It's cool being the same age as MTV. I grew up with that on the tube all day sometimes. I could not stand reality tv, so you can imagine my frustration over what it became. I will never forget the good old days though. I remember watching so many well known videos when they debuted.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Yea reality TV wasn’t really for me either. Almost feels like we took the music video era for granted
@Mikethemenace4154 ай бұрын
I’m 45 and i remember growing up in the 80’s and 90’s MTV was the coolest channel I had ever seen..It sucked when it started to change from music to reality TV..Now all I see on there is Ridiculousness and Catfish..Can’t believe that something that started off so cool is so horrible now
@TownieSimBuilds2 жыл бұрын
When I used to watch music TV channels as a kid before school (MTV, VH1, and Fuse I think it was called), I usually gravitated to VH1 and Fuse. This was roughly the mid 2000s when the music videos were dying down on MTV. What a great look back at the history!
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Music TV channels in the morning before school brings back sooo much nostalgia.
@JimmyKnight-m4g17 күн бұрын
@@intellectualdigest6003Yes it does! I too am one of those kids that religiously watched these channels, and in the am before school. Also late at night.
@impalaman97077 ай бұрын
MTV early on was very helpful for a young pre-teen like me just getting into rock, as it educated me, never having been to a rock concert in my life, and now all the bands I'd only ever heard on the radio, I could finally see what they looked like. And the information at the bottom of the screen before and after the video was very helpful in knowing the name of the artist and what album the song was from so I would know what to buy the next time I went to the record store. In fact, all the first albums I started buying (or had my parents buy) were from ones I'd seen on MTV in 1981, I could also see what instruments or what kind of guitars the bands were playing so that I could know what kind of guitars sounded best.
@bluest15242 ай бұрын
I wish MTV would go back to being a Music TV station. It seems so toxic and dumb now, with these reality shows.
@TowerThunder26 күн бұрын
The internet is now the place for music sadly.
@reverseshin7 күн бұрын
The record labels actually tried to make something like that called “vevo” but it failed later on.
@andrethib7 ай бұрын
In the 70s, there were shows like Midnight Special and Don Kirschner’s Rock Concert; these shows came on late at night (Saturdays, iirc) and were mostly live performances, but they occasionally showed promotional (MTV-style) music videos. This was where I saw David Bowie’s videos for Fashion and Ashes to Ashes (this would have been in 1980). Other programs occasionally showed MTV-style videos; I saw George Harrison’s video for Crackerbox Palace when he was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live in 1976.
@artsrhyme37055 ай бұрын
Mtv was the fastest way for me to look up new music that time but now everyone could easily watch it through youtube. Technology brings big impact but i miss the old moments. So nostalgic
@followyourheart1366 Жыл бұрын
I didn't have cable until the mid-80's. I WAS BORN IN 71, so I grew up with that channel as it grew up. I would watch it a friends houses. By 94, I was 22 and had attended the first Woodstock reunion. MTV playing commercials over the big screens was a total turn-off and I had grown up and had new interests. But yes, I was a fan for the first ten years!!
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Yep, i think everyone was a fan at some point !
@letahawk25 Жыл бұрын
As far as watching MTV, I watch Friday nights when they have "I Want My 80s" music videos. It's great to relive my teen years, even if they do have only a handful of videos that they play
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
These were some of the best times. Waking up to music videos playing as you get ready for school 🥲
@FizzFop1 Жыл бұрын
Prior to MTV, there was a lot of music television building up. Solid Gold with the Solid Gold Dancers was a syndicated show that proved music programs were viable. Nightflight was also on the USA Network. Local TV stations were using music videos to fill time. There were other shows. Also, when MTV first launched, it was only on a few cable systems. Almost no one saw the debut. That started the whole "I want my MTV" marketing campaign. It was a brilliant way to create demand.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
It was brilliance at the highest level
@67psychout9 ай бұрын
I use to watch the Kenny Everett video show around 1979/80. Didn't last on American TV very long
@TMC1982Part2 Жыл бұрын
Also, MTV likely stopped being cool and became irrelevant the moment that they stopped being an effective media gatekeeper. In other words, being a gatekeeper of media means that you're participating in a form of marketing that's selective in what you wanted to push and sell to people. Nowadays, if you want to go watch or listen to something, you have a variety of avenues to do so. But during MTV's proverbial "heyday" in the '80s and '90s, options (especially before digital content became the norm) were decidedly more limited in what you could seek out for the media you consumed. MTV on this end, with shows such as Headbanger's Ball, Yo! MTV Raps, or 120 Minutes gave folks a glimpse into other music that they might not have readily available, and opened you up to other material you might not have previously heard of. Even a show like TRL had a certain validation factor in that people wanted to see/hear the same music as you. The premise of the TRL was that you actually tried and requested songs and then waited for them to be played. In a nutshell, a lot of the appeal that actually came with MTV was being able to tap in and see/hear things you wouldn't get a chance to otherwise. Once the digital age beginning with file sharing and the creation of Napster started to gain prominence, MTV's importance began to shrink. It's arguable that digital file sharing really messed with MTV's business model because they worked side by side with the record companies to basically push the album format.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
This is very true! At one point we literally RELIED on MTV to give us our daily dose.
