Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MTV VMAs aim to capture the country’s sociopolit­ical climate

Show also battles declining ratings

- AUGUST BROWN

Inside the Forum on Wednesday afternoon, four days before this year’s edition of the MTV Video Music Awards, engineers checked audio levels with a trap-music remix of the theme from “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

One worker swung dozens of feet through the air, attached to rooftop scaffoldin­g above a stage of silver mirrored panels. Others scrambled through a maze of placards denoting the celebrity seating chart.

Amid the preparatio­ns for Sunday’s event, however, MTV has two problems still left to solve at the VMAs. One — declining TV ratings amid a spike in social media attention — was predictabl­e.

The other is how performers will address the now-constant tension of a President Donald Trump-era America.

The VMAs are famous for their madcap moments like Britney Spears and Madonna’s smooch or Lady Gaga’s meat dress. In the run-up to last year’s contentiou­s election, the performers were surprising­ly muted in their political commentary. Perhaps many of the liberallea­ning, MTV-friendly artists thought a Hillary Clinton win was in the bag.

Of course, things turned out differentl­y. And the VMAs’ relevance may hinge on how the ceremony handles our sociopolit­ical climate.

“It’s always been part of the show to reflect the conditions around it — look at Miley Cyrus and Jesse (her homeless guest at the 2014 VMAs),” said Garrett English, the executive vice president of MTV. “But so much has happened in the U.S. politicall­y, and we want to have a mixture of levity and gravity.”

This year’s awards are hosted by Katy Perry, the pop singer whose new album, “Witness,” tried to grapple with contempora­ry political and social issues. The LP’s reviews were mixed, but it’s probably no coincidenc­e that producers picked her to carry the VMA torch this year.

To make it more explicit, they introduced a new award category, best fight against the system, whose provocatio­n will almost surely result in a charged speech (nominees John Legend and the “Hamilton” cast have had barbed criticism for Trump’s administra­tion). And even the longstandi­ng “Moonman” statue for the winners has been changed to a “Moon Person” this year, a nod to how the network is trying to do away with traditiona­l gender norms.

As for the night’s performers, Kendrick Lamar has made his awards-show sets into extraordin­ary political theater, having performed in prison chains during the Grammys and in a field of fire with Beyoncé at the BET Awards. Cyrus and Lorde have spoken out on varied social justice issues, as have multiple members of Fifth Harmony.

MTV and production executives said they don’t know what to expect as far as specific artists speaking out. Unpredicta­bility, of course, has always been part of the VMA brand. But in a year when most of MTV’s audience (along with most of America) is consumed by political storms playing out on their news feeds, it’s likely that at least some acts will use the platform to make a dramatic gesture.

The ratings problems might be tougher to solve. The tough fact is that MTV’s core audience has almost entirely migrated to online video and away from live cable. Last year’s TV ratings were down 34% from 2015, but video streams were up 70%.

VMAs brass will have to figure out how the flagship live event on a network nominally devoted to music fits into a fast-moving online conversati­on where all the eyeballs (and ad revenue) are tuning in through a social-media filter.

Live performanc­es are “a tribal experience in a digital world,” said Ric Lipson, the set designer at the firm Stufish who oversaw the VMAs design. He previously worked on U2’s stadium tour for “The Joshua Tree” anniversar­y, and though the shows are very different, he sees a parallel in creating intimacy within a huge spectacle. “A gig is still the most powerful way to experience music. It’s our modern church.”

It won’t be all fire and fury, however. English said that escapism is still definitely part of the show’s appeal.

But whether it’s pure fun or harsh dissent, the VMAs are still one of the last redoubts for surprises in live music on a mass scale.

In a year that no one could have prepared for, that might be reason enough to tune in.

“It’s a place to be creatively aggressive,” English said. “Everyone talks about the water-cooler moments. Navigating that is what the show is for.” The VMAs are scheduled for 7 p.m. Sunday on MTV.

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