MTV, the trailblazing music platform that transformed global pop culture in 1981, is preparing to shut down its remaining international music channels as traditional TV continues to lose ground to digital platforms.
The network famously launched with the iconic debut video, “Video Killed the Radio Star,” a moment that symbolised a bold shift in music consumption.
More than forty years later, MTV—now under Paramount Skydance—is set to discontinue key music channels, including MTV Music, MTV Hits, and its nostalgic 80s and 90s programming.
According to Paramount insiders who spoke with AFP, these channels will gradually go off air in the UK and other parts of Europe in the coming months.

Reports also indicate that the shutdown will extend to France, Germany, Poland, Australia, and Brazil by the end of the year. The move has been widely described as the “end of an era.”
When it first launched in 1981, MTV revolutionised entertainment as the world’s first TV channel dedicated solely to music videos. Its opening broadcast, “Video Killed the Radio Star,” captured a turning point in how audiences engaged with music—ushering in a dynamic visual era that helped elevate countless artists to international fame.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, MTV became a cultural powerhouse, shaping youth trends through music video rotations, celebrity interviews, reality shows, and highly influential award ceremonies. Over time, it expanded into specialised sub-channels such as MTV Hits, MTV Music, and retro networks celebrating the sounds of past decades.
However, the rise of YouTube, music-streaming giants like Spotify and Apple Music, and short-form video platforms such as TikTok drastically reduced the appeal of conventional music television. As audience habits shifted, MTV increasingly leaned toward reality-based content, while its pure music channels suffered declining viewership and advertising revenue.
Paramount’s decision to finally shut down these remaining international music channels marks the most dramatic downsizing in MTV’s history—and underscores the near-total transition from linear music TV to digital, on-demand formats dominating today’s entertainment landscape.













