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Robbie Williams recreates 1990s TV show for new music video.
Robbie Williams, the perennial pop star who has spent decades shape-shifting through the music industry's many moods, has once again tapped directly into the collective nostalgia vein, but this time he’s not just referencing an era—he’s meticulously resurrecting it. For his new single 'Pretty Face,' Williams has engineered a full-blown 'DeLorean Moment,' as he aptly calls it, by painstakingly recreating the anarchic, beer-stained set of 'The Word,' the legendary and notoriously chaotic Channel 4 youth show that defined the early 1990s.This isn't a mere homage with a few grainy filters; it’s a deep-cut, archival-grade replication, from the garish, low-budget graphics and the specific camera angles to the very essence of late-night, post-pub rebellion that the show championed. For anyone who came of age in that period, 'The Word' was less a television program and more a cultural rite of passage, a weekly portal where the raw energy of grunge and the swagger of Britpop violently collided.It was the platform that first blasted Nirvana into British living rooms, the stage where a cocksure Oasis delivered epoch-defining performances, and the chaotic forum that featured everyone from the Happy Mondays to bizarre, often shocking 'freak or famous' segments. Williams, then a fresh-faced teen in Take That, would have been an avid viewer, absorbing this potent mix of music and mayhem, and his decision to return to this specific touchpoint is a masterstroke of autobiographical curation.The video for 'Pretty Face' thus operates on multiple levels: it’s a promotional tool for a new track, yes, but it’s also a profound piece of personal and generational archaeology. Williams isn't just playing a singer on a retro set; he’s embodying the ghost of his own past, confronting the pop landscape that formed him, and re-contextualizing his own journey from boy-band pin-up to a solo artist who has consistently wrestled with fame's absurdities.The original 'The Word,' with its 'too much for TV' tagline and its gleeful disregard for broadcast decorum, represented a specific moment of pre-internet, subcultural discovery that feels almost prehistoric today. By rebuilding it, Williams highlights the stark contrast between today's algorithmically-curated, sanitized musical exposure and the unpredictable, often messy, but authentically thrilling nature of 90s music television.It’s a commentary on how we consume art now versus then, a lament for lost serendipity, and a celebration of the unpolished grit that often births genuine cultural movements. The move is both clever and deeply sentimental, allowing him to connect with his core audience—now in their 40s and 50s—on a level that transcends the song itself, while simultaneously educating a younger generation on a pivotal piece of music history. In the grand narrative of Robbie Williams' career, a story perpetually oscillating between bravado and vulnerability, this video serves as another fascinating chapter where he uses pop culture itself as his confessional booth, proving once again that his greatest talent may lie not just in crafting hits, but in masterfully scoring the soundtrack to our collective memory.
#featured
#Robbie Williams
#The Word
#Pretty Face
#music video
#1995
#nostalgia
#performance