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Madonna has won 20 MTV Video Music Awards, including the 1986 Video Vanguard Award for which she became the first female honoree. [6] In 2003, MTV named her "The Greatest Music Video Star Ever", saying "Madonna's innovation, creativity and contribution to the music video art form" is what puts her at the top of the list. [7]
At the MTV Video Music Awards, she won her second Video of the Year with "You Need to Calm Down" in 2019, [7] and Best Direction with her solo directorial debut, "The Man", in 2020. [8] She wrote and directed the short film All Too Well: The Short Film (2021), her debut as a filmmaker, and the music video for the lead single from her tenth ...
The teaser trailer for the film debuted during the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards [16] and the full video was screened in Paris on October 5 and at the BAFTA on October 6. [2] [13] The video debuted on October 23, 2010 on Vevo, MTV, MTV2, YTV, BET, and VH1.com. [17] The film debuted on YouTube two days later.
The Thriller video sealed MTV's position as a major cultural force, helped disassemble racial barriers for black artists, revolutionized music video production, popularized making-of documentaries, and drove rentals and sales of VHS tapes. [10] Gil Kaufman of MTV described it as iconic and one of Jackson's most enduring legacies. [23]
The bold new cable station captured the zeitgeist, putting the new medium of music videos at the forefront of pop culture. MTV also helped invent a brand-new on-air gig: the video jockey, a.k.a ...
MTV Saturday Night Concert (1981–1987) Friday Night Video Fights (1982–1986) I.R.S. Records Presents The Cutting Edge (1983–1987) MTV Top 20 Video Countdown (1984–1998) Heavy Metal Mania (1985–1986) New Video Hour (1985–1988) 120 Minutes (1986–2000, moved to MTV2) Dial MTV (1986–1991) Friday Night Party Zone (1986–1987)
Material Girl" was nominated for best female video at the 1985 MTV Video Music Awards, but lost to Tina Turner's "What's Love Got to Do with It". [49] The video was ranked at position 54 on VH1's 100 Greatest Videos. [50] On YouTube, the video became her ninth video to surpass 100 million views.
At midnight on Aug. 1, 1981, Martha Quinn, Mark Goodman, Nina Blackwood, Alan Hunter, and J.J. Jackson stood inside the Loft restaurant in Fort Lee, N.J., to watch ...