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Kidz Bop built a 3,000-song empire that has quietly outsold legends. He’s helped shape every track
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Kidz Bop built a 3,000-song empire that has quietly outsold legends. He’s helped shape every track

Fast Company · Jun 30, 2026, 11:00 AM

There are unlikely cultural institutions, and then there’s Kidz Bop. Over the course of 25 years, what was initially supposed to be a one-off music compilation of kid-friendly cover songs has spawned 52 follow-ups, helped launch careers, and even become a benchmark by which pop artists measure success—one rewritten lyric at a time. Michael Anderson, Kidz Bop senior vice president of music, has been with the organization since its genesis, working with cofounders Craig Balsam and Cliff Chenfeld to turn 2001’s Kidz Bop 1—featuring 18 reworked hits by Smash Mouth, Britney Spears, Enrique Iglesias, Whitney Houston, the Backstreet Boys, Cher, and more—into a surprise success. Now, two and a half decades later, Kidz Bop is, in Anderson’s own words, a “global entertainment juggernaut.” He’s biased, but the numbers—more than 24 million albums sold, 53 releases, and some 3,000 songs—aren’t. Only the Rolling Stones (38), Barbra Streisand (34), Frank Sinatra (33), the Beatles (32), and Elvis Presley (27) have had more top 10 albums on the Billboard 200 chart than Kidz Bop, and Anderson helped produce all 24 of them. The covers of Kidz Bop 1 and 53. [Photo: Kidz Bop] Even 25 years in, neither Anderson nor Kidz Bop is slowing down. The brand kicked off its anniversary year with its first concert movie, and in May released Kidz Bop 53. Now, it’s in the midst of a concert tour that kicked off on June 14, with dates that run through the end of the year. Fast Company sat down with Anderson to talk about his time at Kidz Bop, the year of celebration ahead, and how the music magic happens. Responses have been edited for length and clarity. You and the Kidz Bop cofounders worked in compilation albums in the early aughts. When did you start realizing that Kidz Bop was becoming something that could stand on its own? We were first advertising mostly on Nickelodeon, and we were doing well on TV and selling albums. Back then, it was CDs and cassettes on TV. It

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