Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • USA TODAY

    All the revelations from 'Dirty Pop,' Netflix's new Lou Pearlman documentary

    By Erin Jensen, USA TODAY,

    7 hours ago

    Lou Pearlman , founder of Trans Continental Records, introduced the world to the beautiful and vocally-balanced boy bands featured on posters that adorned our bedroom walls in the 90s and early 2000s. The ones who put a chokehold on our tween hearts with the poppy tracks in which they begged us to “ Quit Playing Games .”

    Pearlman also put the harm in harmonizing, swindling about 2,000 people out of about $300 million with America’s longest-running Ponzi scheme that spanned more than 30 years, according to a new docuseries.

    “There would be no *NSYNC , there would be no Backstreet Boys without Lou, period,” AJ McLean, a member of the Boys, acknowledges in Netflix's " Dirty Pop: The Boy Band Scam " (now streaming). “But some of us still have wounds that have never healed, that may never heal.”

    McLean’s bandmate, Howie Dorough, also reflects on his relationship with Pearlman ― affectionately referred to as “Big Poppa” ― in the three-part docuseries. *NSYNC’s Chris Kirkpatrick deems Pearlman, who died in 2016 while serving a 25-year sentence, a snake. Pearlman’s friends and former employees, also interviewed, remember him more fondly.

    Chet Hanks says he's slayed the ‘monster’: ‘I'm very much at peace’

    Pearlman also helped launch the careers of Aaron Carter, LFO, O-Town, Brooke Hogan and Natural, which included Michael Johnson, an executive producer of the docuseries.

    “I always say it's as if Lou was Clive Davis, Howard Hughes, Frank Abagnale Jr. and Bernie Madoff, all in one person,” Johnson, who worked on the film for 15 years, tells USA TODAY in an interview. Johnson, 41, signed with Pearlman in 1999 at 15 after forming a group with his friends. Although Natural broke up in 2004, Johnson continued a business relationship with Pearlman. Johnson had been traveling with Pearlman shortly before the con man's arrest in 2007, paying for the pair's international travel on his credit card at Pearlman's request without realizing he was a fugitive.

    Here are the biggest revelations from the documentary and a conversation with Johnson.

    *NSYNC, Backstreet Boys realized ‘There’s something incredibly wrong’

    The Backstreet Boys was formed in 1993, and *NSYNC was established in 1995. In 1998, Pearlman presented *NSYNC with their first check, says Kirkpatrick. The former waiter looked excitedly at the $10,000 payment.

    But, “the smart one named JC said, ‘How much do you make in a year at Outback?’” Kirkpatrick recalls. The group lawyered up and realized “there’s something incredibly wrong. Why are we still working our butts off for nickels and dimes, and Lou’s making millions?”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=19Fj6L_0ubnkkOX00
    Lou Pearlman, center, with the members of Backstreet Boys. From left: Kevin Richardson, Brian Littrell, Nick Carter, Howie Dorough and AJ McLean Courtesy of Netflix

    Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC sue Lou Pearlman and have to pay him

    Backstreet Boys filed a lawsuit against Pearlman in 1998. ABC News reported the group had made only $300,000 since their debut, while Pearlman pocketed $10 million.

    “We were blindsided to Lou being the sixth member of the group,” McLean says. “You’re going to make your management commission, but you’re also going to make exactly how much the five of us make, and you’re not out there doing what we’re doing.”

    *NSYNC members sued to get out of their contact, but the 10 members of the two bands ended up paying Pearlman a $64 million settlement, Pearlman’s attorney Cheney Mason says.

    “It's hard to say that it wasn't fair, because everybody signed those contracts," Johnson says, conceding they were "heavy-handed on his side.”

    Joey Fatone, AJ McLean promise joint tour will show 'magic of *NSYNC, Backstreet Boys'

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2O8FKe_0ubnkkOX00
    The members of Natural pose in front of a private plan. From left, Patrick King, Ben Bledsoe, Marc Terenzi, Michael Johnson and J Horn, with Marc Piacenza. Courtesy of Netflix

    Lou Pearlman’s Ponzi scheme explained

    In “Dirty Pop,” Johnson says Pearlman financed Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC using insurance claim money he received for his blimps that had crashed. (Pearlman’s diversified business interests also included airplanes and steakhouses.) When that money ran out, Pearlman made a terrible deal with BMG, the former record label for both bands, giving him "a tiny, tiny, tiny fraction" of what the bands made, Johnson says.

    Pearlman’s money came from an Employee Investment Savings Account, sold through his company, Trans Continental Airlines, that promised contributors high rates of return.

    Pearlman failed to pay legal fees to Mason, so the attorney filed a lawsuit in 2003 and contacted the FBI. The agency quickly discovered he had committed bank fraud. Those interviewed in “Dirty Pop” say that Pearlman’s airline never had planes, that he fabricated an accounting firm and forged bank statements and tax returns.

    What did Lou Pearlman do?

    In early 2007, Pearlman narrowly escaped an FBI raid on his Orlando, Florida, office and home by fleeing the country with Johnson. But that June, he was arrested in Bali.

    He pleaded guilty in an Orlando court to charges of conspiracy, money laundering and making false statements during a bankruptcy proceeding. Johnson says Pearlman phoned him “literally every day from prison,” although Johnson frequently didn’t answer. Pearlman told his former protégé about being the prison's bandleader and “choir leader for the Christmas show.”

    'Let's do it again': Justin Timberlake reunites with NSYNC for first performance in 11 years

    How did Lou Pearlman die?

    Pearlman died Aug. 19, 2016 of an infection following a surgery to replace a heart valve. He was 62.

    It's tempting to quote the *NSYNC song for which the docuseries is named and ask Johnson, “Do you ever wonder why” Pearlman did the things he did?

    “Through the boy bands, all of a sudden, he was this really cool guy, which he had never been before,” Johnson says. “Obviously, there's the sociopath/narcissist side of the story, of course. It doesn't exist without that. But I think the root of it was just wanting to be liked and having friends and people looking at him and respecting him in a way that he had never been able to accomplish just by himself.”

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: All the revelations from 'Dirty Pop,' Netflix's new Lou Pearlman documentary

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0