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On May 28, 2002, Paramount Pictures announced it had optioned Avril Lavigneâs song "Sk8er Boi" for a feature film. This news item, along with decades' worth of others both more and less significant in music and pop culture journalism from MTV News, might have been lost forever were it not for The Internet Archive.
Days after Paramount, MTVâs parent company, pulled the plug on over 20 yearâs worth of online MTV News content, The Internet Archive added a searchable database of 460,575 web pages from mtv.com/news to its Wayback Machine. The archive isnât complete, and it's not as easy to use as a full website, but itâs way better than letting all that info disappear down the memory hole.
According to a source familiar with Paramount and quoted by Variety, the cost of maintaining and hosting old, low-traffic MTV news pages was higher than the ad revenue they brought in. Paramountâs spokesperson categorized the removal of articles from MTV Newsâs as part of âbroader website changes across Paramount,â designed to introduce âmore streamlined versionsâ of its sites. Paramount has also 86âed thousands of articles from CMT (Country Music Television) and videos from Comedy Centralâs site, including clips from The Daily Show dating back decades.
The Internet Archive contends that it isn't in violation of copyright law because the content it hosts falls under fair use exception, but itâs not clear whether that argument would hold up in court if Paramount asked the Internet Archive to remove MTVNews content and the Archive refused. So if youâre into reliving your youth through paging through hoary MTV News articles, you might want to do if now, just in case.
Last year, a U.S. District Court ruled that fair use didn't allow the Internet Archive the right reproduce the works of book publishers to lend them out to users in a digital lending library, but the Internet Archive is appealing the ruling.
Credit: Stephen Johnson - Internet Archive
The Wayback Machine can be used to view archived versions of a lot more than just MTV News. Earlier versions of countless websites have been archives via the Wayback Machine (the name comes courtesy of old Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons) is super easy to use. Hereâs how to do it:
If you want to get more fancy with Wayback Machine, you can tell it to archive sites youâre interested in so theyâll (presumably) be viewable forever, or you could install Wayback Machine's browser extension and have Chrome automatically redirect to an archived version of any URL that comes back with a 404 or other error (assuming the site has been archived by Wayback Machine.)
Paramount Picturesâ film option for Lavigneâs iconic 'tween romance tune "Sk8er Boi" has long expired, but as of a few years ago, the film is still in development. In a 2022 interview, Lavigne said she was producing the movie herself and looking for a lead actor with âa ton of swag.â Unfortunately, we won't be able to rely on MTV News to keep us up to date on future developments.
Full story here:
Days after Paramount, MTVâs parent company, pulled the plug on over 20 yearâs worth of online MTV News content, The Internet Archive added a searchable database of 460,575 web pages from mtv.com/news to its Wayback Machine. The archive isnât complete, and it's not as easy to use as a full website, but itâs way better than letting all that info disappear down the memory hole.
According to a source familiar with Paramount and quoted by Variety, the cost of maintaining and hosting old, low-traffic MTV news pages was higher than the ad revenue they brought in. Paramountâs spokesperson categorized the removal of articles from MTV Newsâs as part of âbroader website changes across Paramount,â designed to introduce âmore streamlined versionsâ of its sites. Paramount has also 86âed thousands of articles from CMT (Country Music Television) and videos from Comedy Centralâs site, including clips from The Daily Show dating back decades.
Is it legal for The Internet Archive to host MTV Newsâ old content?
The Internet Archive contends that it isn't in violation of copyright law because the content it hosts falls under fair use exception, but itâs not clear whether that argument would hold up in court if Paramount asked the Internet Archive to remove MTVNews content and the Archive refused. So if youâre into reliving your youth through paging through hoary MTV News articles, you might want to do if now, just in case.
Last year, a U.S. District Court ruled that fair use didn't allow the Internet Archive the right reproduce the works of book publishers to lend them out to users in a digital lending library, but the Internet Archive is appealing the ruling.
How to use The Wayback Machine for any website
Credit: Stephen Johnson - Internet Archive
The Wayback Machine can be used to view archived versions of a lot more than just MTV News. Earlier versions of countless websites have been archives via the Wayback Machine (the name comes courtesy of old Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons) is super easy to use. Hereâs how to do it:
Point your web browser here.
Enter the URL of a specific website or relevant search terms in the search window:
Click on any date in the calendar on the results page.
Enjoy your trip into the past.
If you want to get more fancy with Wayback Machine, you can tell it to archive sites youâre interested in so theyâll (presumably) be viewable forever, or you could install Wayback Machine's browser extension and have Chrome automatically redirect to an archived version of any URL that comes back with a 404 or other error (assuming the site has been archived by Wayback Machine.)
What happened to the Sk8er Boi movie anyway?
Paramount Picturesâ film option for Lavigneâs iconic 'tween romance tune "Sk8er Boi" has long expired, but as of a few years ago, the film is still in development. In a 2022 interview, Lavigne said she was producing the movie herself and looking for a lead actor with âa ton of swag.â Unfortunately, we won't be able to rely on MTV News to keep us up to date on future developments.
Full story here: