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MTVX

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Defunct digital cable hard rock music channel Television channel
MTVX
CountryUnited States
Ownership
OwnerMTV Networks (Viacom)
History
LaunchedAugust 1, 1998
ClosedMay 1, 2002
Replaced byMTV/BET Jams

MTVX was an American hard rock music video channel operated by Viacom's MTV Networks division. A sister channel of MTV, MTVX was available exclusively on digital cable providers, being the first network to be made available as part of the "MTV Networks Digital Suite".

Format

MTVX aired no advertising outside of MTV2 promos, airing videos on a daily loop programmed to air in three eight-hour blocks per day. The channel aired contemporary videos and older videos that were no longer shown on MTV. Likewise, MTVX was not limited to just one genre of rock music videos. The channel aired a variety of genres, including punk, metal, and grunge.

Also, MTVX showcased otherwise unknown or unheard music to the masses, such as Static-X, Disturbed, Finger Eleven, Black Label Society, SOiL, Soulfly, Sepultura, Tool, Pantera, Kittie, Dope, Coal Chamber, Primus, Mushroomhead and others.

Closure

MTVX ended on May 1, 2002, and was replaced by MTV Jams, a hip hop music video channel. The last video played on MTVX was "See You On The Other Side" by Ozzy Osbourne. The replacement of MTVX was decried by rock music fans. MTV's explanation, based upon ratings and Billboard chart information, was that viewers wanted a devoted network for hip hop and R&B videos, rather than the alternative rock and hard rock videos that MTVX had been created to play, and claims that hard rock formats went into a quick decline post-9/11 due to industry and radio de-emphasis.

Reuse of brand

In 2011 MTV began reusing the MTVX brand (with X standing here for 'extended') for "a new cross-media group in charge of developing content for various platforms such as TV, computers and mobile phones." MTV launched MTVX in August The effort never resulted in any actual product or program branded by MTVX, though the brand name of MTVX remained present on MTV's official corporate page for several years.

References

  1. "antiMUSIC - musicNEWS May 2002: MTV Dis(miss)es Rock in Favor of Hip-hop". www.antimusic.com.
  2. Star, JEFF KORBELIK / Lincoln Journal. "Video blogger from Nebraska lands MTV project". JournalStar.com.
  3. "MTV Press & Corporate Website". Archived from the original on 2012-02-07. Retrieved 2012-02-19.
Paramount Media Networks
Kids & Family Entertainment
(Nickelodeon Group)
Entertainment and Youth Group
(MTV Entertainment Group)
Premium Networks Group
(Showtime Networks)
Paramount Global
Corporate directors
CBS
Entertainment
Group
Flagship assets
BET Media Group
CBS News
and Stations
Production &
distribution
Digital media
Streaming
U.S. media
networks
MTV Entertainment Group
Nickelodeon Group
Paramount
Pictures
International
networks
Paramount Networks Americas
Pan-American
Brazil
Argentina
Production arms
Defunct
See also
Paramount Networks EMEAA
MTV
Nickelodeon
Nick Jr.
Nicktoons
Comedy Central
Paramount Network
Other
Defunct
See also
Paramount Networks UK & Australia
United Kingdom
& Ireland
UK-only
Ten Network Holdings
(Australia &
New Zealand)
Network 10
Multichannels
Other
Related
Defunct
Miscellaneous
holdings
Defunct/former
holdings
See also


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