BRH said:...but it does make for a good stunt to grab some publicity.
whitfm said:If it seriously took THIS event happening for stations to start pulling Kanye West's music, then you can bet for sure that it's just a lame stunt. We didn't "boycott" him the time he said Bush hates black people, we didn't boycott him all of the other innumerable times he showed his rear ... we waited until he jumps up on stage and disrespects another pop artist. I'm not condoning at all what Kanye did but that's pretty weak, especially knowing that something stupid happens every year at the VMAs. After all, it is the ONLY reason why that awards show is still relevant on a network that rarely plays the videos of its award nominees. I think more than anything, if a "boycott" was going to happen, then it was long overdue and should have happened way before this drama.
franksandhotdogs said:That being said, MC Lars hit the nail on Twitter, "Very confused about how MTV has the VMAs but no longer broadcasts the content for such an award ceremony?"
TheBigA said:franksandhotdogs said:That being said, MC Lars hit the nail on Twitter, "Very confused about how MTV has the VMAs but no longer broadcasts the content for such an award ceremony?"
Isn't that like Billboard charting CD sales, when almost no one buys CDs any more?
Roger That said:It would be, if CD sales didn't make up 85% of album sales. Still.
TheBigA said:Roger That said:It would be, if CD sales didn't make up 85% of album sales. Still.
The majority of music aquisition is through peer-to-peer file sharing. It doesn't get counted by BDS, and doesn't take place in stores.
Roger That said:Are you arguing that the VMAs shouldn't exist at all, because the content doesn't support it? If so, it misses the point that MC Lars was making in his tweet.
Roger That said:The idea that MTV shouldn't run the VMAs because they don't air videos (MC Lars' point) is more akin to the idea that XX network shouldn't run the Academy Awards because they don't air the movies in question.
TheBigA said:Now that people can watch videos on-demand, it makes a video music channel obsolete...except for the music industry that still misses the free publicity.
Roger That said:They certainly don't move the needle in the website traffic department of radio station sites, compared to the other content.