#TRL

5 items

Video thumbnail — Backstreet Boys - I Want It That Way (Official HD Video)
Celebrities 1996–2001 peak

Backstreet Boys

Orlando's harmonizing five-piece formed the template for late-90s teen-pop dominance. The Backstreet Boys' matching choreography and Lou Pearlman's boy-band machinery made them a TRL staple, an arena-tour juggernaut, and the answer to every teen magazine's "Who's your favorite Backstreet Boy?" quiz.

Video thumbnail — Britney Spears - ...Baby One More Time (Official Video)
Celebrities 1998–2004 peak

Britney Spears

A former Mickey Mouse Club kid whose debut single '...Baby One More Time' (September 1998) and January 1999 album catapulted her to megastardom as the defining pop voice of the millennium. TRL countdown staple, Rolling Stone covers, Pepsi deals, and cultural omnipresence through the early 2000s with 'Oops!... I Did It Again' (2000) and 'Toxic' (2003–04).

Video thumbnail — Michelle Branch - Everywhere [Official Music Video]
Music 2001–2002

Michelle Branch — "Everywhere"

A teenager who wrote her own songs and played her own guitar in a sea of choreographed teen-pop — Michelle Branch's "Everywhere" was the anti-TRL anthem that somehow became peak TRL. That driving guitar, the spy-on-the-cute-neighbor video, and the fact that she wrote it herself made her the authentic alternative of fall 2001.

The iconic MTV logo from the 1990s era with its distinctive blocky lettering and color design
TV 1981–present

MTV

MTV's 1990s golden era transformed the channel from music-video jukebox into a cultural force, with Total Request Live (TRL), The Real World, Beavis and Butt-Head, MTV Unplugged, and a rotation of music videos that defined the decade's soundtrack. Music Television delivered exactly what it promised: a place where youth culture, music, and rebellion converged on cable.

Video thumbnail — *NSYNC - Bye Bye Bye (Official Video)
Celebrities 1998–2002 peak

NSYNC

'Bye Bye Bye' and its jerky-dancing video were inescapable on TRL, announcing that five boys from Orlando could rival the Backstreet Boys. NSYNC was teen pop's other empire during the late 90s, built by the same producer and fueled by a rivalry that defined a generation.