Last year, I covered Billboard’s cover story on The Chainsmokers. The Chainsmokers consist of two douche-bros named Alex Pall and Drew Taggart. Drew is the younger, skinnier one, and Adam is the taller, douche-bro-ier looking one. The Billboard profile was, as I called it, “the portrait of two d-bag frat-bros.” They bragged about “p-ssy,” they name-dropped, they talked about measuring their douche-members. I even suggested at the time that “this is all some sort of bro-tastic performance art.” Guess what? That’s what Alex and Drew claim now. That Billboard misrepresented them. They aren’t really douche-bros, they are IRONIC douche-bros. Their performance for Billboard was meta-commentary on the douche-bro lifestyle. For realsies, bruh. Alex and Drew have a new profile in NME and you can read the whole piece here. Some highlights:
Drew on how they’re more than just dumb bros: “People are like, ‘Oh my God, they’re such bros,.’ And we’re like, ‘No! We’re making fun of bros!’”Alex, in particular, is determined to set the record straight. “I hope people can walk away from this article with a deeper sense of our purpose as artists and our true characters. We’re in this grey area where people are like, ‘I don’t get it, are these guys a**holes or not?’ I promise you, we’re not a**holes.”
Alex on the Billboard profile that made them seem like douches: “It affects you, because you don’t know how people are going to see that – [whether they’ll] take it at face value and walk away feeling you are that person. It’s not about apologising and back-pedalling. It’s about… I don’t want to say becoming better people, because that sounds cheesy. Just keeping it real, and understanding that not everyone’s on your team. Move forward. Make responsible decisions. Think about what it might look like to a kid who’s 10 years old, seeing what we do – how that might impact on the way they listen to our music and enjoy our antics.”
Drew on how fame has shifted his perspective: “We’ve been through a lot this past year. Dealing with becoming famous and having people look at your life in ways that no one gave a s**t about before. How that affects your relationships with people that you’re close to. And people that you’re not close to but who want to be close to you.”
Alex blatantly panders: “I think it’s important that we use our platform to do good and our music to connect with people on a real level. For example, yesterday, we got this email about a nine-year-old kid who was diagnosed with… I don’t want to say a terminal disease, but he was going to be incredibly ill for the rest of his life. His brain was unresponsive and the parents were devastated. But they played a video of us performing ‘Closer’ and it was the first time that he responded to anything. He was dancing around in his wheelchair. And the parents were crying. I can’t believe our music made this moment. The song means something so different to that family than it does to the frat kid in Delaware.”
I feel like Alex is the bigger douche, the Alpha Frat Boy, if you will, and Drew goes along with it for the most part. It’s just the vibe I’m getting. As for this argument they’re making, that they were just being silly and PLAYING at being chauvinistic d-bags as some sort of Commentary On Music… not buying it. I especially think this quote is telling: “Just keeping it real, and understanding that not everyone’s on your team.” Did you catch that? Alex thought Billboard was going to be on his “team,” Team Douche-Bro. Alex thinks that music journalists would automatically be on his team and like, help a douche-bro out by presenting him in the best light. Well, all I can say is that I’m glad these two guys got some media training.
PS… I still honestly believe that Drew called Halsey a “bald bitch” though.
Photos courtesy of WENN.
Who?
Me too. Who?
That’s what my husband said too as we listened to them!
I hate when people say : “You don’t get us.” Maybe I’m wrong, but I’ve always believed that if we don’t get your joke (or art, or message) it’s because you’re not telling it right.
PS : I’m obsessed with their new song with Coldplay. I wish they weren’t assholes…
That’s what I’ve always said. If no one gets it then you’re not communicating effectively. There’s something to be said about certain art or jokes making more sense to someone who is in that sphere, but at worst I should be confused, not outright coming to the opposite conclusion of what you intend.
Lol does he have his tshirt tucked into his jeans? His jeans with studs on them?
And the other one is just so homely, man…I’m sorry. I know commenting on appearance isn’t really kosher, but I feel like his douchery makes him fair game, no?
Tucking your shirt in is a really big trend for this year. You will see it more and more. Everything 90’s lol.
I was at a corporate event last night in SoCal-and they were the night’s entertainment! I’m glad I didn’t know they had such a bad rep because I thought they were cute. They did swear a lot which seemed pretty unnecessary considering the crowd-but there wasn’t any other douchy behavior. They were actually one of my favorite corporate concerts.
I absolutely hate the Chainsmokers. However they have a good rep to make them look good, because I think they are total assholes and douche bags. Plus their album to me is terrible and they are untalented “musician”. That being said, I like their song with Coldplay and that is as far as I can go with these dimwitted idiots.
They do need to work on the production of their performances, that’s all I’ll say.
Oh sweeties, you won’t have to worry about the pitfalls of fame much longer.
Let’s reframe, shall we. If I get a manicure and the person is imitating a manicurist but I still get a convincing manicure, how does that change my experience?
If they’re douchey to people, does it matter if it’s done purposely to that person? Does it matter if it’s done for them to laugh at later (#itsajoke)? Or does that make it worse?
This is an excellent analogy. And I absolutely LOATHE anything done “ironically”. Do it or don’t, but not everyone is cut out to be a performance artist.
You’re bros and I don’t believe the crap you’re selling. Its only because after your grammy win everyone is either “who?” or “i cannot believe those idiot bros won” that you care about how you come off
Satire? What a lame excuse for douchey behavior. What is the point if you explain? That would be like a standup comic explaining the punchline just in case the audience didn’t get the joke. Just own your douchiness.
Also, do they actually chain smoke?
If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck…
…its a douche
“Team Douche-Bro” LOL!!!! That is amazing! I’m using that.
Is a shame they look /act like men you don’t wanna leave your drink by because the suits on the last pic are EXCELLENT ( Full disclosure I don know nor will I listen to their music, I Owe me that)
I am high fiving you QQ, those two are ridiculous and thank god, I will never listen to them nor be exposed to them aside from this article. I love myself to much to suffer bad music 🙂
I came here to say the same: they looked really grown and responsible in those fine suits.
Too bad they have utterly punch-worthy faces( to go along with their deuchetastic attitudes).
It’s almost like big, jerk brother and little, clueless brother.
Alex looks waaaay too old to be playing douche-bro. Sometimes those fake images come back to bite you in the ass.
Not buying this ish…anyone else see that VMA performance? Piss poor. I know nothing about Halsey outside of this song, but girl has some pipes.
Yeah right, and Trump’s presidency is also a performance piece which he is using to call attention to and satirise white male privilege as well as utter contempt for women’s and minority rights, government, the rule of law and democracy more generally.