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In 1998, we accused Courtney Love of selling out for trading grunge's ripped flannel for Versace gloss. We heard the polished guitars of 'Celebrity Skin' and saw it as a desperate grab for mainstream success. But what if we were listening all wrong? This album wasn't just a commentary on old Hollywood; it was a chillingly accurate blueprint for the social media-driven, influencer-obsessed world we all live in now. This wasn't a betrayal of punk ethos; it was the ultimate punk rock move. At a time when authenticity was rock's most valuable currency, Courtney Love draped her band's sound in the very artifice she was dissecting. She held up a mirror to the grotesque machinery of fame, and instead of recoiling, we criticized the mirror for being too shiny. This article re-examines 'Celebrity Skin' not as a commercial pivot, but as a satirical masterpiece—a cultural prophecy written in power chords and acidic wit.