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VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown
1994 American TV series or program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 20 (formerly known as the VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown) is a weekly music video countdown television show that aired on the VH1 cable television network in the United States. The long-running show was first introduced in 1994 as VH1 Top 10 Countdown, part of VH1's "Music First" re-branding effort.[1] Over the years, a variety of hosts counted down the top 10 or 20 music videos of the week. The order of countdown was initially decided by a mix of record sales, radio airplay, video spins, message board posts, and conventional mail. The final episode aired unexpectedly without fanfare on November 28, 2015.
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History
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As part of VH-1's rebranding as "VH1: Music First" in 1994, the channel launched a new show, the VH1 Top 10 Countdown, that counted down the top 10 music videos played on the channel each week. A combination of record sales, radio airplay, video spins, message board posts, and conventional mail decided the order of the countdown. A rotating cast of VJs picked up hosting duties for the show over the years. The show expanded from 10 to 20 music videos, becoming VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown, on April 13, 2001.

Each week, the show was broadcast from another location around New York, often at the Virgin Records store in Union Square. Following a decline in the show's relevance, popular Survivor contestant Jenna Lewis was hired to host the show in 2001. After her departure from the show, from 2002 to 2006, the show was usually hosted by either Rachel Perry, Bradford How, or Aamer Haleem, but occasionally another VJ would fill in. At this point, the show's first airing would premiere on Saturdays at 3:00 AM Eastern, then later at 9:00 AM Eastern, followed by additional airings on Sunday Mornings at 8:00 AM Eastern, and Tuesday mornings at 9:00 AM Eastern. On July 22, 2005, VH1 moved the show's first airing of the week to Friday evenings at 6:00 PM Eastern, followed by additional airings on Saturday and Sunday mornings.
The show became known as the VSPOT Top 20 Video Countdown on April 7, 2006, and had received a new on-air look, a new studio at the MTV headquarters in Times Square (where TRL located at), and a new host, Matt Pinfield, the venerable VJ from both MTV and MTV2 in the 1990s and former host of MTV's 120 Minutes. In a fundamental change from the show's older format of compiling the top 20 videos of the week, online votes resolved the entire order of the countdown. Fan participation was introduced via VSPOT, VH1's online music video outlet. On the week of July 15, 2006, the show stopped airing on Friday evenings.
On the September 16, 2006, episode, Pinfield announced that a video would be retired after being on the countdown for 20 weeks. Before this time, videos could remain on the countdown for as long as seemed appropriate, though almost all were gone by the 24th week. One notable exception, however, was Keane's "Somewhere Only We Know", which remained in the countdown for 28 non-consecutive weeks in two countdown runs. The video only peaked at #8, and its second wind was caused by the popularity of the VH1.com live version of the video.
After Pinfield did not show up for a few recordings of the show[citation needed] on October 7, 2006, former host Aamer Haleem returned to host the show once again. Starting the week of February 17, 2007, after a mass layoff of music producers at MTV Networks (now known as "Paramount Media Networks"),[2] the show left MTV Studios and became broadcast from another location every week, as it was in the late 1990s and early 2000s (decade), starting at New York's Grand Central Terminal. Haleem continued to host the show every week from another location until August 4, 2007, when he hosted his final episode.
Alison Becker became the new host on August 11, 2007. Around this time, the VSPOT online video center was renamed to "Video.VH1.com," so the series readded its original title, VH1 Top 20 Video Countdown. Since then, each episode has usually featured one or two interviews with all celebrities of latest notoriety who either have a video, movie, or TV show of interest at the time. The countdown sometimes has videos high in its countdown despite virtually has no radio airplay for the song. One example is Bret Michaels' Go That Far which was directed by Shane Stanley. This video spent 12 weeks on the countdown and bowed out at #7. The video supported Michaels' show Rock of Love which is shown on the network.
