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*NSYNC's Teen People Article

Y2Kings of Pop
By Dave Karger
Best BoyBand. Album of the Year, Best Video. Best Kiss-off, Entertainment Event of the Year.

“If not for out fans, we wouldn’t be living the dream! Thanks to everyone for all the support in making the album (No Strings Attached), the video (“It’s Gonna be Me”) and the kiss-off song (“Bye Bye Bye”) such a success – and for making 2000 such an amazing year.”

“Guess what I Did?!” on hand with the rest of *NSYNC for their TEEN PEOPLE shoot at Chelsea Piers in NYC, Justin Timberlake feels compelled to butt in on a table full of people deep in conversation. “This is worth the interruption,” he continues by way of apology. “Last week I went skydiving! Funny thing was, I thought I was going to be really scared. But I wasn’t at all!”

Of course he wasn’t: Justin and his group mates – Lance Bass, JC Chasez, Joey Fatone and Chris Kirkpatrick – have been flying high for some time now. Y2K was a dream year for the quintet, which not so long ago was considered by music industry insiders to be little more than a wannabe Backstreet Boys. But *NSYNC’s No Strings Attached – the No. 1 album that launched a trio of hits, including their first chart-topping single, “It’s Gonna Be Me” – changed all that, propelling the group to phenomenon status. The album’s success led to a sell-out concert tour; a slew of accolades, including three MTV Video Music Awards and three Billboard Awards; their own specials on HBO and FOX; and notable performances at the Oscars, the American Music Awards and the Latin Grammys. On this chilly October day, the guys look back over the events of the last 1- months. JC thinks it was their omnipresence that put *NSYNC over the top. “I think it was the footwork we did,” he says. “We toured forever. We had four days off for Christmas, and that’s it.”

Lance has a different theory. “’Bye Bye Bye’ was just phenomenal. [A huge first single] sells albums,” he says. Chris nods in agreement; “’I Want You Back’ and ‘Tearin’ Up My Heart’ were big but ‘Bye Bye Bye’ was our first timeless song.”

Joey credits the resolution of *NSYNC’s legal battles with its former label, OCA Records (the group is now on Jive Records, also home t o Backstreet Boys and Britney Spears): “When that whole lawsuit went down and we finally got control people were like, ‘I Want to see what they’re going to do.’”

Justin offers yet another explanation. “It’s our realness,” he says. “People apprecite our music, but I think they feel like they can talk to us.” Even with everything they’ve accomplished, the guys remain unjaded. JC is ecstatic about getting a Simpsons photo signed by creator Matt Groening (*NSYNC wil guest-star in a 2001 episode). Chris is still starry-eyed from meeting his idol Paul McCartney at the MTV Video Music Awards. “He shook my hand,” he says. “It was real quick in the hall, but it was one of those things that you remember forever.”

An event that would no doubt rank high on Justin’s list of unforgettable events: girlfriend Britney Spears’s choice to go public with their relationship. “That was her decision,” says Justin. “I’ve always told her, if that’s something that she wanted to do, then I didn’t mind. It’s so hard to have a relationship period.” He’s confident, though, that the romance can survive the inevitable media scrutiny. “If you really love somebody, nothing can get in the way. ‘Look I love, you love me, that’s it.’ Problems are going to come and go… She and I complement each other. She breathes fresh air into me; she’s like a reality check. She’s absolutely wonderful, and absolutely beautiful person, inside and out. When [negative] things are said about her, I take offense to them even more than she does.”

Joey weighs in, characterizing the superstar pair as completely down-to-earth. “When they come together,” he says, “it’s like, ‘What do you want to do?’ ‘Let’s sit down and watch TV.’ Stuff like that.” Justin is lucky to have a girlfriend who understands the demanding schedule that comes along with pop supstardom. Although *NSYNC could easily demand some downtime these days – as of this interview, No Strings has sold 9 million copies – the band hasn’t slowed down one bit. This morning for example, they awoke before dawn to perform on Good Morning America; hours later they arrive wide-eyed and eager to do this interview and post for their Teen People cover. Talk about an impressive work ethic! “That’s why groups come and go – they don’t work like they did in the beginning,” JC explains. “Like Madonna – you think she hangs out every day? No. What do you think Prince does? He’s sitting in his studio right now. The people who put the time in and work their tails off, those are the people you end up respecting in the years to come.”

Accordingly, the guys know that their next CD, schedule for release in June, is all the more important. “We’re not going to tour while we do the album,” says Lance, who anticipates heading into the studio this month. “That’s what we’ve done for the last two. If we focus and relax and sit in one city for a couple of months, it’s going to be that much better.”

So what’s in store for fans? Something even more unexpected than the surprisingly funky and hard-edged No Strings Attached. “Everybody was sticking to guitar pop, and we took it to space beats,” says JC, alluding to No Strings’s tracks “Space Cowboy” and “Digital Getdown”. “Now you hear everybody trying to do something digital in their songs.” Adds Chris: “It’s going to have some harder guitars. It’s going to scare some people because that’s what good music does. But they’ll eventually come back around and realize that it’s innovative.”

Eventually *NSYNC hopes to expand it’s empire beyond music, but the road to Hollywood has been rocky. Recently the boys dumped the film project Why Can’t I Be You? for creative reasons. “It was like an edgy She’s All That,” says Chris. “[But] we don’t want to do another American Pie or something that’s been done.” Also scrapped: plans for the group to star in Grease 3 (that was the working title).

While waiting to make their next movie move, *NSYNC has other concerns, among them the upcoming Grammy nominations. Last year the group scored two nods, including Best Pop Vocal Collaboration for “Music of My Heart,” its duet with Gloria Estefan. Now they’re gunning for their first solo nomination. “I’m gonna puke, dude,” says JC of the building suspense. “I’m scared. I’m really really nervous.”

But the group remains confident. “We’re hopeful that something will get nominated because the album was so big,” says Lance. “Nominations are great. And to perform. That’s just what I want to do. We’re crossing our fingers – nothing guaranteed.” Including longevity. “People are going to stop putting posters up on the wall in a while,” says Chris. “Seven or eight years from now, there are not going to be hundreds of girls outside our hotels waiting for us just so they can get a glimpse. We’re realistic. We hope that we can evolve.” Songwriter Diane Warren, who penned “Music of My Heart” and the No Strings track, “That’s When I’ll Stop Loving You,” thinks they’ll do just that. “They have the best shot at longevity,” she says. “They sing their butts off; they’re unaffected by their success; they’re really apart and they’re all entrepreneurs.”

All five *NSYNCers have embraced outside projects: Joey recently filmed a small role in My Big Fat Greek Wedding, a romantic comedy due this spring; Lance manages country artists Jack Defoe and Meredith Edwards, who has opened for *NSYNC and whole self-title debut album is due on Mecury Records in March; Chris’s clothing line, FuMan Skeeto, recently premiered at Nordstrom department stores and has its own Web site; JC wrote and co produced “Just Another Girl,” the first single from Wild Orchid’s upcoming CD; and Justin dabbled in acting with a role in the March 2000 TV movie Model Behavior.

It seems their solo successes have only intensified the five friends’ determination to achieve more together. “We still have a place in our career that we’re string to get to,” says Justin. “I definitely don’t feel that we’re arrived yet. ‘Gratified, never satisfied.’ That’s always been our motto. There’s always somewhere else to go.”

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