2021 MTV Video Music Awards

2021 edition of the MTV Video Music Awards From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2021 MTV Video Music Awards

The 2021 MTV Video Music Awards were held on September 12, 2021, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York City. This marked the first time in eight years that the venue hosted the show.[1][2] The show was hosted by hip-hop rapper and singer Doja Cat.[3] It was the first time in history a Video of the Year nominee hosted the ceremony the same year.[4]

Quick Facts Date, Venue ...
2021 MTV Video Music Awards
Thumb
DateSunday, September 12, 2021
VenueBarclays Center, Brooklyn, New York City
CountryUnited States
Hosted byDoja Cat
Most awards
Most nominationsJustin Bieber (9)
Websitemtv.com/vma
Television/radio coverage
Network
Produced byBruce Gillmer
Jesse Ignjatovic
Directed byJoe DeMaio
 2020 · MTV Video Music Awards · 2022 
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The ceremony was simulcast on The CW, a free over-the-air broadcaster, with Mountain and Pacific time zones airing it live and others delayed for primetime, and on various ViacomCBS networks and platforms.[5] Lil Nas X, Olivia Rodrigo and BTS were the most awarded artists of the night with three awards each, followed by Billie Eilish, and Justin Bieber with two each; the latter was also the most nominated artist with nine nominations. Beyoncé extended her lead as the most-awarded artist in the show's history, collecting her 29th trophy. Her daughter Blue Ivy Carter also became the youngest winner in the show's history.[6]

On August 1, a new iteration of the MTV Video Music Awards "moon person" trophy was unveiled at NASA's Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, in honor of MTV's 40th anniversary. Designed by Kehinde Wiley, it features vines and flowers symbolizing "the ethnic histories that surround America", with the network stating that "each intertwined vine or leaf" holds a "different historical relevance, such as the seeds from African slaves, that are woven into the American tapestry".[7][8]

MTV collaborated with 9/11 Day for a week of activities to "promote awareness and positive action" in honor of the 20th anniversary of the September 11 attacks, which fell on the eve of the ceremony.[1][9]

The show received 3.7 million viewers across all networks,[10] including 900,000 viewers on MTV, representing a 31% drop from last year's 1.3 million. However, the show garnered 38 million interactions across all U.S. platforms, beating the Super Bowl for the first time and becoming 2021's top telecast in social media buzz. Internationally, the VMAs increased 43% in Brazil and 25% in the U.K.[11][12][13]

Performances

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Lorde was initially announced as a performer for the main show on August 18, 2021, but later pulled out of the event on September 3 "due to a change in production elements".[14] Ed Sheeran additionally performed his new single "Bad Habits",[15] but the clip was uploaded to MTV's YouTube channel instead of being shown during the live broadcast. Anitta made a clip for the song "Girl from Rio" uploaded to MTV's YouTube channel as an advertisement for Burger King, but it was deleted.

Presenters

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Presenters for the ceremony were announced on September 8, 2021.[20] Nessa Diab and Jamila Mustafa hosted the 90-minute pre-show event, while Tinashe served as a special celebrity correspondent.[16]

Pre-show

  • Jamila Mustafa — presented Push Performance of the Year
  • Tinashe and Bretman Rock — presented Group of the Year[21]

Main show

Winners and nominees

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Nominations were announced on August 11, 2021.[22][23] Justin Bieber was the most-nominated artist with nine, followed by Megan Thee Stallion and BTS with seven.[23][24] Voting for select categories began on the same day and took place on the VMA website until September 3. Voting for Best New Artist continued until during showtime.[25] Social category nominations, including Group of the Year and Song of Summer, were announced on September 3, 2021. Voting for the former opened on September 4, while voting for the latter opened on September 7—both took place via MTV's Instagram stories.[26] BTS, Olivia Rodrigo and Lil Nas X won the most awards of the night with three each, followed by Billie Eilish, Doja Cat, Silk Sonic and Bieber with two each.

Winners are listed first and in bold.[27]

More information Video of the Year, Song of the Year ...
List of winners and nominees for the 2021 MTV Video Music Awards
Video of the Year Song of the Year
Artist of the Year Best New Artist
(presented by Facebook)
Push Performance of The Year Best Collaboration
Best Pop Best Hip Hop
Best R&B Best K-Pop
Best Latin Best Rock
Best Alternative Video for Good
Group of the Year Song of Summer
Best Direction
(presented by Discord)
Best Art Direction
(presented by Discord)
Best Choreography
(presented by Discord)
Best Cinematography
(presented by Discord)
Best Editing
(presented by Discord)
Best Visual Effects
(presented by Discord)
  • Lil Nas X – "Montero (Call Me by Your Name)" (Visual Effects: Mathematic)
    • Bella Poarch – "Build a Bitch" (Visual Effects: Andrew Donoho, Denhov Visuals, Denis Strahhov, Rein Jakobson, Vahur Kuusk, Tatjana Pavlik and Yekaterina Vetrova)
    • Coldplay – "Higher Power" (Visual Effects: Mathematic)
    • Doja Cat and the Weeknd – "You Right" (Visual Effects: La Pac, Anthony Lestremau, Julien Missaire, Petr Shkolniy, Alexi Bailla, Micha Sher, Antoine Hache, Mikros MPC, Nicolas Huget, Guillaume Ho Tsong Fang, Benjamin Lenfant, Stephane Pivron, MPC Bangalore, Chanakya Chander, Raju Ganesh and David Rouxel)
    • Glass Animals – "Tangerine" (Visual Effects: YSF Studio Paris)
    • Pink – "All I Know So Far" (Visual Effects: Dominique Vidal, Geoffrey Niquet, Annabelle Zoellin and Camille Gibrat)
MTV Global Icon Award
Foo Fighters
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References

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