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Remembering MTV (1 Viewer)

MTV revived and/or elevated a lot of bands, but they also flattened a few careers.

In the late 70's, Christopher Cross was one of the biggest selling acts in the world, but he was told directly by MTV that because he was fat and doughy, the opposite of charismatic, they wouldn't play any of his songs. His career screeched to a halt.

Boston had the biggest selling debut album of all-time, and their second album was hugely successful, but Tom Scholz refused to even acknowledge MTV, and so when their third album debuted in 1986, MTV returned the favor by never even mentioning it.

Jackson Browne did one video (Lawyers In Love), but hated the process so much that he refused to do any others, including for "Somebody's Baby". His career then thudded.
Adult Contemporary took a big hit when MTV first appeared. MTV embraced it again in the late 80s but too late for Cross.

Boston tanked because their new music sucked

Jackson Brown was never that big to begin with

 
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We got MTV just a little less than a year after it came out.

I absolutely remember it. I had heard of MTV but it was not available on the west coast. My city/town was always a great test market for new stuff. The neighborohood I grew up in even more so. Local cable provider sent people door-to-door to get households to subscribe to this new fangled cable TV package...MTV, ESPN, WGN, TBS etc. For some reason my mom pulled the trigger.

The installer started flipping around the channels once it was installed. "Red Barchetta" showed up when she flipped to MTV. I had "Moving Pictures" on vinyl. Hooked.

 
MTV revived and/or elevated a lot of bands, but they also flattened a few careers.

In the late 70's, Christopher Cross was one of the biggest selling acts in the world, but he was told directly by MTV that because he was fat and doughy, the opposite of charismatic, they wouldn't play any of his songs. His career screeched to a halt.

Boston had the biggest selling debut album of all-time, and their second album was hugely successful, but Tom Scholz refused to even acknowledge MTV, and so when their third album debuted in 1986, MTV returned the favor by never even mentioning it.

Jackson Browne did one video (Lawyers In Love), but hated the process so much that he refused to do any others, including for "Somebody's Baby". His career then thudded.
And one bad video killed Billy Squire's

 
Boston tanked because their new music sucked
Amanda went to number 1 on the pop charts and Third Stage spent a month at number 1 on the album charts.

While I don't like that album that much, the success with that record proved that while MTV could give you massive adrenaline shots, you didn't have to have their support to succeed.

 
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Early metal videos I remember...

Metal health

For those about to rock...

Live wire

I Love Rock 'n' Roll

Fast as a shark & balls to the wall

Trashed

Burning for you

I wanna be somebody

 
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I think it was the show Club MTV with Julie Brown that had Kelsey Grammer's first wife on as a dancer,she was pretty hot and always wore something nice for the masturbation session that was soon to follow.

Spring Break was money when they did it for the first few years.

 
First video I ever saw on MTV: Phil Collins, You Can't Hurry Love

Biggest first impression a video ever made: Peter Gabriel, Sledgehammer

 
I think it was the show Club MTV with Julie Brown that had Kelsey Grammer's first wife on as a dancer,she was pretty hot and always wore something nice for the masturbation session that was soon to follow.
That show was upskirt heaven. My VCR wore out.

 
Watched MTV on the 1st day on satellite. The first 3-4 years were the golden era for sure. It really changed after 1992 I would say.

A few of the early videos I remember:

Dire Straits - Skateaway - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GS8TAKMWwjA

Red Rider - Lunatic Fringe - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sTFVMMCwsss

Gary Numan - Cars - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6YMAvfwTFo

Scandal - Goodbye to You - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_50-gOeBilc

Missing Persons - Words - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IasCZL072fQ

 
I remember those little news breaks with Kurt Loder and then John Norris(?). In those days before the internet they were little golden nuggets of music information.

 

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