It Feels Like The Entirety of the Music Industry is Now Fraudulent

Some will read the headline and say, “Come on. This is ridiculous and alarmist.” Others will say, “Well of course it is. You’ve been reporting on this stuff for going on two decades. Aren’t you being a master of the obvious?”
But over the last year or so, the game has shifted, and dramatically, and perhaps, catastrophically, especially for the artists who don’t have the financial resources to play it. Is saying that the entire music industry is fraudulent being a bit hyperbolic? Maybe. But maybe not. Sure, there are still artists and labels and managers out there doing things the right way and above board. Some of them are even breaking through and succeeding despite not participating in the fraudulent aspects of the industry.
But their numbers are dramatically diminishing, and their success is becoming less likely as increasingly you only have one real choice: play the game, or fail. As the old NASCAR saying goes, “If you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t tryin’.” And meanwhile, the amount of new artists actually breaking through in music is dramatically down, thanks in part to the financial burden of entry it takes, and the distrust the public has of the industry, resulting in listeners relying more on older, catalog artists for their music consumption.
Every day you could write yet another story about how some piece of corruption has been exposed, another artist that broke out did so by gaming TikTok, and another artist had their identity stolen by AI. But in truth, you’re just scratching the surface, and simply giving illustrations of much bigger systemic problems, while it still feels imperative to report on the music being released from artists with integrity unwilling to play the corrupt game as opposed to only focusing on exposing the hype.
What’s inspired the latest round of worry that the entirety of the music business might be governed by corruption is a report in Wired talking about the rock band Geese, their 2025 album Getting Killed, and the recent accusations of them being an “industry plant,” or at least the benefactor of market manipulations being true.
But it’s not really Wired’s reporting that exposed what was happening, even though that’s the article that went viral. It was a Billboard interview with two guys named Andrew Spelman and Jesse Coren at SXSW who have a digital music marketing company called Chaotic Good. In the interview they proudly spilled the beans about what they call the practice of “tend simulation,” bragging, “We know how to go viral. We have thousands of pages.”
Long story short, Chaotic Good is one of the many companies out there that uses TikTok influencers and thousands of fake fan accounts to launch artists by placing songs in the backgrounds of viral videos, for the right price of course. Frankly, this is nothing new, nor is artists, management, and labels paying for TikTok virality, or any other kind of promotion beyond the conventional publicist who artists and labels used to pay to work with reputable media outlets to feature artists and their music.
Earlier this year, Saving Country Music exposed how media outlets such as Holler and Whiskey Riff were charging for coverage. But again, this is just barely the tip of the iceberg. In these instances, some love to cite the old radio practice of “payola,” meaning paying radio stations and DJs to play songs. But when it comes to payola, there are actually laws governing this practice, and heavy fines and penalties if radio stations are found to be engaging in it. On social media and TikTok, it’s the wild west.
The braggadocios nature of the Chaotic Good founders who inadvertently exposed Geese as getting goosed by a social media campaigns parallels the same cavalier attitude of another company called WtrCoolr who spilled the beans on how they spread a fictional story about how Dolly Parton was Shaboozey’s Godmother in a way that helped send Shaboozy’s massive hit “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” into the stratosphere.
These companies are acting with such impunity and in an open-faced manner by turning around and bragging about it because it’s an environment with little or no consequences. Some, if not many of the artists employing these types of tactics don’t even know what’s going on. It’s being employed, if not mandated by their labels or managers. The performers are just going with the flow, and glad anyone real is actually paying attention, however that attention was garnered.
But these practices dramatically raise the burden of entry for artists into music. To get the deals, you need followers. To get followers, you need capital to pay companies like Chaotic Good. To get the capital, you need a label or backers. It becomes a self-licking ice cream cone where people standing on the outside looking in don’t have a snowball’s chance in hell to break through, which is the reason only about half as many artists are breaking through in music at the moment than were before the pandemic and the proliferation of TikTok.
Meanwhile, you have to take the accusations from a recent lawsuit against Spotify accusing the Canadian rapper Drake of being the beneficiary of “billions” of fake streams seriously. We know streaming fraud is likely just as rampant as underhanded TikTok campaigns. We just don’t know how rampant it is. How much can you trust those Spotify streaming stats? Is it all propped up via paid-for streams? Is that one of the reasons if feels like bad music rises, and the best stuff gets squashed?
