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All Things Rock Countdown (2002–2005) Beat Seekers (2002) Album Launch (2002–03) MTV Hits (2002–2006) Advance Warning (2003–2005) Video Clash (2003–2005) Hard Rock Live (2003–2005) Weekend Dime (2005) A.D.D. Videos (2006) The Big Ten (2006–2008) Sucker Free (2006–2008) MTV Live (2007) 45th at Night (2007) FNMTV (2008–09) FNMTV ...
The ceremony broadcast was preceded by the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards Pre-Show by the Shore. Hosted by Kurt Loder and SuChin Pak with reports from John Norris , Sway , and Gideon Yago , the broadcast featured red carpet interviews and performances by Mike Jones featuring Slim Thug and Paul Wall , Rihanna , and Fall Out Boy . [ 5 ]
TRL's Number Ones is the collection of music videos that had reached the number-one spot on the daily music video countdown show Total Request Live which aired on MTV from 1998 to 2008. Usually, the same video would stay at the number-one spot for a significant period of time until it was retired or honorably discharged from the countdown and ...
The experiment began in April 2005 as MTV Overdrive, a streaming video service that supplemented the regular MTV.com website. [126] Shortly after the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards , which were streamed on MTV.com and heavily used the MTV Overdrive features, MTV introduced a massive change for MTV.com, transforming the entire site into a Flash ...
MTV Hits is a music video-only spin-off cable/satellite television channel of MTV in several international markets, originally based on the pop music format of a defunct programming block on the American MTV itself. It may refer to the following channels: MTV Hits (Australian and New Zealand TV channel) MTV Hits (British and Irish TV channel)
The collection contained all of their music videos at the time of release, and was named after Duran Duran's song "Girls on Film" which was covered by Girls Aloud. The DVD included some of their most memorable television performances, and footage from their MTV special Girls Aloud - The Show that aired on MTV Hits on 30 October 2004.
VH1 MegaHits in the United States was a fully automated music video channel which played mostly top 40 adult contemporary videos from throughout VH1's history, from the '80s to the early years of the 21st century. It shared the same eight-hour automated loop schedule that VH1 Classic and VH1 Country also had at the time.
The purpose of MTV was to reuse previously-made content by record labels for international audiences, which was free, and televise them in America in a top-40 hits format. [3] On August 1, 1981, MTV was launched with its first telecast of “Video Killed the Radio Star" by British new-wave band The Buggles. [6]