• @Got_Bent
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    325 months ago

    They did give at least a solid twelve years of music. The best unplugged episodes were in the early nineties.

    • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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      5 months ago

      The early 90’s is also when they started showing less and less music and more shit like The Real World, Road Trip and Beavis & Butt-Head. Even when I was a kid and saw Nirvana’s Unplugged set (arguably the best episode of Unplugged), the saying that “MTV doesn’t have music videos” was already a popular joke.

      • @profdc9
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        65 months ago

        Music Television doesn’t necessarily have to be showing videos, but showing something at least tangentially related to music would be nice. MTV is now what every channel is: put whatever is required in front of the viewer to sell ads. All channels are the same shit now.

      • smokebuddy [he/him]
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        45 months ago

        Beavis and Butthead were riffing on music videos for almost half the show though at least. Sometimes was the best part

        • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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          5 months ago

          True. The modern ones feel weird to me with them instead riffing on The Jersey Shore or TikTok videos.

          I think my favorite one was for Black Hole Sun.

          “Hey, Butt-Head, what’s a black hole?”

          “Uhh… It’s like a big bunghole in space that grinds everything up into diarrhea.”

    • @Moops
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      35 months ago

      I still break out a few of those unplugged jams from time to time.

    • @t_berium
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      25 months ago

      I love the series. I still regularly watch/listen to a couple of gigs.

      KISS Unplugged is simply awesome. And Pearl Jam. And Alice in Chains. And… sigh good times, man.

    • ...m...
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      5 months ago

      …at least through ninety-five they still ran music videos overnight and weekly themed shows (120 minutes, headbanger’s ball, MTV raps) at specific timeslots, but by the mid-nineties music videos had been relegated to graveyard-shift filler as the network increasingly focused on conventional programming…

      …fourteen years is a pretty fair assessment, methinks…