Ironically, the crackdown on streaming fraud isn’t affecting artists like Drake, or Geese, or Shaboozey, who have big teams who can make any problems or accusations go away. Who is getting hit the hardest in crackdowns on illegal streaming are completely independent artists with no labels, or managers, and meager budgets who are getting swept up in streaming fraud crackdowns inadvertently, and have little or no recourse to resolve it.
That doesn’t mean breaking through organically is impossible. Though the accusations against Oliver Anthony and his song “Rich Men North of Richmond” being the result of market manipulation and Anthony being an “industry plant” were rampant, those accusations have never bore any fruit. It actually was a tuly organic moment.
But as the story of Geese being an “industry plant” continues to go viral, you’re seeing a significant amount of sympathy for them, or at least excusing of it, and from folks that you might think would be opposed to these kinds of underhanded market manipulations.
“Wild to see how many people didn’t know how social media-based marketing works,” says NPR’s Ann K. Powers. “The point of that Geese expose is in the last paragraph when the artist who ‘exposed’ the marketing plan said she’d do it too. Fair to not approve but don’t be shocked…”
But the reason people are shocked or having a visceral reaction to the Geese story is because all of this stuff is being done so surreptitiously. And no, it doesn’t feel the same as hiring a legitimate publicist who then persuades a third-party journalist to write about them. As guitar player and producer Sadler Vaden said in response to the controversy, “Here’s a mind blowing concept, Geese is awesome. Be awesome, play awesome music, spend money on an awesome publicist. Crazy!!”
What companies like Chaotic Good are doing—as well as big social media accounts who take payment for promoting artists—is presenting the specter of organic virality and reach, when in reality it’s paid-for. When a consumer reads a puff piece on a performer in Rolling Stone or GQ, they know the game, and can measure the information to come to their own conclusions. When it simply appears there’s dozens of average fans buzzing over a band—but those aren’t actually fans, their fictionalized bots bought to push a narrative—it’s the gaming of the mind.
What these companies and bands are doing is exploiting the very last bastion of creating a sustainable career without the help of the industry, which is cultivating a grassroots following. Manufacturing these grassroots fugazis is much more sinister because it undercuts the effectiveness of independent grassroots strategies that try to build fan bases up one fan and one human connection at a time.
Ultimately, just like you have with radio, there needs to be some sort of regulation, oversight, or at least, transparency when people are being paid to promote an artist or band. That doesn’t mean there aren’t still loopholes in the radio system regulated by the FCC. Label reps can still take radio programmers out for steak dinners and cultivate relationships that result in favorable outcomes, similar to publicists in print or even social media.
Is there any hope that some sort of regulatory oversight will be enacted over TikTok, illegal streaming activity, and other market manipulations in music? Of course not, at least not in the near term. There are too many other dilemmas and pots boiling over for the government to even identify the problem, let alone address it.
But what the entire music industry is doing by either turning a blind eye to it, or outright exploiting it, or even making excuses for it as we’ve seen a strange amount of when it comes to the example of Geese, is their undermining the integrity and public trust of the entire music industry.
Whether the entire music industry is fraudulent or not, increasingly the perception in the mind of consumers is that it is. They don’t trust the viral song, the viral moment, or the viral artist. They just assume everything is part of a corrupt scheme. That cynical, distrusting posture is why consumers are turning more and more to back catalog listening as opposed to supporting new, up-and-coming artists, ironically making these new artists have to rely even more on boosted exposure on social media.
The short-term gains of relying on TikTok virality and manipulations are already resulting in a long-term undermining of the industry itself. So when will the powers that be at the major labels, and organizations like the Recording Academy and RIAA step up to put new rules in place, petition the government to offer more regulation and transparency, and clean up the system before there’s no system left, and it’s simply the most monied interest in music that make it, and everyone else is left feeding off the scraps?
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April 16, 2026 @ 11:14 am
Consequently, all the value now to be had is in local live music. The robot economy can pound sand.
April 16, 2026 @ 12:08 pm
This is the reason that all this Live Nation business is so important. If Live Nation is able to monopolize local music, which they already have in certain markets, there truly is no opportunity for the future.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:20 am
Market manipulation has always existed but in the past we got better music out of it. I saw in a video of how friends of Heart would call radio stations from payphones requesting to play on of their songs. I don’t think it’s a damnable sin for some derivative of payolla to exist as long as the music is good. The Clear Channel takeover of radio killed independent stations. I see that as having done far more damage to up and coming artists.
