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How the Josie & The Pussycats movie became a prescient look at pop culture 25 years in the future, according to the cast

Josie and the Pussycats predicted the dark future of the music industry, and none of us listened to the warning

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It’s been 25 years since the Josie and the Pussycats movie hit theaters, and today the film feels like a snapshot of reality. The 2001 musical comedy takes a satirical look at the music industry, revealing that major record labels are working with mega-corporations and the government to brainwash consumers via pop music. Musicians like Josie and the Pussycats become unknowing pawns in this conspiracy, as they learn that every successful artist becomes nothing more than a tool for commercialization.

While musicians have always had corporate sponsorships, the age of streaming, social media, and influencers have taken things to a new level. When Rosario Dawson, who played Valerie Brown, watches the movie today, she can’t help but see how the film seemed to predict what the modern entertainment industry would become.

“I think for me, it was just watching the beginnings of that,” Rosario Dawson says during a Josie and the Pussycats panel at Florida Supercon. “You had the Michael Jackson Pepsi commercial. You had some fire or whatever. But it was that beginning. And I remember just within a couple of years you had Britney Spears at concerts being like, ‘Give me a P, give me a E,’ like really selling it super hard and obviously going into influencer culture.”

 “[Our directors Deborah Kaplan and Harry Efont] caught it. We were really seeing the beginnings of that. For me it was particularly striking because growing up in New York, that used to be the thing, like don’t be a sellout. So, it was a real pivot. I felt it. Now it’s like Snoop Dogg has his own cereal.”

“It really flipped. I found that really interesting in that the film didn’t really connect with people at that time on this idea because it wasn’t as ubiquitous as we find it today. And that’s one of the reasons why the film holds up so well. When you watch now you see how ahead of the curve they were. And really like foretold this moment that we’re in. I think it’s powerful. I think it’s an important conversation.”


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Joshua Lapin-Bertone

Joshua Lapin-Bertone: Joshua is a pop culture writer specializing in comic book media. His work has appeared on the official DC Comics website, the DC Universe subscription service, HBO Max promotional videos, the Batman Universe fansite, and more. In between traveling around the country to cover various comic conventions, Joshua resides in Florida where he binges superhero television and reads obscure comics from yesteryear.

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