MTV News Website Goes Dark, Archives Pulled Offline - Paramount Global also has removed content from CMT’s site

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By Todd Spangler
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More than two decades’ worth of content published on MTVNews.com is no longer available after MTV appears to have fully pulled down the site and its related content. Content on its sister site, CMT.com, seems to have met a similiar fate.

In 2023, MTV News was shuttered amid the financial woes of parent company Paramount Global. As of Monday, trying to access MTV News articles on mtvnews.com or mtv.com/news resulted in visitors being redirected to the main MTV website.

The now-unavailable content includes decades of music journalism comprising thousands of articles and interviews with countless major artists, dating back to the site’s launch in 1996. Perhaps the most significant loss is MTV News’ vast hip-hop-related archives, particularly its weekly “Mixtape Monday” column, which ran for nearly a decade in the 2000s and 2010s and featured interviews, reviews and more with many artists, producers and others early in their careers.

Former MTV News staffers posted on social media about the website shutdown and the scrubbing of the archives. “So, mtvnews.com no longer exists. Eight years of my life are gone without a trace,” Patrick Hosken, former music editor for MTV News, wrote on X. “All because it didn’t fit some executives’ bottom lines. Infuriating is too small a word.”

“sickening (derogatory) to see the entire @mtvnews archive wiped from the internet,” Crystal Bell, culture editor at Mashable and one-time entertainment director of MTV News, posted on X. “decades of music history gone…including some very early k-pop stories.”

“This is disgraceful. They’ve completely wiped the MTV News archive,” longtime Rolling Stone senior writer Brian Hiatt commented. “Decades of pop culture history research material gone, and why?”

Last week, Paramount Global’s CMT website similarly pulled its repository of country-music journalism dating back several decades.

Reps for MTV did not respond to requests for comment Monday.

Some observers noted that MTV News articles may be available through internet archiving services like the Wayback Machine, but according to Hiatt older MTV News articles do not show up via Wayback Machine.

In May 2023, Paramount Global shut down MTV News — which had already been severely downsized by layoffs in recent years — coming amid a 25% reduction in workforce across the Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios and Paramount Media Networks groups in the U.S. The group is headed by president-CEO Chris McCarthy, who in late April was named one of the three co-CEOs running Paramount Global’s “Office of the CEO.”

MTV News began in the late ’80s with “The Week in Rock,” a show hosted by Kurt Loder, who was the first MTV News correspondent.
 
I'm not sad that they shut down, but I am sad that this is going to be the pattern for all media. We have archives of print media going back centuries. With everything digital it can all vanish if the opening corporation fails, or the website gets taken down, or if the archive gets DMCA'd into oblivion. Hundreds of years from now this era is going to be a blank spot in human history.
 
Perhaps the most significant loss is MTV News’ vast hip-hop-related archives
Lmao. Yes imagine all the scholarly research that will be disrupted by this.

Kurt Loder, who was the first MTV News correspondent
I remember, barely, Kurt Loder doing MTV news. Shame how it fell apart later on.
I'm just old enough to have caught a year or so of MTV playing music, circa 2000, and South Park making fun of Kurt Loder for being an ancient dinosaur. 24 years ago.
 
I remember when MTV played music. Crazy, right? I was still in grade school but I remember. All the great shows. Daria, B&B, The Head. Around 1998 is when it really began to go down the shitter with their reality shows featuring faggots, niggers, and whorish white women. Because the site launched in 1996, it spent the better part of its existence sucking so nothing of real value was lost.
 
Hundreds of years from now this era is going to be a blank spot in human history.

Is that really such a bad thing? Humanity would benefit from pretty much everything that's happened from 2013 to now being wiped from collective memory. Archives of Tumblr about femboy bussies and squirrelkin should be destroyed so that future generations do not fall prey to such degeneracy. Oh no, MTV is dying, future generations won't be able to read or watch interviews by "artists" who made WAP, how will we ever sustain ourselves without this crucial historical knowledge? The important shit will be archived, remembered and studied, frivolous pop cultural tripe from trash companies like MTV, Rolling Stone and Buzzfeed will be relegated to dust where it belongs because it is astroturfed dogshit propped up by legacy media companies and investment firms to push The Message and without that it would have died a decade or more ago (well Buzzfeed more like 4 or 5 years). If it's gone it's because no one gave a fuck to even archive it since barely anyone reads or watches this garbage except to shit on it. This ain't the 60s, 70s, 80s or 90s, this culture, if it can even be called as such, deserves to be eradicated from human memory
 
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Explain to me how this isn’t a net positive for the quality of society? Total Tabloid Death.
You are on the website that archives the cartoon related musings of a troon who raped his own mother, and which has been hounded to the ends of the earth because we preserve the oversharing tweets of another troon sex pest, and now I'm not even sure why you are here.
 
You are on the website that archives the cartoon related musings of a troon who raped his own mother, and which has been hounded to the ends of the earth because we preserve the oversharing tweets of another troon sex pest, and now I'm not even sure why you are here.
Let’s agree to disagree and chalk it up to subjectivity. The bottom line is some things are worth documenting and some are just a waste of space. I’ve never been a data hoarder because I prefer to not buy copious amounts of external storage. I’m not against hoarding either I just think some times it’s not worth the effort.
 
Is that really such a bad thing?
Yes. Hundreds of years from now humanity should be able to look back and ridicule the insanity of this era. If it is forgotten then batshit ideas like a man can be a woman or that people should dress up like cartoon characters and fuck each other may again become reality. The clown world era should be remembered as a dark age that should never be repeated.
 
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