While I disagree with what Chaotic Good is doing, how is this any different from major pop stars like Sabrina Carpenter being a nepo baby industry plant, and Chappel Roan having a dubious origin story and a very wealthy father? American Idol and The Voice have tricked most of Gen Z and A into believing that is a normal path to success – fabricate a sob story and go on a reality TV show which only exists for bolstering social media clicks.
I came across an interview clip of Steve Allen in the early 80’s where he talked about how American’s will only latch onto an artist after they are famous and THEN appreciate their musicality vs appreciating someone for their musicality first. Social media and the internet destroyed local culture so now bands have to fight for nationwide and worldwide appeal on social media because it replaced local band scenes.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:32 am
Gen Z and A don’t watch American Idol or the Voice dog thats boomer shit. Your last paragraph is spot-on though – an incredible band like Geese could play at your local bar and no one would give a shit unless they already knew they were famous.
Jeremy Pinnell’s “goodbye LA” is a rippin album
April 16, 2026 @ 12:40 pm
Boomer shit
Really?
April 16, 2026 @ 12:56 pm
Well, it objectively is. You really think Gen Z is sitting at their TV watching American Idol and the Voice in 2026?
Hell, even older Millennials long ago tuned that out. The people watching those shows are Gen X’ers and Boomers. That is who still watches network TV. This is just a harsh truth.
Most of your reply might be correct, but where Gen Z is finding music is TikTok and YouTube. Zach Bryan, Sam Barber, Dylan Gosset, Noah Kahan, all can credit their success to being discovered on TikTok and YouTube and their music getting shared via both the algorithm and young people sharing it with other young people.
Look – Gen Z has their flaws – like all generations do (Boomers included). But it has been clear for some time now (as seen by the success of the artists above) that a large number of that generation is yearning for something less “manufactured” and “real” in their entertainment. And American Idol and The Voice – only still on TV because those shows are cheap to make and it fills a time slot for the networks – ain’t where young people are finding artists.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:08 pm
Hey Mike,
I wasn’t talking about those shows. There’s so much trash talking on here, I think I was just too quickly responding to “boomer shit”. Sorry I had to make you write all those interesting comments.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:05 pm
I’m 73 and I agree. That’s Boomer shit
I won’t watch
April 16, 2026 @ 1:17 pm
Getting wound up over someone using the term Boomer shit is the most Boomer shit ever.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:20 pm
Boomer is literally taken from Baby Boomer so idk how you find that to be an insult
April 16, 2026 @ 1:18 pm
I was trying to make it obvious that I understand that they don’t watch it. Artists trying to make it will go on those shows and then leverage that exposure on social media. The majority of them are doing that.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:25 am
I was just reading about that Chaotic Good / Geese piece yesterday on Paste (via AV Club) — thanks for bringing it up here. 😀
April 16, 2026 @ 11:29 am
Trig, great article, few thoughts
1. Please link and credit Eliza McLamb, a great indie artist whose substack post “Fake Fans” started this whole thing
https://www.wordsfromeliza.com/p/fake-fans
2. I think a lot of people defending Geese are saying that the members of Geese are not engaging in anything immoral by signing up for a marketing campaign. I agree with this defense of Geese because
3. Paying for promotion, be that through ads or agencies like Chaotic Good, has become simply an unavoidable cost of releasing music (if you’re interested in having anybody hear it). It’s a positive feedback loop where it’s unavoidable, so you pay for promotion, which makes organic reach more impossible, which makes paying for promotion more unavoidable.
As an artist, you’re participating in a broken system, but thats a favorable alternative to giving up on your career. Hence why McLamb ends her article by saying she would happily accept one of these campaigns, despite its associated systemic issues.
Jeremy Pinnell rips
April 16, 2026 @ 12:17 pm
I made sure in the article to mention that we can’t assume any of the bands or artists that benefit from these companies are programs are actively advocating for them, or even know about them. I don’t take any issue with Geese personally.
“Paying for promotion, be that through ads or agencies like Chaotic Good, has become simply an unavoidable cost of releasing music…”
I strongly disagree with this mindset, and this characterization. The majority of artists are not participating in this, and never would. Maybe they will pay for a publicist, or ads on Facebook. But paying for fake fans to push your music, or for fake streams to make it look like you’re bigger than you are, that’s a whole other thing.
I’m also seeing this “well, this is just the way it is now” all over the place, so I’m not just jumping your butt Jim. But I do thing this is a wrong mindset. There are other ways artists can promote themselves where they don’t have to undermine their integrity.
