Lizzo Declares “The Golden Age of Music Videos is Over”

Lizzo has never been one to hold back with her opinions. And she continued that practice today with more weigh-ins on the state of Pop culture. For, in a new TikTok video, the GRAMMY winner declared that the “golden age of music videos” is officially over. Full story below… Reflecting on the big-budget era of the ’90s and 2000s compared to today’s social-first climate,  » Read more about: Lizzo Declares “The Golden Age of Music Videos is Over”  » The post Lizzo Declares “The Golden Age of Music Videos is Over” appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. - Thirsty?.

Lizzo Declares “The Golden Age of Music Videos is Over”

Lizzo has never been one to hold back with her opinions.

And she continued that practice today with more weigh-ins on the state of Pop culture.

For, in a new TikTok video, the GRAMMY winner declared that the “golden age of music videos” is officially over.

Full story below…

Reflecting on the big-budget era of the ’90s and 2000s compared to today’s social-first climate, the Houston native unpacked her stance that the days of iconic rollouts like Michael Jackson‘s ‘Thriller’ and ‘Lady Marmalade’ are long gone.

Instead, the star asserts that short, viral clips are now the real currency of music promotion.

Check out Lizzo’s video in full:

@lizzoTrust me bro 😇♬ original sound – lizzo

Speaking candidly, the 37-year-old said:

“The golden age of the music video is over. And actually, it’s been over for a long time. There will never be another ‘Thriller,’ ‘Lady Marmalade,’ or ‘Ladies Night,’ because critical mass and mainstream culture just don’t exist anymore.

Once upon a time, music videos were an extension of an artist’s vision. They gave audiences a face and an aesthetic to go with the song they heard on the radio. It wasn’t about money or metrics – it was just art expanding naturally.”

Continuing, Lizo stressed:

“By the late ’90s and early 2000s, everyone was trying to one-up each other with the biggest, most cinematic music video experience. Then YouTube came along.

Music videos became obligatory. Even if an artist didn’t want to shoot one, they had to. In my opinion, that’s when the quality started to decline. It worked for a while… until it didn’t.

For example – I just dropped a music video for my song STFU featuring Lil Jon. And it’s actually really ******* good. But I didn’t even put it on YouTube. Hell, I didn’t even put it on TikTok. Right now, the full video is only on my Instagram page. Why? Because music videos don’t move the needle anymore.”

She wasn’t done.

Lizzo Stars in the 'Still Bad' Video

Expanding, the ‘About Damn Time’ performer added:

“The budgets will never be what they were in the ’90s. Or in the early 2000s. Why? Because the investment doesn’t bring in profit anymore.

We all need to make peace with the fact that music videos will never be what they once were. But the exciting part? Now we get to create what the next thing is.”

Lizzo’s words come after the release of her mixtapes ‘My Face Hurts From Smiling’ and deluxe offering ‘My Face Still Hurts From Smiling.’

Your thoughts?

The post Lizzo Declares “The Golden Age of Music Videos is Over” appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. - Thirsty?.

Share

What's Your Reaction?

Like Like 0
Dislike Dislike 0
Love Love 0
Funny Funny 0
Angry Angry 0
Sad Sad 0
Wow Wow 0