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* [[The Tube Music Network]] |
* [[The Tube Music Network]] |
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[[Category:1980s American television series]] |
[[Category:1980s American television series]] |
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[[Category:1981 television series debuts]] |
[[Category:1981 television series debuts]] |
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[[Category:1986 television series endings]] |
[[Category:1986 television series endings]] |
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[[Category:HBO network shows]] |
[[Category:HBO network shows]] |
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[[Category:American music television series]] |
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Video Jukebox | |
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HBO's Video Jukebox
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Starring | Various |
Country of origin | United States |
Production | |
Running time | Varied |
Original release | |
Network | Home Box Office (HBO) |
Release | December 1981 – November 1986 |
Video Jukebox was an American television program that aired from 1981 to 1986 on HBO. It was a monthly series that showcased music videos from the popular recording artists of the time such as Duran Duran, Prince, Madonna, REO Speedwagon, Culture Club, David Bowie, Blondie and The Human League to name a few. A typical episode of Video Jukebox consisted of seven or eight music videos and lasted roughly 30 minutes, and the lineup changed in the middle of each month.[1]
In the late 1970s (and before the MTV network debuted), HBO was already airing one or two music videos (or "promotional clips" as they were known at the time) as filler in between their feature films and other series. These short clips also carried the Video Jukebox moniker. When Video Jukebox premiered as a half-hour series in December 1981, HBO reached more households than MTV (which was launched only four months earlier), so a video that aired on Video Jukebox may have received a little more exposure than it would on MTV, a claim that would be short-lived as MTV quickly gained more cable markets by around 1983.[2]
The series had no host until September 1985, when Dennis Elsas was brought on as voiceover talent, introducing the videos that were shown on the program. Elsas served as host of Video Jukebox until its final airing in November 1986.
At the peak of its popularity in the mid-1980s, Video Jukebox spawned many "special editions", including Christmas Jukebox, Country Jukebox, Comedy Jukebox, Heavy Metal Jukebox, Sixties Jukebox, and other editions featuring songs from movies and Grammy winners.[3]
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