It's All or Nothing for the
members of O-town as Making The Band continues to chronicle their fast-paced
lives, drama-filled loves and rise from struggling singers to pop superstars --
" (by Shawna Malcolm)
Ah, the glamorous life of a teen idol.…..
This particular November day began with Ashley Parker Angel, O-Town’s resident
heavenly blond, disguising himself in sunglasses and a hat in an attempt to
sneak past a group of giddy girls who were waiting for him in the lobby of his
New York hotel (it didn’t work). Then came a morning full of teen ‘zine
interviews and a quick sound check for MTV’s epicenter of Gen-Y cool, Total
Request Live, which O-Town will cohost and perform on later today. By the time
the carefully coiffed boy band – made up of Angel, 20; Jacob Underwood, 21;
Erik-Michael Estrada, 22; Trevor Penick, 22; and Dan Miller, 21—arrives in a
dimly lit room on the 29th floor of MTV’s Times Square offices, it’s barely
12:30, yet they already look beat. They’ve been allotted 40 minutes for lunch
(and not a second more), although nobody but the dreadlocked Underwood—who
immediately grabs a sandwich from the deli tray—seems eager to chow down.
Instead, as they converge around a small table, Estrada and Miller rest their
eyes, Penick halfheartedly check out a TV that’s been left on and Angel
attempts to take care of a little personal business.
Big mistake.
“Where did Ashley go?” barks the group’s tour manager, Mike Morin. Underwood
shrugs. “He just had to go to the bathroom.”
This hardly seems to make Morin happy. He scowls and begins anxiously pacing
the room until the momentarily MIA O-Towner returns. “I swear, right now we
feel like the busiest group in the world,” says Angel. “Because we’re on tour,
we’re always in a different place. I never know what we’re doing or where we’re
going. I don’t even look at the schedule anymore because it’s too depressing.
There’s no downtime.”
It’s been a week since the group hit the road as the opening act for the queen
of teen pop, Britney Spears. It’s their third tour this year and, according to
Penick, “it’s really hot.”
“On our summer tour, we were the
headliner and we [were playing], like, 6,000-seat places,” says Estrada,
perking up. “And now we’re playing to, like, 20,000 people a night.”
Not bad for five guys who were complete unknowns a mere two years ago. The
brainchild of boy-band impresario Lou Pearlman (he also put together ‘N Sync
and the Backstreet Boys), O-Town came into being after thousands of hopefuls
auditioned during the first season of ABC’s reality series Making The Band.
Faster than you can say “overnight success,” the group’s first single, “Liquid
Dreams” – from the platinum self-titled debut disc—entered the Billboard charts
at No. 1 in January. Its follow-up, “All or Nothing,” was the breakout ballad
of last summer (the video even routinely trounced ‘N Sync’s and BSB’s videos on
TRL). And the pop act shows no signs of slowing down in 2002: They’ll ring in
the new year performing at MTV’s New Year’s Eve bash, while MTB will jump from
ABC to the music network when the series returns for its third season January
19. Such momentum is even more impressive considering it’s come at a time when
teen pop has started to show it’s age. “O-Town came around toward the end of
the boy-band splash, as the whole phenomenon was losing steam,” says Chuck
Taylor, senior editor at Billboard. “But their material was strong enough to
defy the odds.”
The musical act isn’t about to take its success for granted. The first time AON
hit No. 1 on TRL, Miller and Penick were on a rare vacation in the Bahamas. “We
were in the middle of a basketball game with these Bahama dudes,” Miller
remembers. “When we heard [the news], Trevor and I were, like, hugging each
other and jumping all over the place. The Bahama guys were, like, ‘What the
hell?!’”
“It was awesome,” adds Penick. “It was really, really hot.”
By 3 P.M., the crowd gathered outside
MTV’s Time Square studios has grown feverish. While a good percentage have come
to see Michael Jackson and Enrique Iglesias – both will also appear on TRL
today—it’s hard to ignore the O-Town fans. Some, like Tasha Lazbobsky, 16, have
traveled from as far away as Vancouver, Canada, to catch a glimpse. Others,
like 18-year-old New Jersey resident Kari Culver, have come bearing gifts. “I’m
an O-Town artist,” she says intently. She’s holding a large placard on which
she has sketched each member of the quintet.
“Erik is my favorite drawing,” she says, “but I don’t have, like, a favorite
member. Everyone always ask me that, and it’s like, I can’t choose!”
More decisive is Jessical Hurlye, who, clad in a white strapless prom dress,
hopped on a train from Connecticut at 8 this morning for a chance to propose to
her favorite O-Towner via poster: “Marry me, Trevor!” “I’m 18,” she says with a
giggle, “so I’m legal.”
