
It's hard to believe it's been 39 years since MTV's first Video Music
Awards.
It seems like only yesterday that I was standing on line waiting for the men's room behind David Lee Roth when a young lady asked if she could meet him after the after-party, and he
turned, leaned right in my face, and gave me a big wink.
Or watching Madonna roll around on the stage at Radio City Music Hall while performing "Like A Virgin" not far from where I was
seated.
Or eating sushi with Diana Ross during one of the after-parties at Tavern On The Green in Central Park.
That was MTV in its heyday when it literally was "music television."
I've given up second-guessing the wisdom of the pivots corporate media moguls have made to undermine some of the greatest media franchises long ago, but I figured since this is the eve of MTV's
39th annual Video Music Awards, I'd weigh in just a little bit more. Also, I'm filling in for Wayne Friedman on "TV Watch" this week, so might as well tackle something timely.
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Sadly, I had to
research MTV's current programming schedule to research this column, because I haven't actually watched it in many years, and from what I can tell, other that some occasional "MTV Unpluggeds,"
occasional music-oriented documentaries, and some concerts airing on Paramount+, the only actual music program MTV still produces is its annual "Video Music Awards."
So once or so a year, MTV
actually is music television.
I'd say that MTV left a void in the music television marketplace, but others have long since filled it, especially Google (YouTube is one of, if not the largest
licensor of music content of any video medium.)
Maybe that's just the
natural order of things.
MTV begets YouTube.
HBO begets Netflix.
CNN begets, well, you know.
But for a TV channel that was in the vanguard of video music, it's nice to
know they still have an award for that. Even if they just give it out once a year.
