Comment: 40 Years of MTV: the channel that shaped popular culture Published on: 3 August 2021 Writing for The Conversation, Dr Adam Behr discusses the influence of MTV over the last four decades. , 惭罢痴鈥檚 on August 1 1981 opened with footage of a shuttle launch and the words 鈥渓adies and gentleman, rock and roll鈥. The first song, however, was The Buggles鈥 distinctly poppy single 鈥揳ppropriately enough, . Given the commercial and cultural behemoth it would become, 惭罢痴鈥檚 launch was inauspicious. It was set up with a view to capitalising on the burgeoning market in cable TV, but parent company Warner Amex was sceptical. The initial broadcasts were to the New Jersey area only, and founding executives recall an uphill battle for approval and resources. Robert Pittman, 惭罢痴鈥檚 first CEO, notes that Warner Amex initially to the idea. Such scepticism wasn鈥檛 entirely unfounded. Although tailor-made promotional clips for pop and rock songs had a history dating back at least as far , and the first 鈥渕usic video鈥 鈥 for Queen鈥檚 Bohemian Rhapsody 鈥 was in 1975, the format was still relatively marginal. As MTV studio producer Robert Morton : We鈥檇 explain that we were starting a music channel and we鈥檙e gonna play videos, and people didn鈥檛 even know what videos were. In the intervening 40 years, MTV might not have 鈥渒illed鈥 the radio star, and its brand salience may be somewhat diluted in the age of YouTube, TikTok and other social media platforms. But from such comparatively meagre beginnings 鈥 in corporate terms, anyway 鈥 it鈥檚 difficult to overstate its effect on popular culture at large. Reinforcing the visual in pop music 惭罢痴鈥檚 effect on record sales . During the channel鈥檚 initial rise and 1980s heyday, it helped to kick-start the careers of stars such as Cyndi Lauper, and launched others 鈥 like Madonna and Michael Jackson 鈥 into the stratosphere. Its early days, however, were also accusations of a 鈥渃olour barrier鈥 that favoured white artists. This echoed what happened in throughout the 50s and 60s, when a segratated system was in place, and some stations are now widely known to have refused to play Black artists. Versions of their songs were often remade, carving out space for white artists they had influenced, such as Elvis Presley. Indeed, part of the significance of artists like Prince and Michael Jackson lies in the way that they pushed through to mainstream white audiences, using MTV as a significant platform, especially as it expanded beyond its initial primarily rock-oriented base. Heavy rotation on MTV supercharged the benefits of video as marketing tool, and the widespread success of videos like Michael Jackson鈥檚 and 鈥 alongside spiralling budgets 鈥 reinforced the visual as a key component of mainstream pop. This aesthetic convergence of sound and sight was felt beyond music. Cable TV precipitated the decline of the traditional television networks. The networks still had major moments like the 鈥淲ho Shot JR?鈥 reveal in Dallas in 1980 (in the US), or the final episode of M*A*S*H* in 1983 (, still a record), but their dominance was fading. The televisual monoculture of the post-war era gave way to more diverse content. MTV, through alignment with the music charts, helped to fill a popular cultural gap, especially since it greatly accelerated the trend for cross-marketing of musical acts and songs with major Hollywood productions. Music videos and the movies were natural partners in selling content like theme songs, soundtracks and music-oriented blockbusters. From and to and , a hit single became an integral part of Hollywood鈥檚 . The aesthetic cross-over worked both ways, too. The pathway from directing music videos to films became well-trodden by names whose early work found a home on MTV (like David Fincher, Michel Gondry and Spike Jonze). New formats MTV also predicted and encouraged the globalisation of media content and formats. It spawned a host of sister channels in the US and internationally, like MTV Europe and MTV Brasil. Beyond the music videos themselves, its adoption of and, latterly, rap in the 1990s also had an effect on the rise of genres, as well as individual artists. Later the MTVs Video Music Awards became an important indicator of success in the industry and a much anticipated yearly event. Concert series like spawned hit live albums in their own right. As the media environment became more fragmented, MTV also popularised reality and celebrity TV formats. Precursors to modern reality TV included , which depicted strangers living together. Debuting in 1992, eight years before Big Brother, it still runs today. Other MTV shows like , and Jersey Shore were breakout successes in the 鈥渞eality鈥 mould, the latter giving rise to international spin-offs like in the UK. MTV also had a hand in shaping the contemporary adult cartoon when it commissioned Mike Judge鈥檚 in the early 90s. Taking the satirical aspects of more family-oriented shows like The Simpsons and adding a sharper edge, the cartoon pushed the boundaries of taste. Beavis and Butt-Head leaned into the grunge-oriented demographic, giving rise to still iconic spin-offs and (also produced by Judge). South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have of Beavis and Butt-head and its nihilistic Generation X aesthetic, which paved the way for latter-day hits like Bojack Horseman, Archer and Rick and Morty. MTV forged new paths in entertainment by serving third-party produced content like music videos to a wide audience, paving the way for platforms like Netflix, pushing forward formats like reality TV, and yoking popular music and movies closer together. Beyond just hosting some of the key pop moments of the last 40 years, it has had a huge effect on shaping the cultural landscape of today. , Senior Lecturer in Popular and Contemporary Music, This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the . Share: Latest News 缅北禁地 expert highlights climate crisis in a new film A leading 缅北禁地 climate scientist is featured in a new film about how the climate and nature breakdown will affect the UK. published on: 14 April 2026 Neolithic tombs reveal ancient kinship ties Male individuals buried in Neolithic chambered tombs in northern Scotland were often related to each other through the paternal line and some were interred in the same or nearby tombs, research shows. published on: 14 April 2026 We are our Memories New exhibition by Fine Art graduate Trish Hudson-Moses, 22 April 鈥 4 May 2026 published on: 10 April 2026 Facts and figures