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MTV drops "Music Television" from its iconic logo

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MTV Removes “Music Television” From Iconic Logo

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In a move that signifies the end of an era, MTV will no longer include the words “Music Television” under its iconic logo. The Wrap was the first to report on the new logo, which will still feature the monolithic “M” and its dripping “TV,” but no underlying text. The shift seems to confirm what many have suspected for years: Following the cancellation of TRL and the success of Jersey Shore, The Hills and the Real World spin-offs, music is no longer MTV’s main priority.

“The people who watch it today, they don’t refer to MTV as music television. They don’t have the same emotional connection that, say, the people who are writing about [the logo change] do,” MTV’s head of marketing Tina Exarhos told the Los Angeles Times. Exarhos adds that the marketing department had previously toyed with removing “music television” but felt the text was too sacred and that higher-ups wouldn’t approve the idea. Since the network is introducing some new on-air designs, “now felt like the right time” to update the logo, Exarhos said.

It remains to be seen if the logo change will have any further impact on MTV’s scheduling. The network will likely continue to schedule their Video Music Awards and provide ancillary between-commercial coverage to musical figures. However, the removal of “Music Television” makes it harder for critics to point out that MTV’s programming isn’t really dedicated to music. At the 2007 VMAs, Justin Timberlake used MTV’s own stage to chastise the network for its shift away from music. “Play more damn videos. We don’t want to see the Simpsons on reality television,” he said.

There’s a brief history of the MTV logo posted on the Website for Frank Olinsky, one of the designers who created it; according to Olinksy, the logo originally was not accepted by the fledgling network until the words “Music Television” were added underneath. Nearly 30 years later, Olinsky’s original design has returned.

Source: Rolling Stone
 
“The people who watch it today, they don’t refer to MTV as music television. They don’t have the same emotional connection that, say, the people who are writing about [the logo change] do,” MTV’s head of marketing Tina Exarhos told the Los Angeles Times.

was that a veiled slam against us old folks who remember mtv when it was actually music television?

oh well. they stopped being about the music a long time ago. now they're like any other cable channel, drowning in cheap "reality" television.
 
Took them long enough. After TRL was there any show dedicated to music?
 
At the 2007 VMAs, Justin Timberlake used MTV’s own stage to chastise the network for its shift away from music. “Play more damn videos. We don’t want to see the Simpsons on reality television,” he said.
I remember Billie Joe Armstrong saying the same thing at one of the award shows.
 
They just made a new show called "silent library" or something and it just brought my intelligence down a few notches.

Who creates these garbage shows?
 
They just made a new show called "silent library" or something and it just brought my intelligence down a few notches.

Who creates these garbage shows?
It's a remake of a Japanese show which was pretty funny.


I wish MTV would get out of the way and let another company take over music on regular cable. There's no reason for them to bogart shit if they have no intention of playing music videos.
 
I'm watching "Sleepwalkers" on MTV2 right now.
 
While it would make sense to move away from emphasizing videos,there are so many ways to put out compelling music themed shows that would keep things fresh and different.If lowest common denominator "pop" culture most glaringly presented through"reality" programming...so scripted and fake is what so called reality television has been for a long time(tell me,The Real World,at one time one of their better "reality"efforts...has rarely been based on anything real or authentic,and things have been going downhill rather fast over the years)they should drop the M from their logo altogether.Now anything about the music is incidental at best.
 
Took them long enough.

Id normally find this upsetting, but MTV died for me years ago.
 
Nobody has the guts to offer a channel with an actual identity for long. They always start shoehorning in "alternate " programming until they become just another cable channel. I liked the idea back then that MTV was like a visual radio station. Never bogged down in long form programming. Like club video for your home setup.

Cartoon Network is doing it right now with their "CN real" crap. They all want a piece of what they think they're not getting by having a strong focus.

To me, music's become too fragmented to program a channel like MTV used to be. They'd need multiple channels like HBO has because very few people would want to see such a wide mix of styles. At least not enough for their bottom line.

Even MTV started undoing itself when they added more Hip Hop and Rap. Sure there's crossover, I can enjoy both, but a lot of the audience would be one or the other, and they would rather have them all. They probably figured the non-music shows wouldn't alienate Rock or Rap fans and they could net a bigger audience with shows that were more "music-neutral".

They served their purpose before the internet arrived. It's hard to sit through a bunch of odd crap just to see a clip by someone you like when you know you can probably just get it in a few clicks now. www is the new MTV
 
I wouldn't be surprised if now it's going to be even harder for a new artist to break through.
It's easier and harder, but I don't think that balances it back out to where it was before. It's easier to put something out there online, but it's harder to get noticed by a larger audience because of how easy it is to put it online. That means far more competition for attention and thousands of people attempting to "showcase" themselves. If everyone has a voice, how can you hear any one particular voice in the crowd?
 
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