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Friday Night Videos




  Caption Graphic from first Friday Night Videos intro
  Format Music Video s / Variety Show
  Runtime 90 mins (1983-1987)<br>60 mins (1987-2002)
  Narrated (announcers, 1983-1985)<br> Nick Michaels , Scott Muni
  Network NBC
  First Aired July 29 , 1983
  Last Aired May 24 , 2002
  Imdb Id 0165583
  Tv Com Id 1529


''Friday Night Videos'' was a Music Video show broadcast on the American NBC television network from July 29 , 1983 to May 24 , 2002 , and was considered network television’s answer to MTV .


HISTORY

In the beginning, MTV was still a phenomenon that very few people actually could see in their homes, as cable television wasn't yet the "norm." ''Friday Night Videos'' took advantage of that fact and proved to be the next best thing.

While it primarily showcased music videos by popular , Rock , R&B , and Rap .

In the beginning, the show was 90 minutes long, and consisted of music videos introduced by an off-camera announcer. In addition to this, classic artists of the 1960s and 1970s occasionally appeared in ''Hall of Fame Videos'', major stars were profiled in '''''Private Reels''''', and new clips made their network debuts as '''''World Premiere Videos'''''.

The most popular feature was ''Video Vote''. Two videos were played back-to-back, and viewers across the country could call in and vote for one of them, using nationwide 900 Numbers for a small per-call fee. The winning video faced a new challenger the following week.

Nick Michaels and Scott Muni were the off-camera announcers.


The first year

's '' Billie Jean '']]

''"Many of our viewers aren't familiar with music videos, so we're going to begin our first show with one of the best."''
— so stated the announcer at the beginning of the first telecast. Michael Jackson ’s '' Billie Jean '' was the video chosen for this honor.

During the early years, the ''Video Vote'' segment often received as many as 200,000 calls in one night. The first year ended with a final contest, pitting the videos with the most victories against each other. Callers chose ZZ Top 's '' Sharp Dressed Man '' as the '' 1983 Video Vote Champion''.

Occasionally, ''FNV'' was Simulcast on the radio, so viewers could hear the music in stereo. In December 1983 , the show scored a Ratings victory when it aired Michael Jackson's '' Thriller '' as a ''World Premiere Video''.


CELEBRITY HOSTS

to 1990 .]]In 1985 , ''FNV'' began to use different celebrity guests to host the show each week. Actors (many from other NBC network series), comedians, media celebrities and musicians all did their stint on ''FNV'' (usually in teams of two); a handful of whom made repeated appearances. As a result of the host banter, the show often would have to slightly shave off bits of the end of the videos to conserve time.

Notable hosts have included:

































LATE 1980S/EARLY 1990S

hosting in 1988 .]]
In , ''FNV'' gave out its own awards, naming Michael Jackson the ''Greatest Video Artist of the Decade''.

In early 1990 , NBC sporadically ran a Saturday morning edition of ''Friday Night Videos'' for viewers who missed the show hours earlier because of its late night time slot. That fall, the network premiered a clone show on the Saturday morning line up called ''Saturday Morning Videos'', which followed '' Saved By The Bell '' and was basically a Campier version of ''Friday Night Videos'' that targeted the lead-in teenage audience. It was cancelled in 1992 .

to 1993 ]]
In late 1990 , ''FNV'' began to move away from an all-video format. Regular bumper segments were added, featuring Judy Tenuta (''The Goddess of Gossip''), Richard Belzer ('''''Ask the Belz'''''), Kim Coles ('''''Girl Talk'''''), Tom Kenny ('''''Music News'''''), and James Stephens III ('''''Rapitorials''''').

In 1991 , live in-studio musical performances were added. Tom Kenny , meanwhile, became the regular on-screen host, while popular radio personality Frankie Crocker hosted his own feature, ''Frankie Crocker's Journal'' — which highlighted important dates in music history. Shortly thereafter, Crocker took over as host, sharing duties with Darryl M. Bell (who was later replaced by Branford Marsalis in 1993 ) while continuing to host ''Frankie Crocker’s Journal''.


Format change


In and Rita Sever . In 1996 , Rita Sever took over as sole host. The old ''Video Vote'' segment, meanwhile, was resurrected and renamed "Friday Night Jukebox."

For the host segments after 1998 , Sever would be seated or standing in front of the giant videoscreen on the right side of '' The Tonight Show With Jay Leno '' set, near the guest's entrance.


The twilight years


In 2000 , despite having its highest Ratings in years, the show was once again reformatted by NBC for budget reasons. As is, ''Friday Night'''s last telecast was December 29 . On January 5 , 2001 , the show came back being called ''Late Friday''. Completely nixing music and entertainment segments, the show now solely revolved around stand-up comedians doing their stage routines. After 65 episodes it was replaced by '' Last Call With Carson Daly '', which was extended to five nights a week.


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