I'm glad we live in the post-modern era where television shows,
movies and books can gleefully deconstruct themselves before our
very eyes. MTV led the way on the Idiot Box front years ago when
they introduced two characters named Beavis and Butt-Head, who
did exactly what we had been doing for years--commenting on the
relative coolness or lameness of all those music videos we'd been
subjected to. But MTV has canceled the cartoon couch potatoes
and still seems more interested in showing "Real World"
marathons than in broadcasting actual music videos. So where are
dedicated music video lovers/haters supposed to go for their daily
fix of rock star bashing? Surprisingly, it's MTV's sister station
VH-1.
Bloop. "Pop-Up Video" was launched in December
of 1996.
The brainchild of producers Woody Thompson and Tad Low, "Pop-Up
Video" made its debut one year ago this month and instantly
became the network's number one show. "Not that it was too
tough to beat the 238th airing of some 'American Bandstand' episode
from the late '70s," admit Thompson and Low on their snarky
Web site (www.popupvideo.com/popupflfr.html). The rude-boy duo
go on to suggest VH-1 change their slogan to "We love Dick!"
That should give you some idea of what goes on in "Pop-Up
Video."
Bloop. Earlier this year, Thompson and Low were named among
Entertainment Weekly's "100 Most Creative People in
Hollywood."
"Pop-Up Video" has a simple, hilarious and highly addictive
formula--show music videos and pop-up little information bubbles
every few seconds that explain the video, give facts about the
artist, spit out random bits of information or just make an insulting
joke at some superstar's expense. Take, for example, Tom Petty's
"Learning to Fly" video. An arrow pointing to Mr. Petty's
sunglasses tells us they're $95 Ray-Bans; a passing dog in the
background gets its own "info-bullet" explaining that
it's a mixed-breed collie named Bart that Tom adopted in 1987;
Tom walks past a chili dog stand in the mall as the screen lists
its nutritional ingredients.
Bloop. Tina Turner's "Missing You" was the first
video ever "popped" on "Pop-Up Video."
Considering the sarcastic tone most of the pop-ups take, it's
surprising only two videos have ever been pulled from the show.
"Every Breath You Take" by The Police was yanked thanks
to some record company pressure (possibly due to numerous "lung
cancer" references) before it ever hit the airwaves. The
Wallflowers' "One Headlight" did air several times,
but was eventually yanked when lead singer Jakob Dylan called
complaining about the "nasty tone."
I, for one, hope that nasty tone never goes away.