NETFLIX IS ABOUT TO UNLEASH THE DARKEST TRUTH THE MUSIC INDUSTRY DOESN’T WANT YOU TO SEE. Forget the curated, feel-good biopic—Noah Kahan’s upcoming documentary is a RAW, UNFLINCHING exposé of the SOUL-CRUSHING price of overnight fame. This isn’t a celebration; it’s a WARNING.
While the industry peddles Kahan’s “Stick Season” success as a fairytale, insiders whisper a more sinister reality. The film promises footage of the singer’s “deeply personal struggles” as he returns to his Vermont roots, but WHY? Is this the portrait of an artist on the BRINK, sacrificed on the altar of global streaming and endless tours? The timing is SUSPICIOUS, dropping just as his new album, “The Great Divide,” hits—a title that screams of a man TORN APART by the very machine that made him.
This is the UGLY SIDE of your Spotify obsession. We’ve seen this story before: a sensitive artist, a breakout album, and the relentless grind that leads to burnout, breakdown, or worse. Netflix isn’t just releasing a documentary; they’re PROFITING from the public dissection of a young man’s mental health under the guise of “art.” They are turning his pain into your ENTERTAINMENT.
As you watch him perform for sold-out crowds, ask yourself: are you witnessing triumph, or the final act of a system that consumes its brightest stars and spits out content? The global release in 2026 isn’t an event—it’s a VIRAL AUTOPSY, and you’re all invited to watch.



