The first video aired on MTV was "Video Killed the Radio Star" by the Buggles in 1981.

MTV's First Video Was "Video Killed the Radio Star"

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At exactly 12:01 AM on August 1, 1981, MTV broadcast its first-ever music video to cable television subscribers across America. The choice was almost too perfect: "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles, a synth-pop song about how new technology replaces old media. As the network literally killed radio's dominance with this new visual format, the irony wasn't lost on anyone.

The song itself had been released nearly two years earlier in September 1979 by the British duo Trevor Horn and Geoff Downes. While it topped charts in 16 countries and became a massive hit in England, American audiences had largely ignored it—the single peaked at a modest #40 in the U.S. But MTV's launch changed everything.

The Video Nobody Wanted

Directed by Russell Mulcahy, the "Video Killed the Radio Star" clip had more production value than most music videos of the era. Yet despite this, it wasn't exactly a coveted choice. The video was relatively unknown in America, featuring a band that hadn't achieved U.S. stardom. MTV picked it partly because they needed content, and partly because the song's prophetic lyrics perfectly captured what the network was about to do to the music industry.

The results were immediate. Record stores in areas that received MTV suddenly reported a surge in Buggles album sales—one of the first concrete examples of the network's power to drive music consumption.

An Unexpected Superstar Connection

Here's a fun detail: Hans Zimmer, who would go on to compose iconic film scores for The Lion King, Inception, and Gladiator, played keyboards on the track. At the time, he was just a session musician helping out on a quirky pop song. Nobody could have predicted that both the song and Zimmer would become legendary.

Why This Moment Mattered

MTV's launch fundamentally changed the music industry. Artists who could create compelling visuals suddenly had an advantage over those who couldn't. The music video became as important as the song itself. Michael Jackson's "Thriller," Madonna's provocative imagery, and the entire visual language of 1980s pop culture all stemmed from what MTV started that night.

The Buggles' prophecy came true: video didn't literally kill the radio star, but it transformed how we consumed music forever. And it all started with one synth-heavy song about nostalgia for a simpler, audio-only past—aired at the exact moment that past became history.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was the first video played on MTV?
"Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles was the first music video aired on MTV at 12:01 AM on August 1, 1981.
When did MTV launch?
MTV launched on August 1, 1981, broadcasting to cable television systems across the United States.
Why did MTV choose Video Killed the Radio Star as the first video?
MTV chose it partly for its ironic lyrics about new technology replacing old media, and partly because director Russell Mulcahy's video had higher production value than most available at the time.
Was Video Killed the Radio Star popular in America before MTV?
No, it peaked at only #40 in the U.S. in 1979, though it was a huge hit in England and topped charts in 16 countries.
Did Hans Zimmer play on Video Killed the Radio Star?
Yes, legendary film composer Hans Zimmer played keyboards on the track before his movie scoring career took off.

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