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#documentary #grunge #seattlesound A glimpse into the mind of people who were relevant to the Seattle Sound chapter of music. Hype! is a fascinating documentary that dives into the explosion of the Seattle grunge scene in the early '90s, capturing both the raw energy of the music and the surreal hype that followed. Released in 1996, directed by Doug Pray, it’s a time capsule of a moment when underground bands like Nirvana, Soundgarden, and Mudhoney got swept up in a cultural tidal wave, often against their own instincts. The film doesn’t just celebrate the music—it’s got a sharp eye on how media, commercialization, and outsider fascination turned a local scene into a global phenomenon, for better or worse. What’s cool about Hype! is how it balances insider perspectives with a kind of anthropological lens. You’ve got interviews with the musicians—people like Eddie Vedder and Kim Thayil—mixed with footage of sweaty, chaotic live shows that feel like a punch to the gut. There’s this great bit where Jack Endino, a producer who worked with tons of these bands, talks about recording Nirvana’s Bleach for something like $600, which really drives home how scrappy and unpolished things were before the suits showed up. But then you see the flip side: the absurdity of fashion spreads and MTV overexposure, with locals rolling their eyes at “grunge” becoming a buzzword for flannel and angst. The doc also doesn’t shy away from the darker edges—there’s a palpable sense of loss as it touches on the burnout and casualties, like Kurt Cobain’s death a couple years before the film came out. It’s not preachy, though; it lets the story unfold through the voices of the people who lived it, from band members to zine writers to Sub Pop’s Jonathan Poneman. The soundtrack’s a killer, too—tons of rare live cuts and tracks that didn’t get overplayed to death. What makes Hype! stand out, even now, is how it nails that tension between authenticity and commodification. It’s less about nostalgia and more about asking what happens when something real gets hyped into something else entirely. Donations Respected Not Expected PayPal, Zelle, CashApp: [email protected]