Technologist Mag
  • Home
  • Tech News
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Guides
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Wearables
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
How to Use Google Chrome’s New AI-Powered ‘Skills’

How to Use Google Chrome’s New AI-Powered ‘Skills’

14 April 2026
Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

14 April 2026
Mouse: P.I. For Hire Review – A Monochrome Mystery Worth Solving

Mouse: P.I. For Hire Review – A Monochrome Mystery Worth Solving

14 April 2026
GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

14 April 2026
These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

14 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Technologist Mag
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Tech News
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • Guides
  • Laptops
  • Mobiles
  • Wearables
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Technologist Mag
Home » The Fanfare Around Geese Actually Was a Psyop
Tech News

The Fanfare Around Geese Actually Was a Psyop

By technologistmag.com14 April 20263 Mins Read
The Fanfare Around Geese Actually Was a Psyop
Share
Facebook Twitter Reddit Telegram Pinterest Email

Brooklyn indie rockers Geese shot to the heights of rock and roll fame at the end of 2025. Their fourth album Getting Killed, was released in late September and dominated the year’s top 10 lists. Their fall tour sold out almost everywhere. The collective buzz earned them slots on Saturday Night Live and at Coachella and made the band (and frontman Cameron Winter, who has his own solo career) something close to a household name—at least in households where polyrhythmic art rock is a topic of conversation. The Guardian’s review of the new record called Geese “the new saviors of rock ’n’ roll.”

Their explosion onto the scene, seemingly out of nowhere, led to an inevitable backlash. Haters called them a “psyop.” Some questioned their sudden-seeming rise to superstardom, calling them “an industry plant.” Others, while acknowledging their talent, attributed their fame to savvy marketing. Certainly, when a band blows up so quickly, it can seem inorganic, and a bit weird. When a band moves from the edges of the conversation to smack in the center, it can raise suspicions that its darling status was attributable to some sort of back-room machinations rather than a rare combination of talent, hard work, and a bit of good luck.

Now, those paranoid-seeming suspicions have been proven true—sort of.

In late March, the cofounders of the digital marketing company Chaotic Good Projects—who provide, per its Instagram, “digital experiments and musical mayhem”—appeared on Billboard’s On The Record podcast. In the episode (recorded live at South by Southwest) Chaotic Good’s Andrew Spelman and Jesse Coren explained how their viral marketing methods work.

Essentially, the firm creates networks of social media pages (typically on TikTok) and uses them to drive the band’s music into the recommendation algorithm. Songs are dropped into the backgrounds of videos. Live clips are shared. Sometimes, burner accounts, comments, and whole ecosystems of interactions can be fabricated out of digital cloth, stoking—and in some cases, completely manufacturing—discourse around an artist. These ginned-up interactions push the songs and the discussion about them higher up a platform’s algorithmic rankings. And social media platforms like TikTok and YouTube are, increasingly, where (real) fans discover new music.

“We can drive impressions on anything at this point,” Spelman told Billboard. “We know how to go viral. We have thousands of pages.” Spelman has dubbed the process “trend simulation.” And the campaigns themselves are referred to by Chaotic Good as “narrative” or UGC (for “user-generated content”) campaigns.

Now Chaotic Good cofounder Adam Tarsia confirms to WIRED that his company engineered campaigns for both Geese and Cameron Winter. “We helped distribute clips of them performing and doing some interviews on TikTok,” Tarsia says via email, speaking on behalf of Chaotic Good. “I understand that ‘industry plant’ discourse is inevitable, but we’ve had the pleasure of being Geese fans since their 2021 project Projector,” which, he notes, was released four full years before his agency launched.

The long-bubbling suspicions about the band’s rise boiled over the first week of April. A viral Substack post by singer-songwriter Eliza McLamb traced the connection between Geese and Chaotic Good and mulled the fuzzy ethics of such marketing. As McLamb summed up the model: “If 100 people think your song sucks, Chaotic Good will create 200 people who think your song is awesome.”

“I wasn’t expecting the piece to be as widely shared as it was, and I was happy to see a conversation get started around the whole thing,” McLamb, who is currently on tour supporting her 2025 album Good Story, says of her post, titled “Fake Fans.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Reddit Email
Previous ArticleMercedes-Benz EQS gets a refresh with huge leap in range and charging tech
Next Article How to restore deleted or missing contacts on your iPhone

Related Articles

How to Use Google Chrome’s New AI-Powered ‘Skills’

How to Use Google Chrome’s New AI-Powered ‘Skills’

14 April 2026
Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

14 April 2026
GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

14 April 2026
These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

14 April 2026
Anthropic Opposes the Extreme AI Liability Bill That OpenAI Backed

Anthropic Opposes the Extreme AI Liability Bill That OpenAI Backed

14 April 2026
Amazon is acquiring Globalstar, the company that powers satellite features on your iPhone

Amazon is acquiring Globalstar, the company that powers satellite features on your iPhone

14 April 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Don't Miss
Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

Bloodborne is getting an animated film treatment at Sony

By technologistmag.com14 April 2026

Sony Pictures dropped some exciting news at CinemaCon 2026. The beloved gothic horror video game…

Mouse: P.I. For Hire Review – A Monochrome Mystery Worth Solving

Mouse: P.I. For Hire Review – A Monochrome Mystery Worth Solving

14 April 2026
GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

GoPro’s New Mission 1 Cameras Have 8K Video and Interchangeable Lenses

14 April 2026
These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

These are the 5 best Mac utilities I found in 2026, and you should give them a try too

14 April 2026
Bloodborne Is Getting An R-rated Animated Film Adaptation With Jacksepticeye’s Help

Bloodborne Is Getting An R-rated Animated Film Adaptation With Jacksepticeye’s Help

14 April 2026
Technologist Mag
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Technologist Mag. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.