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Music: Telehealth – Cool Job: Seattle Synth-Punk for the Burnout Economy

Why it is trending: Telehealth’s “Cool Job” is sparking buzz ahead of their Sub Pop debut as the band weaponise danceable synth-punk against tech optimism, hustle culture, and the glossy illusion of modern “progress.”

Telehealth are a Seattle-based synth-punk conglomerate formed by Alexander Attitude and Kendra Cox alongside Ian McCutcheon, John O’Connor, and Dillon Sturtevant. Emerging from the Pacific Northwest, the group treat contemporary culture like a product line — dissecting burnout, branding, gig-economy ambition, and algorithm-driven identity with sharp hooks and taut, club-ready tension. Their sound fuses art rock, new wave, and nervy post-punk with sleek, industrial-tinged synths, capturing the friction between underground authenticity and corporate scalability.

“Cool Job” distills that critique into a tightly wound anthem, pairing icy electronics with punchy rhythms and wry lyricism that skewers the performance of success. It feels equal parts sarcastic and sincere — a soundtrack for side hustles, LinkedIn validation, and luxury sustainability aesthetics. The track sets the tone for their Sub Pop debut Green World Image (out May 15, 2026), which reframes Seattle’s post-grunge lineage for the tech-bro present: anxious, self-aware, rich, and built to scale. With “Cool Job,” Telehealth don’t just soundtrack collapse — they make it danceable.

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