@christopherwebb35172 жыл бұрын
That wasn't Neil Armstrong planting the flag. It was Buzz Aldrin. Neil was the one taking the pictures.
@kiddthomas33757 ай бұрын
MTV just gave up on TV. Ridculousness on repeat daily 😂
@snava360z3343 ай бұрын
That’s true, around 5 years ago they had a bunch of shows you could watch now it’s old stuff on repeat .
@TowerThunder26 күн бұрын
Music has moved online!
@galesito17336 күн бұрын
I remember when MTV was about music videos. I loved it and I discovered so much great music from it. I still love Beavis and Butthead and I think it's a superb piece of satire.
@Brianreason2 жыл бұрын
Hey man, great research and quality of voice! I would mix up the pacing a bit though. Throw in some montage style segments with a fast song, and then find a story beat to slow it down with. This could be a great channel!
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Much appreciated, the plan is to get better each video for you guys!
@BibleSamurai Жыл бұрын
I forgot mtv existed till now…lol
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
😂 i think we all did, crazy how much they fell off
@NeoKokoro209 ай бұрын
MTV in the 1980's and 1990's: Music Television MTV in the 2000's and 2010's: Reality Television MTV in the 2020's: Ridiculousness Television
@TMC1982Part2 Жыл бұрын
Somebody on r/television (in the thread "The Y2K era (1997-2003) was the last okayish era for MTV. McBling era (2004-2008) was when they really overdosed on reality TV.") said that the move into Times Square (in 1997) ruined what MTV was at that point. Before that, they always did location shoots for their genre video shows either in a random diner in Manhattan or down in Point Pleasant during the summer. Once everything got shoved into the TRL package, focused hard on boy bands or other bubble gum pop acts, it really sucked.
@letahawk25 Жыл бұрын
I'm stuck subbing in a Sports and Entertainment Marketing class for a few weeks. I want to do a lesson on MTV and music marketing, so this video is a great short documentary to introduce the topic.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Wow, now that’s an honor! Let me know how it goes, that’s an amazing idea
@letahawk896 Жыл бұрын
@@intellectualdigest6003 it went fairly well. They were attentive to the video and seemed to grasp the main points I wanted to make about marketing. However, getting them to apply it to their own experience... 🙄
@shaindaman137 ай бұрын
I was there from DAY ONE. And 10 year old me was over the moon. If you had told a 9 year old me one day bored out of my mind at school, that coming this summer I would be sitting in a bean bag watching music all day I woulda crapped my pants. But sure nuff there I was doing just that. Alas…times change, things change, nothing good truly lasts. It’s ironic though that MTV were the first ones to broadcast a reality Tv show. Road Rules. I bet they had no idea they were signing their own death warrant.
@hhvictor24622 ай бұрын
I infrequently watched Club MTV during the freestyle days and later The Grind. And the original VJs' banter regarding musical tidbits never bored me. And I was comfortable with their sets: homey, laid back, a time to chill kinda scene. I knew Mark Goodman during his WPLJ days during the late 70s. And Martha Quinn when she DJ'd once or twice a week via New York University's New Afternoon radio program.
@sjsharks16 күн бұрын
(2:16) The photo shown of Eurythmics is actually The Kinks. Oops!
@stephendevore2 ай бұрын
The ANSWER was so-so music and more talking and more "reality TV" than music.
@brians774219 күн бұрын
The internet killed the video star.
@guydreamr28 күн бұрын
The irony of MTV banning videos because they're too controversial is beyond hilarious.
