Britney Spears barely survived 2007. She divorced her husband, lost
custody of her kids, went to rehab, shaved her head and assaulted a
paparazzo. In the midst of her public breakdown, she managed to record
an album, Blackout. Critics thought it spelled the end for Britney
Spears' career.
But Blackout turned out to be one of the most influential albums of the
aughts. It not only brought glitchy digital noise and dubstep into the
Top 40, but also transformed Britney into a new kind of pop star, one
who shrugged off mainstream ubiquity for the devotion of smaller groups
of fans who worshipped her idiosyncratic sound.
This book returns to the grimy clubs and paparazzi hangouts of LA in the
2000s as well as the blogs and forums of the early internet to show how
Blackout was a crucial hinge between twentieth and twenty-first-century
pop.