MTV Australia Video Music Awards 2005
The first Annual MTV Australia Video Music Awards were held on 3 March 2005 at The Big Top Sydney. They were broadcast live on MTV Australia and throughout the world. The event, which followed a Circus Theme, was hosted by The Osbournes.[1]
2005 MTV Australia Video Music Awards | |
---|---|
Date | 3 March 2005 |
Location | The Big Top |
Hosted by | The Osbournes |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | MTV Australia |
On the night Punk Rock band Green Day performed two of their hit songs American Idiot and Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Natalie Imbruglia performed her new single Shiver for the first time live, Carmen Electra performed a strip tease, and Kelly Osbourne premiered her new single One Word.[2]
Performers
Presenters
Nominees and winners
The winners are in bold.
Video of the Year
Best Male
Best Female
Best Group
- Green Day — "American Idiot"
- Powderfinger — "Sunsets"
- Outkast — "Roses"
- Jet — "Cold Hard Bitch"
Best Breakthrough
Best Rock Video
- Green Day — "American Idiot"
- Jet — "Cold Hard Bitch"
- Spiderbait — "Black Betty"
- U2 — "Vertigo"
Best Pop Video
Best Dance Video
- Britney Spears — "Toxic"
- Fatboy Slim — "Slash Dot Dash"
- Freestylers — "Push Up"
- Usher — "Yeah!"
Best R&B Video
- Beyoncé — "Naughty Girl"
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Hey Mama"
- J-Wess — "Luv Ya"
- Outkast — "Roses"
Sexiest Video
- Beyoncé — "Naughty Girl"
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Hey Mama"
- Britney Spears — "Toxic"
- Robbie Williams — "Radio"
Best Dressed Video
Pepsi Viewers Choice
Supernova Award
VH1 Music First Award
Free Your Mind Award
Award moments
- The Red Carpet was the longest in the Southern Hemisphere and the longest ever used for an MTV Award Ceremony.
- Anna Nicole Smith removed her top while presenting.
References
- FasterLouder.com.au.Nominees Announced For The MTV Australia Video Music Awards Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine FasterLouder.com.au. Accessed 17 June 2008.
- Rummage.com.au.rummage.com.au Archived 9 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Rummage.com.au. Accessed 3 May 2008.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.