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Old 10-04-2011, 11:41 AM   #1
andrewdkm
 
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Default ‘Pop Up Video’ Retooled for a New Decade

&ldquo;They&rsquo;re all married now, with families,&rdquo; Mr. Thompson said wistfully by phone from Los Angeles. &ldquo;Nobody had real lives back then.&rdquo; &ldquo;Back then&rdquo; was 1996, and the band was really the staff of &ldquo;Pop Up Video,&rdquo; the humorous music-video explainer beloved by one generation &mdash; and about to be introduced to another. &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; was shown on VH1 until 2002. Now, as the channel tries to realign with music, &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; will return as a midday show, starting Monday. But just as much of the staff under Mr. Thompson, one of the show&rsquo;s creators, has moved on, so too have the artists who once helped &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; become VH1&rsquo;s top-rated show, and long gone is the golden era of voracious video consumption. When &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; had its debut, peppered with balloon captions filled with trivia and gossip annotating each video, VH1 was two years into a &ldquo;Music First&rdquo; makeover led by &ldquo;Video Countdown.&rdquo; MTV was still the music-oriented channel fans now pine for, broadcasting videos around the clock on certain shows. The Box, a channel fueled by call-in video orders, was thriving. And this was all before the genre&rsquo;s late-1990s fever pitch moment. MTV wouldn&rsquo;t unveil &ldquo;Total Request Live&rdquo; until 1998, the same year a 16-year-old named Britney Spears donned schoolgirl tartans and shot the video for &ldquo;... Baby One More Time,&rdquo; which came out the next year. &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; sliced through the cultural landscape by giving music fans exactly what they wanted: credibility, not to mention some ironic distance. In other words, fans could simultaneously <a href="http://www.uggssalediscount.com/"><strong>ugg sale</strong></a> enjoy and skewer pop&rsquo;s latest output. &ldquo;People felt it communicated: &lsquo;I read my music videos,&rsquo;&nbsp;&rdquo; Mr. Thompson said. But by 2002 both artists and fans were becoming less interested in videos, and VH1 decided the &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; concept was exhausted. &ldquo;We expanded, did some episodes of &lsquo;Brady Bunch&rsquo; and &lsquo;Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,&rsquo;&nbsp;&rdquo; Mr. Thompson said. &ldquo;But everyone still felt it had run its course. Everyone but us.&rdquo; The show&rsquo;s last episode was that August. Mr. Thompson packed up his Bowery apartment and headed for Los Angeles. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t pitch VH1 for a decade,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And I didn&rsquo;t hear from them either.&rdquo; Then, a year ago, Mr. Thompson met with Shelly Tatro, VH1&rsquo;s senior vice president for production and programming, who was with the company during the heyday of &ldquo;Pop Up.&rdquo; The show that resulted from that meeting quickly fizzled, but &ldquo;in our last <a href="http://www.northfacesales-discount.com"><strong>north face discount sales</strong></a> conversation I said to Shelly in a jokey way, &lsquo;Call me when you want to bring back &lsquo;Pop Up,&rsquo;&nbsp;&rdquo; Mr. Thompson said. &ldquo;Three months later she called.&rdquo; Ms. Tatro said, &ldquo;It had always been near and dear to my heart.&rdquo; She wasn&rsquo;t alone. &ldquo;Bringing the show back was a no-research gut decision,&rdquo; the channel&rsquo;s president, Tom Calderone, said. &ldquo;People were so loud about how much they missed it, we said, &lsquo;Let&rsquo;s just do it.&rsquo;&nbsp;&rdquo; The musician Pete Wentz, host of VH1&rsquo;s coming special &ldquo;100 Greatest Songs of the &rsquo;00s,&rdquo; was a junior in high school when &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; had its debut; he was instantly hooked. &ldquo;The show made every video more interesting,&rdquo; he said. Of course much of its charm came from the yet-unknown information it presented, uncovered by researchers in constant contact with musicians&rsquo; camps. (An average video takes two staffers a week to research, then another few days to write, with 25 videos in progress at a time.) The missives were short, their content grabby. Today it&rsquo;s a mode familiar enough to be obvious. &ldquo;&nbsp;&lsquo;Pop Up&rsquo; beat Twitter to its own game,&rdquo; Ms. Tatro said. Saul Austerlitz, the author of &ldquo;Money for Nothing: A History of the Music Video From the Beatles to the White Stripes,&rdquo; said, &ldquo;The show first struck a chord because it allowed people to have that experience&rdquo; they would later get with social media. The parallel initially concerned Mr. Thompson. After all, fans are perfectly capable of searching Google for relevant information while simultaneously watching a video. &ldquo;For that generation who&rsquo;s getting their first taste, I worried that we&rsquo;d be seen as a rip-off of current culture,&rdquo; he said. That wasn&rsquo;t the only problem that the Internet posed. The backstage stories once first gleaned by &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; researchers were already spattered across the Web. Mr. Thompson wasn&rsquo;t as worried by that. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s <a href="http://www.northfacejackets-discount.com"><strong>north face jackets</strong></a> not what we tell you,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s when we tell you it. The moment Britney bends over, we tell you a story about K-Fed. ...&rdquo; He trailed off. &ldquo;You know.&rdquo; And &ldquo;Pop Up&rdquo; is taking some advantage of the Internet; on its Web site you can inscribe your own captions on videos. Other than that and a few tweaks to graphics, the show has barely had a touchup. It&rsquo;s fitting, since the videos it dissects have a much cleaner look these days. Mr. Thompson has lamented this shift for ages. Videos are often &ldquo;essentially glorified GQ shoots on a soundstage in Midtown,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s just not always that much to talk about.&rdquo; As Mr. Austerlitz explained, &ldquo;Videos have changed to reflect their environment. They&rsquo;re smaller, lighter and made for people to watch at their desks. It&rsquo;s not a superstar medium anymore.&rdquo; Mr. Thompson is well aware but not at all deterred. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather make fun of those indie bands with all the credibility and convince everybody that hey, Lindsay Lohan is actually a good singer,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the game: to always keep you second-guessing what you see.&rdquo;
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