MTV Video Music Award for Best Group Video

The MTV Video Music Award for Best Group Video was first introduced at the inaugural MTV Video Music Awards in 1984.[1] American rock band ZZ Top was the first recipient of the award, for their song "Legs".[2] The award was presented by the Cars's Ric Ocasek and accepted by Tim Newman, the video's director, on behalf of ZZ Top.[3]

MTV Video Music Award
for Best Group
CountryUnited States
Presented byMTV
Formerly calledBest Group Video
First awarded1984
Last awarded2020
Currently held byBTS
Most awardsNo Doubt (3)
Most nominationsU2 (6)
Websitewww.mtv.com/vma/
ZZ Top was the first act to win the award at the inaugural show in 1984.
No Doubt first won in 1997 for "Don't Speak". They went on to become the most awarded artist in the category with a total of three wins.
U2 has been nominated six times, the most of any artist, for seven different music videos over the course of ten years.
Fall Out Boy was the first artist to win the award under its new name, Best Group, in 2007.
BTS is the only act to consecutively win Best Group, in both 2019 and 2020.

A 2007 revamp of the ceremony saw the award renamed to the more general Best Group.[4][5] In 2008, the VMAs returned to their original format, but the award was not included.[6] It was brought back in 2019, as one of three social-media voted categories, instead of being determined by industry personnel as in previous years.[7][8]

No Doubt is the most awarded artist in this category, having won the award on three separate ocassions. U2 is the most nominated act, with seven of its videos receiving nominations in six different years between 1985 to 2005. TLC is the first and only girl group to win the award twice, with their videos for "Waterfalls" (1995) and "No Scrubs" (1999). BTS is the only nominee to win the award in consecutive years, doing so in 2019 and 2020.

Recipients

Year Winner Nominees Ref(s)
Best Group Video
1984 ZZ Top – "Legs" [9]
1985 USA for Africa – "We Are the World" [10][11]
1986 Dire Straits – "Money for Nothing" [12][13]
1987 Talking Heads – "Wild Wild Life" [14][15]
1988 INXS – "Need You Tonight/Mediate" [16][17]
1989 Living Colour – "Cult of Personality" [18][19]
1990 The B-52's – "Love Shack" [20][21]
1991 R.E.M. – "Losing My Religion" [22][23]
1992 U2 – "Even Better Than the Real Thing" [24][25]
1993 Pearl Jam – "Jeremy" [26][27]
1994 Aerosmith – "Cryin'" [28][29]
1995 TLC – "Waterfalls" [30]
1996 Foo Fighters – "Big Me" [31][32]
1997 No Doubt – "Don't Speak" [33][34]
1998 Backstreet Boys – "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" [35][36]
1999 TLC – "No Scrubs" [37][38]
2000 Blink-182 – "All the Small Things" [39][40]
2001 'N Sync – "Pop" [41][42]
2002 No Doubt (featuring Bounty Killer) – "Hey Baby" [43][44]
2003 Coldplay – "The Scientist" [45]
2004 No Doubt – "It's My Life" [46][47]
2005 Green Day – "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" [48][49]
2006 The All-American Rejects – "Move Along" [50]
Best Group
2007 Fall Out Boy [51][52]
2019 BTS [53]
2020 BTS [54]

References

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