@jalen3666 Жыл бұрын
80s, 90s, and 2000s were the glory years of MTV. Although I enjoyed there shows like beavis and butthead Daria, Aeon Flux, and The Real World but I loved seeing music cause it’s in the name. I glad I grew up with magic of mtv, these kids today will never know cause of iTunes Spotify and KZbin taking over. This goes the same with Saturday morning cartoons and especially the big 3 kids network ( Cartoon Network Nickelodeon and Disney channel) all were at there peak and a golden age in the 80s 90s and 2000s but got lazy and fell apart cause of technology. You should do a video on that.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
You know you might be on to something. Maybe I’ll try to spin something up, pretty dope idea! Thanks for that
@torrijones8434 Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@laurisaarinen11267 ай бұрын
As a millennial born in 1992, i was glued to MTV for about 2000-2005. People always say it was way after its golden era and i believe them, but it's not like there was no music being played. I watched HOURS of music videos every day, usually waiting for that one RHCP, Foo Fighters, Linkin Park, Green Day, etc. video to come on, whatever was popping at the moment. Sitting through countless pop, rnb and rap videos from artists i didn't care for to the point that i recognized almost every name in the game. It also became interesting just for the videos themselves, i didn't necessarily need to care about the music. Sure there were lots and lots of reality shows too, most of i couldn't give two craps about but i did enjoy watching Cribs, Pimp My Ride and Punk'd for example. Still, it felt like it was maybe 50-50 between music and shows.
@shaindaman137 ай бұрын
I was there when MTV Started. 10 years old and just over the mon obsessed with it from day ONE. IF you HAD TOLD 9 year old me in school one day that coming this summer you can sit in the bean bad and watch music all day I would’ve crapped my pants. Sure nuff. There ya go. But it changed, times change, everything changes. The ironic part is MTV STARTED reality Tv shows with The Real World. Crazy to thing they were signing their own death warrant.
@darknagaadventures78845 күн бұрын
I haven't wanted my MTV for nearly 30 years...
@jorgefelix92383 ай бұрын
HMMM some stuff is wrong - Michael Nesmith had the original idea for MTV, and the channel was only available in a few cities when it started
@stephendevore2 ай бұрын
Didn't it start as a cable channel? a new one?
@impalaman97077 ай бұрын
MTV in 1981-82 was kinda like watching Sesame Street. The studio scenes would get interrupted by music videos. But you always looked forward to the interruptions! And sometimes the videos would be the same ones played over and over again, but occasionally a new one would pop up. I looked forward to seeing a new one! Early Gen X kids like me had a longer attention span than later generations.
@carlosguerra7441Ай бұрын
Music videos that are available on KZbin and Facebook has become similar to MTV On Demand for quite sometime. Currently, MTV Classic channel also plays music videos. That network is similar to the original MTV with the exception of VJs & MTV bumper animation. I don't think the original MTV will ever return to it's original format. MTV has too many sister networks & social media. Also, KZbin has options of people making their own music playlists anyways.
@averagecarpentryskills714811 ай бұрын
I wouldn't call the Beavis & Butthead reboot a flop. What killed MTV was catering to smaller groups and isolating the bigger audiences. The 80s and to mid 90s targeted pop, rock, alternative, and rap but then in late 90s they decided they were going to focus mainly on pop and the worst kind of mindless bubblegum pop. MTV survived the early to mid 00s cause the reality shows still had an edge or even a sophomoric edge to them like Jackass & Viva La Bam & Pimp my Ride or the trashy dating shows like NeXt etc but when it turned to Jersey Shore and Teen Mom type mindless crap you knew they weren't even trying anymore like the did years earlier with their Road Rules and Real World reality experiment. You gloss over a whole lot but yeah maybe lame artists and lame stunts like the Kaye / Taylor Swift stunt at that MTV VMAs about 15 years ago was the final nail in MTV's coffin. Did you even mention now how it's 24 hours a day Rob Dyrdek Ridiculous reruns? Everyone is pulling the plug on cable.
@josejsalazar194110 ай бұрын
No i'm 58 Ilove the old mtv ❤
@larrykuehn197210 ай бұрын
I totally agree with that. I don't care for the new mtv at all.
