A 13-year-old Canadian kid uploaded R&B covers to YouTube in 2008 from his bedroom. A talent manager named Scooter Braun stumbled on the videos and signed him.
For the next 15 years, Braun controlled everything. Tours, branding, business deals, public image. The kid became the biggest pop star on the planet, sold 150 million records, racked up 32 billion Spotify streams, and had three Diamond-certified singles before turning 25.
Then in 2022, he got hit with Ramsay Hunt syndrome. Partial facial paralysis. Cancelled the world tour. Disappeared from public life entirely.
Here's where it gets interesting.
In January 2023, he sold his entire 290-song catalog to Hipgnosis for $200 million. Every song he'd ever released. "Baby." "Sorry." "Love Yourself." All of it. Gone. At 28 years old, he cashed out his past.
Then he dropped Scooter Braun. After 15 years. No manager. No agent. For the first time in his career, nobody was making decisions for him.
Fast forward to this weekend. Coachella calls. He picks up the phone himself. Rolling Stone confirmed he negotiated his own headlining deal directly with Goldenvoice. No agent commission. No manager cut. $10 million for two weekends, and he kept all of it.
Then he walked onto the biggest stage in music, sat down behind a MacBook, and pulled up YouTube.
He played "Baby" from 2010. He played his bedroom covers from 2008. He harmonized with his 13-year-old self in front of 100,000 people. Katy Perry joked about whether he had YouTube Premium.
Half the internet called it lazy. The other half called it genius.
They're both wrong. It was a receipt.
He sold his catalog for $200 million. He fired the man who discovered him. He negotiated his own deal. And then he went back to the exact platform where it all started and said: I built this from a laptop. I'm headlining Coachella from a laptop. And for the first time in my life, every dollar is mine.
The kid from YouTube just closed the loop.
'The Guardian' acclaims Karol G's stellar performance with a 5/5 ⭐ review
— “an exuberant statement of Latinx pride and pan-American unity as well as the joys of absolutely lethal, ass-shaking music so relentlessly danceable I broke a sweat on the coldest night of the festival”
'The Guardian' acclaims Karol G's stellar performance with a 5/5 ⭐ review
— “an exuberant statement of Latinx pride and pan-American unity as well as the joys of absolutely lethal, ass-shaking music so relentlessly danceable I broke a sweat on the coldest night of the festival”
🚨 The Guardian atribui nota 100 ao show de Sabrina Carpenter no Coachella:
"Carpenter entendeu a missão: se você vai ser a atração principal do Coachella, é melhor entregar não apenas um show, mas um teatro. [...] a estrela pop transformou o deserto em uma revista teatral ambiciosa com cenários elaborados e participações especiais de celebridades."
BREAKING: Lady Gaga has just announced 21 new North American dates for The MAYHEM Ball Tour in 2026!
Presale begins Friday, September 12 — sign up here: https://t.co/kxFxHH3ZmT
See the full list of shows below:
🇺🇸 USA
• 02/14: Glendale, AZ — Desert Diamond Arena
• 02/15: Glendale, AZ — Desert Diamond Arena
• 02/18: Los Angeles, CA — Kia Forum
• 02/19: Los Angeles, CA — Kia Forum
• 02/28: Fort Worth, TX — Dickies Arena
• 03/01: Fort Worth, TX — Dickies Arena
• 03/04: Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena
• 03/05: Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena
• 03/08: Austin, TX — Moody Center
• 03/09: Austin, TX — Moody Center
• 03/13: Miami, FL — Kaseya Center
• 03/19: New York, NY — Madison Square Garden
• 03/20: New York, NY — Madison Square Garden
• 03/23: Washington, DC — Capital One Arena
• 03/24: Washington, DC — Capital One Arena
• 03/29: Boston, MA — TD Garden
• 03/30: Boston, MA — TD Garden
🇨🇦 Canada
• 04/02: Montréal, QC — Bell Centre
• 04/03: Montréal, QC — Bell Centre
🇺🇸 USA
• 04/09: Saint Paul, MN — Grand Casino Arena
• 04/10: Saint Paul, MN — Grand Casino Arena