What sort of programming will 'MTV Hits' have? Assuming it refers to music, just current hits or historical hits also?
And now, for commentary:
Not to say 'Listening to X will make you burn in hell,' but there is a difference, IMHO, between the Beatles and (P)Elvis, and a lot of the music today. [I sound like my dad...]
Not just the music, but the whole social tableau in which it resides. The Beatles [et al] got a bad rap mostly because it was 'new' and 'different', very unlike most of the previously popular music. And, yes, some of the lyrics were a little 'racier' than what the elders of the time listened to [Wake Up Little Suzy, it's 4 am already? Indeed!] [That said, I know there are racy allegorical and figurative works of art in every era, back to Shakespeare and farther.]
But much of today's music, and the emotions it represents, especially some of the negative ones, surrounds our society today, and is everpresent. Not only is it on at least 4 music television stations [which most everybody has access to at least one], but everyone has access to a radio; Internet radio; and if it's not the music, it's the lifestyle as viewed on MTV Cribs, or Entertainment Tonight, or People magazine, etc.
It's not solely due to the music, but I do think the music has something to do with it--and, IMHO, our society, and the human race as a whole, has, at the same time it is reaching new heights with technological advances, is losing ground morally/socially. 'The quickest way to damage a society is through its music' [bad paraphrase, I'm going from memory of the PWEI sampling.]
Check this out:
the Billboard Top 100 Singles chart:
If nothing else, it's a wonder our kids are even literate, with titles like Rock Wit U and Right Thurr, and no wonder kids are so sexually active with titles like P.I.M.P., Like a Pimp, and Rock Your Body.
http://billboard.com/bb/charts/hot100.jsp
And some of the songs nowadays are so negative and cruel--compare to heavy metal, say, of the 80's. For all the bad press Ozzy Osbourne gets, his music was either reasonably honest and positive [Crazy Train], or if negative, told a story with a message [Suicide Solution].
Again: I don't think 'music makes people go bad', but it, along with all the other influences in one's life, definitely has a combined impact on people's lifes and outlooks. And with the large part of many people's lives that music and 'the music industry' take up nowadays, obviously it can have a greater relative impact.
And the disclaimer:
I'm 30, grew up listening to anything from Huey Lewis and Billy Joel to AC/DC, Anthrax, Ozzy and Slayer; current favorite bands are GWAR, Christian Death, and Switchblade Symphony [but I'm also enjoying going back and listening to all my old cassettes/cd's]; I also played Dungeons and Dragons for years, and read horror [King], scifi [Heinlein/Asimov/Varley], and fantasy, [Feist,Anthony, etc.] and never sacrificed anyone.
I also temper all that with reading other fiction and nonfiction, and listening to other music like oldies and classical, and try to keep up with the news, if I can avoid anything blatantly political [The Week is a good source for all sorts of opinions.] I also have a 9 month old baby boy, so perhaps I look at things a little differently nowadays. I don't want him listening to or watching certain things, even now; and I will assuredly be of the same opinion later on, until he is mature enough to know right from wrong, and I can have faith in his decisions; that he will either make the right decisions, or learn from his mistakes.