April 16, 2026 @ 12:31 pm
I’d agree its a spectrum, where paying for ads is healthier than paying for a marketing campaign (that may involve “user-generated content”), which is healthier than buying fake streams outright.
But of those 3, i’d only say the last one really undermines an artist’s integrity. The first two are just playing the game. And since Meta Ads work (unfortunately), both are basically payola. The second one is just more likely to convert people to actual fans, which is the true goal for any artist.
In the Geese discourse, you get a lot of “who cares, they’re great!”. Which is stupid, but was made possible by the fans they made through the fake fan campaign.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:39 am
They got the name completely wrong, there’s nothing good about what that company does.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:49 am
I know this is bad, but now that I’m middle aged I’m past the point of discovering new music. I’m grateful that I’ve got a lifetime supply of music that has already been made that I like.
Example: I decided a couple days ago to listen to the new Ella Langley album because I haven’t listened to someone new in a long while. I listened to a couple tracks, then noted that there’s 5 writers for every song. I bailed.
It’s too tiring to find what I would consider “real” artists – those who write and perform their own music. Every song has 6 writers, not to mention AI, then autotune and other digital manipulation. This doesn’t even take into account the schemes you mention here which are required for me to even hear about an artist.
I guess music up through Silverada / Turnpike / Childers is where I get off the bus.
April 16, 2026 @ 12:21 pm
“It’s too tiring to find what I would consider “real” artists – those who write and perform their own music.”
The vast majority of new artists who I highlight/review here still fit this bill. It’s really only the few mainstream artists where this is the case.
Completely understand the “I’m old, and I know what I like” mentality. This is the natural progression of a music fan. We tend to take the music of our 20s and early 30s, and rarely look for anything new. But there are some really great newer artists, and they’re having a harder and harder time to find support.
April 16, 2026 @ 11:50 am
Maybe I’m just getting old, but it feels like all the shenanigans on social media are making it less likely I’ll pay attention. And if that trend continues, it’s not clear how independent artists can even connect with me anymore (other than here, of course). Significant success as an independent could turn out to be a short lived phase.
April 16, 2026 @ 12:15 pm
This is why I prefer geese’s solo work (Goose)
April 16, 2026 @ 1:45 pm
I immediately thought of Goose too. I don’t know anyone would run with a band name without Googling it first to make sure it isn’t already used.
April 16, 2026 @ 12:34 pm
What exactly is an “industry plant”? Like you find a good looking person with passable talent, put them in the clothes you want, give them the hair you want and then promote them? This question doesn’t even have to do with the article specifically, just in general I see that term and it seems like, well yeah, like the monkeys, John Cougar, olivia Newton John, like all these people are talented. Or does it have to be like Milli Vaneli to be an “industry plant”?
April 16, 2026 @ 1:22 pm
South Korea’s whole music industry runs exactly like that, actually. They take teenagers (or the parents sign them up or whatever), put ’em in camps and train them to be “pop stars” – singing, dancing, fashion, media training etc. dress them up, do their makeup, give them plastic surgery, give them songs to sing, and shove ’em out to the masses for consumption. That’s what “K Pop” is. The ones that don’t make it commercially get booted from their deals unceremoniously and nobody ever hears about them ever again.
It’s the most dystopian thing I’ve ever seen or heard of, and I wouldn’t put it past American companies to do exactly the same thing.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:46 pm
*cough Disney *cough
April 16, 2026 @ 1:37 pm
An industry plant is someone who was hand-selected and “groomed” to be a mostly empty vessel for provided output. There is no concrete objective proof that will hold up in a court of law for individuals accused of this but the evidence is circumstantial. There are artists who come up thru the Disney ranks who become major Pop artists with tons of plastic surgery by age 22. There are repeat stories of a personal trainer having power of attorney over artists. The mental breakdowns of Kanye and Britney Spears point to this. They both had a trainer/power of attorney who controlled their lives. If you go down the Youtube rabbit hole you will find interviews of people making the claims of artists who essentially work with the occult to summon demons to bolster their careers. Obviously you have to take each one with a grain of salt but the occult imagery in Pop music is bizarre. There is also the weird occult artwork and clothing (Balenciaga) that many top artists wear – artwork that includes bloody faces and suggestive exploitation of children. These are extreme examples I’m throwing out there but the idea of appealing to the occult for fame and riches is not new. The idea of a Faustian deal with a demon has been around for hundreds of years. The problem with confirming any of this is that none of us are on the “inside.” I know this sounds crazy but it’s one thing to understand why The Beatles, Elton John, Miles Davis, Eric Clapton, got as big as they did because of their raw talent. I can’t justify why Sabrina Carpenter, Jojo Siwa, any mumble rapper, Drake, got famous.