Like many fans,
these girls first got into O-Town not through their music but through MTB.
While O-town’s critics and peers have derided the group for being
“manufactured” for TV, its fans view the group’s reality-TV roots altogether
differently: For them, the show has served as the ultimate backstage pass, a
chance to observe every triumph and stumbling block on the boys’ rise to fame.
The fact that it also affords them the opportunity to spy on O-town’s love
lives – particularly Angel’s on-again, off-again relationship with hometown
honey Shelli – certainly doesn’t hurt. (For those of you keeping track, Angel
and Shelli are currently on again, Underwood remains devoted to his childhood
sweetheart and the remaining three heartthrobs are single.)
O-Town wasn’t totally sold on the idea of a third season. While it has gained
exposure from the show, the guys were eager to focus solely on their music.
“When the third season came up, we were just like, ‘How long is this going to
go on?’” admits Angel. “At some point, you just want some things to be
private.”
Eventually, O-Town was persuaded to do another season, on a couple of
conditions. First, the show’s cameras will no longer be on 24/7 (that means
considerably fewer shower shots, girls). And for the first time, the boys are
able to screen episodes before they air and veto anything they think represents
them inaccurately. “When we first did the show, there was a lot of stuff that
was taken out of context “says Estrada. “People who don’t even know [us] were
piecing the show together, and some of the story would get lost.”
Estrada recalls one such story line with indignation: “[In
season two] I happened to get sick, and now everyone thinks I’m this sickly
little Tiny Tim kid, which is not the case. But that’s what TV does. It’s
unfortunate, but we work through it.”
MTB’s producers understood O-town’s concerns. “We recognize that they are not
the five unknowns guys they once were when we first started [the show],” says
executive producer John Murray. “They’re artists now. They’re going to be a
little more controlling because they now have so much to protect.”
But lest you think MTB will now be all about Making the Band Look Good, never
fear, says executive producer Mary Ellis Bunim: “O-Town understands the
audience wants to have a glimpse into what’s really happening to them as a
result of this rise to fame.” This season, look for early episodes to focus on
the group’s songwriting efforts as well as a weekend getaway with their
respective girlfriends.
3:30PM inside the TRL studios. A petite, middle-aged blond woman is watching
the festivities with all the excitement of on of the fans outside. When host
Carson Daly introduces O-Town, she screams at the top of her lungs and claps so
furiously that her hands turn bright red. She is Penick’s mom, and she has
flown all the way from Rancho Cucamonga, California, to be here today. Penick
immediately spots her and gives her a little wave. “Besides Trevor, Dan’s my
favorite,” she confides, unprompted. “He reminds me of Trevor, but he’s more
responsible.”
When the group starts dishing about touring with Spears, Underwood reveals that
the teen diva requires a whopping 21 semitrailers to tote her elaborate set.
“You know, you don’t need all that stuff if you can really sing,” Penick’s mom
whispers.
7:20 PM. It’s mere minutes before O-Town will take the stage at Nassau Veterans
Memorial Coliseum on Long Island, and a few girls have asked Shelli, who is
sitting back by the soundboard, for a picture. It was the baby-doll voiced
Shelli who provided MTB with its choicest sound bite of the first season, when,
during a temper tantrum on the beach, she yelled at Angel, “I hate you!”
Today she’s wearing an itsy-bitsy white midriff top, skintight jeans, mile-high
platforms and enough mascara to put Tammy Faye to shame. Around her neck
dangles a blue VIP pass, which the girls eye enviously. “Ok, smile.” Shelli
flashes a fleeting, plastic grin. The girls thank her, but as they walk away,
one of them mutters under her breath, “@#%$.”
By the time the guys take the stage at 7:30, though, all is forgiven.
Immediately, the overwhelmingly female audience unleashes a wave of deafening
screams, which don’t seem to cease once during the 45-minute set. For anyone
who watched O-Town perform on the early days of MTB, this performance is a
revelation. The guys are confident, charming and (gasp!) actually decent
singers. “They are five very gifted guys, and they shouldn’t be lumped into any
category,” says the man who signed the band to its record deal, the legendary
Clive Davis. “Initially, everybody is doubtful, but if you see their live show,
these guys are the goods.”
The girls in the audience certainly seem to think so. When AON begins, they
immediately sing along, waving their little blue and green glow sticks in
unison. When the song ends, the members of O-Town stand still for a beat, just
taking in the moment.
“I understand the people who stereotype us,” Angel will say later. “I’d
probably do the same thing. But there’s something special here. All five of us
feel it. And we’re out to prove people wrong.”