Justin Bieber walked onstage in his underwear and the Grammys froze. Viewers gasped, timelines exploded, and everyone demanded to know the same thing: why was one of the world’s biggest pop stars stripping down on live TV? Was it a breakdown, a protest, a desperate plea for relevan… Continues…
What looked like a wild, chaotic moment was actually cold, calculated business. Bieber’s lavender boxers weren’t a wardrobe malfunction or an impulsive dare; they were Skylrk. The singer used the most-watched music stage on Earth to turn his own body into a walking billboard for his lifestyle brand, flashing the logo to millions and instantly sending sales of those exact shorts surging online.
Behind the noise, there’s a quieter story too: a 31-year-old artist who stepped back for his health, then chose to return on his own terms. A stripped-back performance of “YUKON,” just a guitar, bare legs, socks, and a reminder that in 2026, fame, vulnerability, and commerce are hopelessly tangled. He’s heading to Coachella next, not just as a pop star, but as a brand — fully clothed or not.





