‘TRL’s’ greatest contributions to Western civilization
By Todd Martens, Stephanie Lysaght and Patrick Kevin Day, Times Staff Writers
In November, after 10 years on the air, MTV’s one-time juggernaut of a show, “Total Request Live” is switching off the lights. The world has seen a lot of change in the last years of the 20th century and the dawn of the 21st century. We’ve experienced presidential elections, wars, celebrity breakdowns and the dominance of the Internet. But if any single agent of change has carried a steady pulse through the tumult, it’s the show that became so ubiquitous that it shortened its name to just three letters, “TRL.”
In celebration of 10 years of being a dominant force in pop culture, we present to you the greatest contributions MTV’s “Total Request Live” has made to our national consciousness.
“TRL” is dead. Long live “TRL”! (Peter Kramer / Associated Press)
A star is born:
As the face of MTV for the much of the last decade, Britney Spears videos were TRL staples. Her
Baby One More Time was essentially the TRL soundtrack in 1999. Shes arguably the biggest MTV star since
Lessons in self-hype
If theres anything MTV excels at, its turning its own shows into commercials for its other television shows. Evidence? The Video Music Awards, which celebrate the handful of artists who still get videos aired on the network. And TRL itself provided some inspired moments of self-promotion, as when
Family values
“TRL” has had its unsavory moments, but it can also be a good place to air grievances, right wrongs, and even provide positive examples of what’s lacking in today’s society, which for one singer is the familial unit. R&B prince
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This guy!
Only on MTV could a tall, wild-haired, high-pitched rock n roll kid win a contest to host a television show. Jesse Camps eccentric nature would stand in stark contrast to the more groomed winners of
Carson Daly
Back when
Country music spinoffs
In 2001, uber-hit Total Request Live inspired the country community to launch a spinoff series called CMT Most Wanted Live. The show was shot in Nashville and featured appearances by country music heavyweights such as
And the spinoffs didnt stop there! TRL-spin-off CMT Most Wanted Live went on to spawn MWL Star and MWL Stacked. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
Vanessa Minnillo
Carson Daily isnt the only “TRL” host who went on to have a career beyond the show. Former pageant queen Vanessa Minnillo, in photo at left on the right, got her start on “TRL” in 2003. After spending a few years hosting TRL, Minnillo landed a gig as an “Entertainment Tonight” correspondent, her own makeup line, an ad campaign for BONGO, a fledgling film and TV career and a high-profile romance with former boy-bander Nick Lachey. (Bryan Bedder / Getty Images)
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Fierce feuds
“TRL” was a favorite destination of pop-tarts and boy-banders, but it was also the place where stars took shots at other stars.
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