David Cook and David Archuleta, the seventh-season winner and runner-up of American Idol were the first guest stars to introduce their own music video at the #1 spot. David Archuleta introduced his video "Crush" on November 15, 2008. The following countdown on November 22, 2008, Cook made a guest appearance to introduce his music video for "Light On" which was making its countdown debut at #1. Rock group Shinedown joined the list to introduce a song at #1 when their video for "Second Chance" was #1 on May 16, 2009. Introducing "Come Back To Me" at #1 on May 30, 2009, made Cook the first to introduce two music videos at #1 on two occasions. Later in 2009, rock group Daughtry introduced their music video for "No Surprise" at #1 on July 18, 2009, and British pop singer Jay Sean and hip-hop rapper Lil Wayne introduced their music video for "Down" at #1 on October 17, 2009. After four months of no one introducing their own video at #1, Pop-rock singer Adam Lambert would also join the list as he introduced his video, "Whataya Want from Me," at #1 on February 20, 2010. At VH1's "Winter Wonderland" countdown special, Irish rock group The Script introduced their video, Breakeven at #1 on March 6, 2010. For five months, no one had introduced their song at #1 until August 21, 2010, when hip-hop rapper B.o.B and pop-rock singer Hayley Williams introduced Airplanes at #1. Two months later, on October 9, R&B/pop singer Bruno Mars introduced his #1 single, "Just the Way You Are," at #1. Following a four to five-month absence of an artist introduction at #1, on February 26, 2011, British pop singer Adele introduced "Rolling in the Deep" at #1. On November 5, 2011, pop singer Kelly Clarkson introduced "Mr. Know It All" at #1. On March 24, 2012, hip-hop group Gym Class Heroes and British pop singer Neon Hitch introduced "Get Yourself Back Home" at #1. On July 27, 2013, R&B singer Robin Thicke introduced "Blurred Lines at #1. Since then, no other artists have introduced their own videos at #1.
At the end of the January 3, 2009 broadcast, Becker announced that it would be her final show as host. The new host, Jim Shearer, taped his first show on January 5, 2009, at the Virgin Megastore at Union Square in New York, for broadcast on January 10. In 2009, VH1 took faster control of the songs played on the show, with the number of videos available to be voted onto the Top 20 Countdown reduced to less than 30, and several videos were removed from the voting list while they were still in the top half of the countdown. There was also less competition regarding songs trying to earn a #1 spot due to the lack of a majority of song competitions in 2009 and four consecutive brand new #1 videos in January 2010.
On September 18, 2010, the show expanded from two hours to two and a half hours. It returned to the original two-hour format on February 11, 2012. On May 14, 2011, the show celebrated its 800th episode. This makes the countdown the longest-running, music-related program on any channel ever in television history. The countdown's 800th #1 video was "Rolling in the Deep" from Adele.
In the past, viewers could choose up to 20 videos to vote for at one time by dragging a song into spaces numbered 1-20. Voting was unlimited, allowing viewers to vote however many times they wanted, but in mid-2011, the voting format changed, and viewers could only vote for one video at a time. Votes were also limited to 20 times per day. In 2014, the show's voting was taken away, reverting to the original format of record sales, streaming, radio airplay, video spins, chart performance, and social media hype. Jim Shearer hosted his final episode on December 13, 2014, since his contract was not renewed for 2015. From January 10 to April 25, 2015, musical artists and other entertainment personalities guest-hosted the show.
Shannon Coffey was announced as the new host on April 20, 2015, and officially began hosting on May 2, 2015. The show was renamed "The 20," keeping the same video countdown but introducing new segments and a new studio.
On November 28, 2015, the final episode of "The 20" aired without ceremony, and the program was canceled without any publicity or statement as to why. An end-of-year special aired on December 19, 2015, in the same timeslot called The 2015 Year-End Special hosted by a panel of hosts, but no video of the year was named, and it composed a countdown of 20 pop-culture moments instead of videos. As of January 2016, Paramount has dropped music videos from the VH1 schedule (the first being BET two years earlier in December with 106 & Park). Reruns of Cheaters now air in the show's former timeslot.