Without going full conspiratorial there an industry plant can also be someone who paid the way of their kid to become famous: Sabrina Carpenter (niece of Nancy Cartwright), Taylor Swift, Owl City. Or someone the industry put resources behind to make into something they believed would be marketable like Shaboozy and Lainey Wilson.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:54 pm
Ok. So that’s what I am saying. I thought it was a given, and just widely accepted that this happened/happens. Plastic surgery seems like a lot though. But I just listened to Jack Ingram and Kelly Willis talk about doing “media training” in the 90’s. people are told how to dress and do their hair all the time. Given songs they didn’t right. The disney thing is a great example. The partridge family, Ricky nelson, Leif Garret, New Kids, Ricky Martin, Will Smith, are these all “industry plants’? I thought it was just good business and (usually) shitty music.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:50 pm
An “industry plant” is not the same as a boy band or a manufactured artist who is sort of groomed by the industry as some are saying here.
What makes an “industry plant” is an artist that manipulates grassroots markets to make them look like they came up organically, but it truth was manufactured with a planned out media strategy. The practice of cultivating these artists is often called “Astroturfing,” because again, you’re exploiting grassroots energy to launch them.
This is what makes taking thousands of fake fans, and acting like there’s an organic movement behind them so damaging. We all know what a boy band is. When you take an artist or band and act like there is an organic movement behind them, you dilute the efficacy of actual grassroots growth.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:59 pm
Ok, thank you Trigger. That makes more sense. I responded to Straight above before I saw this. So “industry plants” are something that’s come after the internet right? because you really couldn’t do that pre internet I don’t think.
April 16, 2026 @ 2:04 pm
Also, sense I got you, Rodney Crowell released a new song with Guy Clark singing. Its not a song he’s released before I don’t think, or that I’ve been aware was (that’s not to say it’s not older, I’m just not familiar with it. Do you have any insight how that happened? Not A.I I hope. Just something they recored before Guy died?
April 16, 2026 @ 2:06 pm
It’s from a “lost” Rodney Crowell album called “Then Again” that will be released on June 26th. I will try to get an article up about it at some point.
April 16, 2026 @ 2:15 pm
Cool, thanks!
April 16, 2026 @ 2:07 pm
* since
April 16, 2026 @ 1:16 pm
This is as good a comments section as any to say that the reason I’ve read Saving Country Music almost every day for the last nine or ten years now is because it’s an antidote to dead internet theory. It reads like a blog from 2008–that is, written by a person and not by and for algorithmic slop, and likewise not beholden to any of these shady new forms of payola.
Country underground aside, it’s the last island of old internet.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:36 pm
It’s a terrible shame to see what’s going on here. I’m wondering though, if the entire music industry, even BEFORE tiktok and the pandemic, was significantly harder to break through than in the past.
Artists don’t put out one album a year any longer. they’re lucky to put out one album in three years. That means that songs, older songs, stay in the top spots longer, playlists remain stagnant for much longer (and i’m talking not only about country radio playlists – that goes without saying; i’m talking about streaming playlists too) and there’s only so much room on the playlist of the average person.
So along comes a new guy, and there’s not even any room on the playlists anymore for these guys. How is a a new guy supposed to even get noticed anymore in the traditional ways? Now, when we add your article on TOP of this, that they can’t even break into the industry in non-traditional ways, it becomes a total disaster.
April 16, 2026 @ 1:56 pm
Statistically, it is harder to break into the industry now than it was before TikTok, at least for top level stars. The industry launched half as many stars in 2023-2025 as it did in 2013-2015. This has been a long-standing narrative across the industry basically since the pandemic.
It is true that social media, streaming networks, etc. make the burden of entry easier for artists. But that also means there is incredibly more competition, stealing attention from more worthy artists towards less worthy ones. The peak era was before the pandemic, because you could still leverage the value of technology, but there still was a level of accountability and meritocracy involved.
April 16, 2026 @ 2:05 pm
Seeing the amount of apathetic response from the talking heads on the internet has me feeling like there’s no bottom to any of this. This “endless hustle economy” has everyone willing the sell their souls, culture, morals… whatever it takes to make it. Whatever that means these days. All hail the dopamine kings. Never been happier to be a small bar songwriter with no desire for mass exposure.