Josh Heuston Performs Yellow Haze in Off Campus Clip

Josh Heuston Performs Yellow Haze in Off Campus Clip

josh heuston appears in a new Off Campus clip as Justin, the frontman of After Hours, performs “Yellow Haze” with Ella Bright’s Hannah before the Prime Video series premieres on May 13. The song will also land on the official soundtrack the same day, tying the clip to the show’s launch plan instead of treating it as a stand-alone teaser.

Yellow Haze and After Hours

The clip gives Hannah a musical partner in Justin, whom the series presents as a fellow musician and the frontman of the fictional band After Hours. She has enlisted him to help write lyrics for a melody she composed, and the resulting track, “Yellow Haze,” becomes part of the show’s wider music rollout. That makes the performance more than a scene: it is one of the pieces feeding the season’s soundtrack strategy.

The official Off Campus soundtrack is a 16-song album with four original songs, including music from Asha Banks, The Two Lips, Remi Wolf and After Hours. In a series built on a college hockey team and the women around it, the music is doing the same work as the romance plot — giving the adaptation something specific to sell beyond the book title.

Prime Video on May 13

May 13 brings both the series premiere and the soundtrack release, so viewers who stream the first episode will also be able to hear how the show packages its music outside the episode runtime. The first season includes 19 on-camera performances, which signals a heavy reliance on performance scenes rather than using music as background texture.

Hannah also sings an original song by Amy Allen and Ethan Gruska in the season finale, which adds another hook for anyone tracking how closely the series leans into performance as part of the story engine. Josh Heuston is listed as a series regular, so Justin is not being used as a one-scene novelty; he is part of the season’s musical structure.

Hannah Wells and Garrett Graham

The first season follows Ella Bright’s Hannah Wells and Belmont Cameli’s Garrett Graham, using the storyline from The Deal and a fake-dating romance setup. Against that backdrop, “Yellow Haze” works as a useful preview of the show’s tone: the clip shows how the adaptation is packaging romance, band dynamics and original music into one release window.

Ella Bright said at the show’s premiere, speaking to THR, “There is a really fun musical element in the first episode that I had the privilege of getting to perform in it. The song that I get to perform was my manifestation song for the whole audition process” and “It ended up being in the top [two] on my Spotify Wrapped.” For viewers, that suggests the series is not treating music as decoration; it is building episodes around songs the cast is already invested in performing.

Next