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Special editions
Occasionally, VH1 aired special editions of the Top 20 Video Countdown:
- Fairway to Heaven: The show is condensed to 18 videos and takes place at a celebrity golf tournament. The title is a reference to the song "Stairway to Heaven."[3]
- Lift Ticket to Ride: An annual winter ski party event. The title is a reference to the song "Ticket to Ride."[4]
- VH1's Top 40 Videos of the Year: The year's best videos are counted down with commentary from celebrities. Prior to 2002, the special was a top 50 countdown, and was five hours long to allow most or all of each video to be played. From 2002 to 2011, the special was a top 40 countdown and resembled VH1's occasional "Top 100" countdowns. In 2012, the format of the year-end show changed again, to a top 20 countdown. The special was presented the same way a weekly show would be shown. In 2013, the format changed back to a top 40 countdown. In 2014, the year-end countdown changed back to a top 20 format.
- Rock Across America: Each summer through 2001, the show became a traveling event across nationwide.[5]
- The 20th Anniversary special aired on June 20, 2015. Starting with 1995, each year was represented with a video.
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20/20 Club
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A video is said to be part of the 20/20 Club when it has been on the countdown for 20 consecutive weeks. On its 20th week, the host will say that it has reached 20 weeks and this will be the last time it will be shown on the countdown. As of 2013, the 20/20 Club has ended, and there is no limit to how long videos can appear on the countdown.[6]
Videos that spent 20 weeks or more before the 20/20 Club
1995
1996
- "One Sweet Day" - Mariah Carey featuring Boyz II Men
- "Because You Loved Me" - Celine Dion
1997
1998
- "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" – Aerosmith
- "My Heart Will Go On" – Celine Dion
- "The Way" – Fastball
- "Iris" – Goo Goo Dolls
- "Torn" – Natalie Imbruglia
- "3 a.m." – Matchbox Twenty
- "Real World" – Matchbox Twenty
- "Truly Madly Deeply" – Savage Garden
- "Walkin' on the Sun" – Smash Mouth
1999
2000
- "It's My Life" – Bon Jovi
- "Smooth" – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
- "Kryptonite" – 3 Doors Down
- "Everything You Want" – Vertical Horizon
2001
- "With Arms Wide Open" – Creed
- "Thank You" – Dido
- "I'm Like a Bird" – Nelly Furtado
- "The Way You Love Me" – Faith Hill
- "Superman (It's Not Easy)" – Five For Fighting
- "Hanging by a Moment" – Lifehouse
- "Again" – Lenny Kravitz
- "South Side" – Moby featuring Gwen Stefani
- "When It's Over" – Sugar Ray
- "It's Been A While" – Staind
- "Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me)" – Train
- "Beautiful Day" – U2
2002
- "One Last Breath" – Creed
- "Soak Up the Sun" – Sheryl Crow
- "Everyday" – Dave Matthews Band
- "Wasting My Time" – Default
- "Here is Gone" – Goo Goo Dolls
- "Standing Still" – Jewel
- "How You Remind Me" – Nickelback
- "The Middle" – Jimmy Eat World
- "No Such Thing" – John Mayer
- "Hella Good" – No Doubt
- "Hey Baby" – No Doubt featuring Bounty Killer
2003
- "Landslide" – Dixie Chicks
- "Bring Me to Life" – Evanescence featuring Paul McCoy
- "Unwell" – Matchbox Twenty
- "Your Body is a Wonderland" – John Mayer
- "Harder to Breathe" – Maroon 5
- "The Remedy (I Won't Worry)" – Jason Mraz
- "Underneath It All" – No Doubt featuring Lady Saw
- "The Game of Love" – Santana featuring Michelle Branch
- "Calling All Angels" – Train
2004
2005
2006
Videos retired to the 20/20 Club
2006
- "Not Ready to Make Nice" – Dixie Chicks
- "About Us" – Brooke Hogan ft. Paul Wall
- "Far Away" – Nickelback
- "Buttons" – The Pussycat Dolls ft. Snoop Dogg
2007
2008
2009
- "Gives You Hell" – All-American Rejects
- "Lucky" – Jason Mraz and Colbie Caillat
- "Stay" – Safetysuit
- "Second Chance" – Shinedown
2010
- "Halfway Gone" – Lifehouse (Honorary)
- "Breakeven" – The Script (Honorary)
- "Like You Do" – Angel Taylor
2011
2012
- "Not Over You" – Gavin DeGraw
- "Somebody That I Used to Know" – Gotye featuring Kimbra
- "Lights" – Ellie Goulding
- "Some Nights" – fun.