@mutezone9 ай бұрын
The only MTV I watch nowadays is the old one & only on KZbin. The last time I seriously watched MTV was back in the early 2000s when they used to put on music that was not in the charts or not well known. The problem was I grew out of it being in my mid 20s but I also noticed more reality programmes instead of music so gave up watching MTV. Btw, I am in the UK & my first exposure to watching MTV live was in 1989 or 1990 via satellite when it had its own channel for UK & Europe. It was mostly UK / European programmes + presenters but there was also stuff from America shown as well. I used to record on VHS overnight the music videos they played in the early hours as it was mostly uninterrupted. My favourite "non-music" programme was Beavis & Butthead, as I found it really funny how they made fun of the dumb youth of back then even though I was part of that youth. I am not surprised the reboot in 2011 was not successful as I consider B & B very 90s & was very relevant of that era to which it belonged. I suppose B & B is making a comeback now because of nostalgia from people like me who grew up watching them. As for MTV now, I do not associate it at all with the MTV back in the 80s & 90s. Like I said I noticed the change in the early 2000s, noticeably with The Osbournes & since then it might as well be another entertainment channel rather than a music one. Sorry about the long comment, but I enjoyed the video. Well done on explaining everything clearly 👍
@jdn6452 ай бұрын
I remember moving to California in early 1982 and then going to a new friends house to watch Rush's primere of Exit Stage left. That was the my first exposure to cable TV, MTV, and Rush all at the same tame. I went and subscribed to cable the next day and was MTV junkie for the next several years. The videos started getting cheesy and teen. poppy so I started tuning out. When reality TV came on board, I was done with it. It became Musicless television after that.
@stephendevore2 ай бұрын
If you are going to take this much trouble to collect these videos, please writer better copy; and have someone deliver it who sounds like they really care. Better quality videos would also be good. And, what about other stations? And did music on MTV move to something like an MTV2? (I skimmed.)
@CGMedia20237 ай бұрын
Two events killed MTV. 1. Rock the Vote: A Democrat propaganda campaign in 1992 that paid off in spades. Immediately after Clinton got elected the CEO told all talent that music was "over". When asked why, according to Martha Quinn, who was in the board room for this, the CEO responded, "We just elected a PRESIDENT! And now you expect us to just play another WINGER video?" This was the moment that music was taken off of prime time and reality shows replaced it. 2. Napster: When MTV sided with Napster over Metallica in the music pirating war, they lost ALL support from the labels, (which paid the bills throughout their first decade,) and not a single music video has aired on the network since.
@HitWave80sАй бұрын
You're talking about early MTV stars being in their commercials and group G'N'R as being among them. They weren't even out until 1987, when MTV already sucked. I wish you people that make these retrospective videos about the past would get their shit together. I hear these mistakes all the time in these types of videos. Were you actually even there !!
@Yeahno-ey3rb7 ай бұрын
I remember when music was still on Mtv. I also remember VH1 Popup videos.
@Forgiven156Ай бұрын
8:16 Race even has to be brought up in the history of MTV. Just can’t stop hearing it
@DemnRaig8026 күн бұрын
That's all they care about. Color.
@TheSgtslow2 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1998 (I'm 24) so I didn't get to see MTV when it was at it's best, I remember some friends in Middle School telling me I had to watch MTV "It's Amazing, you need to watch it for at least a week!" but after watching MTV for the 1st Three Days, I wasn't really impressed then again this was during there Reality TV phase, and I'm not a fan of those type of shows. So for the rest of the week I would have MTV on in the Background while I played video-games, or I would change the channel to the Syfy Channel, or Comedy Central my Favorite Channels while I was in middle school. Going to be honestly I would actually enjoy watching a video that talks about either of them. I think it's great that your talking about Channels that aren't just the Major Kid Channels cause there are a lot of Networks/Channel out there that have have there own rich histories.
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Thanks for that feedback! I'll definitely look into that for you
@flashjackson25707 ай бұрын
Olivia Newton John was not disco. She was soft rock.
@Inspiration_Date2 жыл бұрын
Here's a suggestion for a future video: What Killed The Hub? The Hub was a promising channel that could have rivaled the likes of Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon and Disney, yet it only lasted 4 years. What happened?
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Not a bad idea at all actually!
@VideoGamesAndTheWorld Жыл бұрын
And now, MTV is the Ridiculousness channel
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
I legit don't think I've seen anything else playing on MTV in a while lol
@larrykuehn197210 ай бұрын
I totally agree with that.
@PabbyMan20002 ай бұрын
I remember MTV in the early days as back to back music videos with very few commercials. And a few VJ's. My favorite was Martha Quinn. I followed The Real World when it was in San Francisco but quickly lost interest after that. And pretty much lost interest in MTV altogether.
