Look, this is a well-made concert film. Spike Lee knows what he's doing, JT and the band are tight, and critics loved it. But let's be real: unless your kid is already a fan or genuinely fascinated by live performance production, this is going to be a slog.
It's not enriching in any meaningful developmental way—you're not learning about history, science, or even music theory. You're just watching a concert you didn't attend. The 2016 timestamp doesn't help; the 20/20 Experience era isn't nostalgic for today's kids, it's just... old.
If you've got a teen who's into choreography, stage design, or pop music craft, there's value here. For everyone else? Skip it. There are better music docs (Summer of Soul, anyone?) and more engaging content on Netflix.