- "Domino" – Jessie J
- "Ho Hey" – The Lumineers
- "Everybody Talks" – Neon Trees
2013
2014
- "Let Her Go" - Passenger
- "Burn" - Ellie Goulding
- "Am I Wrong" - Nico & Vinz
- "Chandelier" - Sia
2015
- "Sugar" - Maroon 5
- "Talking Body" - Tove Lo
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List of #1's
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1994
*Video of the Year: "Come to My Window" – Melissa Etheridge
1995
- July 29: "Scream" – Michael Jackson and Janet Jackson
- October 28: "Runaway" – Janet Jackson
- November 4: "As I Lay Me Down" – Sophie B. Hawkins
- November 11: "As I Lay Me Down" – Sophie B. Hawkins
- November 18: "As I Lay Me Down" – Sophie B. Hawkins
- Video of the Year: "Let Her Cry" – Hootie & the Blowfish
1996
- February 10: "One Sweet Day" – Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men
- February 17: "One Sweet Day" – Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men
- March 30: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- April 6: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- April 13: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- April 20: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- April 27: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- May 4: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- May 11: "Because You Loved Me" – Celine Dion
- May 18: "Always Be My Baby" – Mariah Carey
- July 13: "Give Me One Reason" – Tracy Chapman
- July 20: "Give Me One Reason" – Tracy Chapman
- July 27: "Give Me One Reason" – Tracy Chapman
- October 26: "It's All Coming Back to Me Now" – Celine Dion
- Video of the Year: "Ironic" – Alanis Morissette
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
- Note: No song of the year was named in 2015 due to the show's abrupt cancellation.
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List of hosts
Since the show's first introduction in 1994, it has featured a number of hosts:
- A.J. Hammer (1995–98)
- Cynthia Garrett (1997)
- Madison Michelle (1998–2000)
- Cane (2000–01)
- Rachel Perry (2002–06; August 26, 2006 (voiceover only); October 21, 2006 (hosted in person/on camera))
- Abby Gennet (2003)
- Bradford How (2004–06)
- Matt Pinfield (April 7-September 30, 2006)
- Aamer Haleem (2001-2006; May 26, 2006; October 7, 2006–August 2007)
- Alison Becker (August 2007–January 2009)
- Jim Shearer (January 2009–14)
- Shannon Coffey (2015)
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Records
- Artist with most weeks at #1 – Daughtry (39 weeks)
- Video with most weeks at #1 – "Smooth" - Santana featuring Rob Thomas and "Not Ready to Make Nice" – The Dixie Chicks (14 weeks)
- Most consecutive #1 video – "Not Ready to Make Nice" – The Dixie Chicks (13 weeks)
- Artist with most songs in the 20x20 Club – Lifehouse ("You and Me", "Whatever It Takes", "Hanging By A Moment" and "Halfway Gone")
- Song with the most weeks in the countdown – "Iris" – Goo Goo Dolls (35 weeks)
- Longest number of weeks to reach #1 – "Ho Hey" – The Lumineers (25 weeks)
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Artists with the most #1 videos
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See also
References
External links
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