see what the marketing potential is."
There must, inevitably, be a Biscuit T-shirt. Perhaps even a
Biscuit biscuit. Maybe Bart Simpson could be persuaded to do
an endorsement. One good profit center deserves another.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>