Sad to see it end, but it was past it’s time for more than a decade. Curious to notice that on Sirius radio, the old time DJs of MTV show up on the 80s Sirius channel; fun for nostalgia, but I have to say that Nina Blackwood sounds more like Nana Blackwood nowadays…
Stations ended the transmission with the song that started all:
Well, I’m glad that they finally saw the writing on the wall. It’s probably been at least two decades since I’ve watched more than a few minutes of any MTV owned/affiliated channel. Even when they were showing music videos, there just wasn’t much point in watching ten videos I didn’t care to see in the hope of catching one I did want to see.
MTV was a trailblazer in that most media tries to keep their existing audience so they end up aging along with them. MTV was one of the first to decided to let their audience age out and consistently chase young viewers, morphing and adapting as the generations progressed to cater to their tastes. It was way ahead of its time in that.
I didn’t know that MTV was still around in any fashion. The 80s wouldn’t have been the same without them.
A big thanks to MTV for broadcasting The Young Ones into my American living room!
Sad, but I buried MTV in my head about 30 years ago. I remember what it was when it was something, And it wasn’t always all that when it was at its peak.
Maybe I miss the ideal of MTV more than the reality.
MTV is my first memory of hearing about the internet outside of tech stuff. I think it was Adam Curry signing off from a show, with a comment along the lines of “If you haven’t heard about the world wide web, check it out.”
One of the creators of youtube stated nipplegate was an inspiration for starting youtube because there was no obvious place to find footage of the incident online.
I’ve never been able to stand her voice. I know some guys find the whole raspy voice thing sexy. I find it grating and irritating!
Those VJ’s talk wayyyy too much on Sirius. Introduce the song and STFU. I don’t care what happened to the singer from Big Country. Play the music I paid for.
Our city first got MTV in 1982, when they rolled out nationally. I was already 32, hardly their target audience, but my interest in music instantly rekindled after the Top 40 disaster that was the 70s. All those quirky yet melodic and catchy British groups still are favorites. Others were already doing music videos and those would have taken off regardless, but MTV’s 24-hour barrage at the precise moment changed the music culture in ways scattered programs never would. Everybody in the industry thought they were crazy to do this. They won and we won.
They needed to go in on talented DJs/VJs and presenters that could showcase and educate you about music (established genres plus bleeding edge stuff). I would not tune in just to stream a particular song that I already had in mind.