@r.d.493 Жыл бұрын
I gravitated to MTV in 1997, which was the year I turned 15. The network, along with VH1 and Entertainment Weekly, helped me keep up on who was popular in music at the time, but I also discovered the MTV show "Loveline" before learning that it had been a radio show for years. I watched the show religiously hoping that anyone whom Dr. Drew and Adam Carolla spoke to might have problems that reflected what I was feeling at the time. That was also why I watched "The Real World" religiously even after the 1998 Seattle cast, which was the last season I enjoyed. Eventually, I grew up, was never a fan of the teen pop era, never watched TRL, and had no interest in all those crappy reality shows. What little I have seen of the young women from Teen Mom on KZbin is so disturbing that two minutes makes can make my worst day feel so much better.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
I loved those music videos in the morning before school
@r.d.493 Жыл бұрын
@@intellectualdigest6003 I used to work in a coffee shop and I would occasionally see music videos on MTV during the 2AM hour when I was getting myself ready to open the shop. The last video I can remember seeing was Whitney Houston’s “Saving All My Love For You” the day after she died.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
That’s crazy that you actually remembered the last music video you saw on MTV.. I wish i could tell you mine
@drmusic3641Ай бұрын
You neglected to mention the one band that was featuring music videos every week from 1966 to 1968 and they were The Monkees. In fact Mike Nesmith had a lot to do with the beginnings of MTV.
@POPNDOUGHАй бұрын
Thank you. I was thinking the same thing when the video was listing the acts that did promotional videos. Mtv even started playing Monkees episodes in the mid-80s if I recall. On Nesmith from Wiki: "In 1974, Nesmith founded Pacific Arts, a multimedia production and distribution company, through which he helped pioneer the music video format, winning the first Grammy Award for Video of the Year for his hour-long comedy/variety program, Elephant Parts (1981).[2] He created one of the first American television programs dedicated to music videos, PopClips, which aired on Nickelodeon in 1980, and was soon after approached to help develop the MTV network, though he declined."
@digitaldosage19795 ай бұрын
I too lived through 80s MTV in my childhood and 90s MTV in my formative years. Don't know that i agree with some of this info... yeah, the Real World created the downward spiral that became "reality TV", but I don't know that people were wanting more of it in the way they got it in the years to come. The decision to go full reality TV was more of an executive push than a necessity in viewership. Also, early MTV days were pretty fruitful... people didn't think it was boring prior to Thriller (81-83ish)? It was pretty much a success that they built upon from its inception.
@lilmissbloodbath89 Жыл бұрын
"It was the late 70's....." Proceeds to show examples of shows from the mid 80's and later....
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Lol cut me some slack, this was one of my first few videos when i began. I’ve definitely came a long way since 3 months ago as far as quality. Hope you still enjoyed the content though :)
@RockinRobin4117 ай бұрын
With KZbin and the ability for people to make playlists of all their favorite music videos, there really isn't the same need for MTV or a channel like it as there was.
@13blackcatzzz7 ай бұрын
Seriously? You say Sonic Youth and show a picture of Kurt Cobain? WTF?????
@DERRTYCHYBO7 ай бұрын
What a travesty!!! You should call 911!!!
@aisle_of_view2 ай бұрын
MTV died because YT allowed you to watch your favorite artists without having to sit through an hour of crappy videos before something good came on. MTV was like Vegas slots. Bad video, bad video, maybe a good video might be next.
@chrissydavis53467 ай бұрын
I moved on many years ago like before my kids were born.
@MrShortWhiteGuy Жыл бұрын
To me MTV died in 1998 with the death of the MTV top 20 Video Countdown. The show was one of Cable TV's most watched and talked about cable shows of the 1980s. Many considered the show to be law as to what music was popular. By the mid 90s, the show was given horrible time slots and poor graphics compared to the 1980's and early 1990s. By 1998, because the countdown was based on airplay and there wasn't much anymore, the show got cancelled. TRL was the same show as Dial MTV, just with a new name. The only difference is that people can vote online. In the late 80s, Dial MTV was mostly power ballads and rock we didn't see much as mainstream, like Britny Fox, Enuff 'Z Nuff, Slaughter, and Faster Pussycat. In recall in 2001, MTV had a 10 hour special of the first 20 years of MTV review each year in a 30 minute special. In 2006, MTV had a 25 year special playing a video to represent each year from 1981-2005 based on what was popular at the time. I don't believe they celebrated any more anniversaries after that.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Yea, i think we all can agree that they had a beautiful run though.
