In the early 2000s, Aurelien Cotentin is a young middle-class man from deep France with an uncertain future. When he gets into rap music with a few friends, he's got strictly no markers of success. Indeed, this codified street music leaves little room for fancy. So, he seizes upon the birth of Myspace, the first music-sharing social network, to develop his own music world. Aurelien morphs into Orelsan, gaining fame through his homemade video clips with edgy punchlines. His chronicles of a confused post-teen reach the ears of the Paris record companies. Orelsan is ready to make his first album. However he needs to win another audience beyond Myspace fans. One way to do it is to go on tour—a tricky task for Orelsan and his three non-professional friends Skread, Ablaye and Gringe. Yet they manage to enthuse label directors, and are about to ambark on sixty-date tour. But a media controversy shatters those fine prospects. An older piece turns up, stirring months of media and political frenzy. With the shows canceled and his record wrecked, Orelsan feels like giving up music altogether. His friends have to persuade him to grab the microphone again and work on a second opus. Orelsan must prove that his artistic ambition is more powerfu than the media circus that ruined his first record. The second album's success prompts him to launch an improbable venture: to revive the Casseurs Flowters, his early band with Gringe. And this diversion that was supposed to last a few months turns into an unexpected hit adventure cumulating sales, awards, a TV series and a feature film. After this golden stretch, Orelsan wants to make a solo album. But six years have passed and rap music has changed. The strand of hair across his face has whitened, and he is facing one of the greatest challenges in his life.