@dragoonseye762 ай бұрын
I was 9 when I first saw Madonna at the first vmas
@henrikharbin5521 Жыл бұрын
When everybody could get the videos and music we wanted through KZbin and Napster, Mtv lost that business incentive and blamed the download ers for it. They should have blamed Napster.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Mannnn i legit forgot all about Napster. Can’t forget good ol Limewire while we’re at it
@jasonpalacios13637 ай бұрын
Now they should call MTV, RTV or Ridiculousness Television because that's they play now.
@danielpeet981126 күн бұрын
GENX imposter alert. There is zero chance the guy making this video is GenX. Nobody cared about nor ever used the word, “diversity.” Ironically, the biggest videos I remember from that timeframe (pre-Michael Jackson) was herbie hancock “Rocket,” and Ratt, “Round and round.” I never realized they had, “playlists.” I mostly watched headbanger’s ball, but I watched MTV here and there outside of that. He’s also wrong about Beavis and butthead. They started on liquid television. This video is bogus.
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
Anybody here remember watching MTV Jamz growing up? Share your thoughts below!
@J2V896 ай бұрын
The actual channel I do. From 2006 until its very end I did watch it. They had a great thing going with its weekly Jam Of The Week videos and it’s why I watched.
@davidlarson91252 ай бұрын
Alan Hunter was a jock? Also, this sounds like AI generated content so how does he remember any of this stuff?
@HoneyBunny-69Ай бұрын
It doesn't just SOUND like AI, *IT IS!!!!* YT is inundated with AI slop now!! It's complete garbage. These so-called "content creators" can't even take the time to make their own videos. They've become LAZY!!!
@rivaldovillegas37252 жыл бұрын
Hello Sir, I watched Two Videos, and so far so good i have to say. This Channel may not be at your time, but between 2011 and 2014, there was a children's Channel called The Hub, and in my opinion was the perfect Children's Programming that sadly died, I highly suggest you look it up and do some research and think to yourself, should The Hun return or stay Buried.?
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Thanks for that! You're actually the second person that is interested in "The Hub", I'll check it out.
@McSynth4 ай бұрын
Dreadlocks are now 'cultural appropriation' ? I trust African Americans who've straightened their hair will now likewise face a ban.
@Smedleydog12 ай бұрын
Until watching this video, I didn't know MTV or VH1 was still being produced. All they have showed for years were worthless reality shows. It appears that is still the SOP.
@flashjackson25707 ай бұрын
Dr. Demento introduced Weird Al ,not MTV.
@joemccandless1278Ай бұрын
I always just blamed Jessie Camp.
@JimmyKnight-m4g17 күн бұрын
So I'm going to proudly be Captain Obvious and say it's because they quit playing music videos! Plain and Simple! They forgot what they originally stood for and started playing these pea brain, no intelligence reality shows!
@yasseralsaidi1168 Жыл бұрын
Should we vote for the Return of mtv
@intellectualdigest6003 Жыл бұрын
They have my vote!
@bradfurlow68667 ай бұрын
In all seriousness tho music and music culture has went downhill since the 2000s. So it makes sense mtv would ease up on music . It because the music sucks. There are many reasons for this . If rock and roll ever comes back from the dead perhaps mtv will too
@dragoonseye762 ай бұрын
I miss Mtv
@Bthe3126 күн бұрын
The AI is too hard to listen to. Try again.
@cuseyeti_one8three2 күн бұрын
Martha was the best.
@stejer2112 жыл бұрын
I'd like to let you know in the comments that... it's incredibly annoying to keep being told to write something in the comments!
@intellectualdigest60032 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the feedback! Learning as we grow.
@MegaTechnoteacher2 ай бұрын
David Bowie
@Jessica-ou2fb6 ай бұрын
I like Austin Powers movies
@Johnmyork2323 күн бұрын
You over generalize and jump all over in time.
@thomasmaloney8432 ай бұрын
The Monkees were the precursor to MTV. No mention of the show in this video.
@peddleandcrank23 күн бұрын
Your voice is so annoying I couldn't finish the vid, monotone rubbish
MTV...it was short lived...... Because They would not play the Beatles...Stones.....Who....doors....or stuffl..by rock bands.... from the late 1950 to the 1970s...it was mostly New Wave and 1980s Rock.... that is why it went down....VH1 was far better 😊
@DemnRaig8026 күн бұрын
VH1 DIED BEFORE MTV AND WHEN DID THOSE ARTISTS IN THE 50'S RECORD ANY MUSIC VIDEOS? AND WHAT RIGHTS WOULD MTV HAD TO PAY TO AIR THE RARE FOOTAGE?