99% Invisible - Karaoke Videos
Episode Date: June 9, 2026Behind every cheesy karaoke track was a surprisingly ambitious filmmaking experiment. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of 99% Invisible ad-free and a whole week early. St...art a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is 99% Invisible.
I'm Vivian Lay in this week for Roman Mars.
I was raised in a Vietnamese household,
which means I was practically born with a karaoke mic in my hand.
Birthdays, family reunions, funerals,
Sunday mornings after the Raiders lost,
all good reasons to whip out the karaoke machine.
And one of the things that I remember most vividly
during these formative mid-90s moments
was watching the videos that played during the karaoke tracks
my parents were singing along too.
They were mostly stock footage synchronized to the music.
You know, people on a beach, people sailing boats, people in a hot air balloon, pretty generic stuff.
Every time I hear the song listen to the rhythm of the falling rain, I could still see freestyle roller skaters weaving through cones in an urban park.
These videos were like watching the equivalent of hotel art.
Something to look at, not necessarily something to think about.
In other words, they were nothing like the karaoke videos that Brian Raftery was watching.
when he was in his 20s.
I definitely remember nights
and times when I was singing
when everyone would just kind of turn their head
toward the video because they were
so strange and they're so ambitious
and they're so weird.
And some of them look really great.
Brian is a culture writer
and author of the book, Don't Stop Believe in,
how karaoke conquered the world and changed
my life. Brian's entry point
to karaoke came in the late 1990s.
He and his friends were living in New York City
when they discovered a little
dive called Village Karaoke.
It was during these late-night excursions
that he realized the karaoke videos
playing at Village were on a whole
other level. Like the Benny and the Jets video,
you can interpret that song,
85 million ways,
but the video we remembered, for some reason,
was like a mom luring a bunch
of kids slowly to
a plate full of cookies, and I'm like,
what the hell does this do with Benny and the Jets?
No Benny, no Jets. It wasn't like
these videos were unrelated stock footage
just thrown over music. These are
all originally produced short films, equipped with their own storylines, characters, and tangential
interpretations of the song's lyrics. And there were literally thousands of videos like this.
There's a very strange video that we used to talk about all the time for Paul McCartney's
Ebony and Ivory, which was really, I don't know if it's problematic or not, but it was like
there's a black man walking a white dog and then a white man walking a black dog, and then they
become friends. It is trying to be true to the spirit.
of this, you know, Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder do it.
But it makes no sense that it's a dog park.
Some of these karaoke videos were clearly bananas,
but they were not lacking an ambition.
Actors were hired, locations were scouted, lighting was designed,
and a lot of them were shot on actual film stock.
Brian wanted to know who had made these,
and why go through all the effort?
I was just kind of like, this is weird that, like,
this is a video that, like, we're just here as a goof,
and someone put a lot of time and effort
to make this video for this haul and oats song
that we're all drunkenly singing in a tiny room.
As it turns out, these weirdo karaoke videos
were kind of their own micro-movement of filmmaking.
It only lasted a handful of years
and is only remembered by a handful of people,
but it gave a generation of aspiring filmmakers
something that barely exists anymore,
a paying gig where they could just mess around
and figure out how to make stuff.
It's about as close to an outside of,
of Hollywood, Hollywood project as you can get.
Some videos were good, some were bad, and several were so bad that they were awesome.
And I had to know more about where they came from.
The story of these videos actually originated about a decade before Brian discovered them at
Village Karaoke.
Back in the 1980s, the world of consumer electronics was exploding.
Personal computers, the Walkman, camcorders, fax machines, the Game Boy.
It was like a shiny new toy was coming out on a monthly basis.
And Neil Altnew wanted in.
I basically was a sales and marketing exec.
And I introduced a lot of products to the United States.
One day in 1988, Neil was flipping through the New York Times,
and he saw a job ad that intrigued him.
And they were looking for somebody,
for some sort of a startup in the East Coast.
The company that put out that ad was Pioneer,
the Japanese Electronics Corporation.
They were looking for someone to head up a brand-new division
specifically in America.
Neil applied, and when he got an interview,
his wife drove down with him to the pioneer offices in Manhattan.
Well, you know, maybe two hours passed.
I came down and I said, this is a really interesting product.
And she said, what is it?
And I said, it's this thing called karaoke.
She said, what is it?
Karaoke, what is that?
Karaoke had been around for over a decade at this point.
But back in the 1980s, it was still pretty unknown in the West.
It was huge in Asia, though, particularly.
in Japan where Pioneer was headquartered.
The word karaoke itself is Japanese, meaning empty orchestra.
If you go to Japan, every little bar, there was 800,000 bars in Japan, believe it or not.
But every bar had to have karaoke in it.
And actually, a big reason why karaoke was already so popular in Japan
was because of Pioneer's karaoke technology.
A few years before Neil joined the company,
Pioneer completely revolutionized the karaoke game
by releasing the first-ever karaoke Laserdisc player.
For those under the age of 37,
Laserdisc was one of the lesser-known combatants
in the home video format wars of the 70s and 80s.
Picture a DVD the size of a vinyl record.
And I've got one on my hand right now.
It's a disc looks like an LP record.
It's silver, and it has information on both sides.
Okay, and there's 28 videos.
on each disc.
Back then, when home video was first emerging, VHS, Betamax, and Laserdisc were all battling it out
to be the dominant consumer technology.
VHS and Beta turned out to be exponentially more popular for the home movie watching experience.
And videotape won the war.
Laserdisc only was able to capture maybe 1% in the market.
But the video market is so huge.
1% of the market is very significant.
So Pioneer says, you know what?
Maybe not so much for movies, but karaoke, yeah.
Because nobody else is doing it.
So we're all alone.
So we'll take 1% in the market all alone.
When it came to something like karaoke,
Laserdisc had a superpower that gave it an edge over VHS or beta.
A laser disc could jump around to individual chapters on the disc.
Again, like a giant DVD.
This made it well suited for searching for individual karaoke tracks
if they were listed as chapters, like you would on a jukebox.
It was a technology that fit the art form.
Pioneer said, you know what, for a karaoke,
application. This is perfect.
Essentially, all you need for karaoke are two things, a backing track and the lyrics to the song
displayed on the screen. But when Pioneer manufactured these discs for the Japanese market,
they also decided to include one additional element, a karaoke music video that went along
with each track. I think that the original concept of using those videos in Japan was to
basically sell laser discs. Laser discs were known for having really good picture resolution,
way better than its competitors, VHS, or Betamax.
Pioneer in Japan figured it would be a complete waste
not to put a nice-looking video up on the screen.
And Neil says when Pioneer decided to expand to the American market
and get Laser Karaoke into American bars,
they copied that same formula.
They had a lot of success in Japan with it that way,
and they wanted to replicate their success in the United States,
and they felt that this is the way we did it in Japan.
We've got to do it in the United States the same way.
But it couldn't be exactly the same.
Those videos were shot in Japan, for Japanese songs, for a Japanese audience.
You know, you couldn't have a song like, you know, I shot the sheriff with a Japanese video on it.
It didn't work.
You had to have a production company go out there and shoot the videos.
Which is how people like Nori Niven got involved.
I always compared it to like that scene in Conan the Barbarian where he has to push that rock in a circle for like 10 years before he becomes a grown man, you know,
when he's all strong
because you shoot
a million feet of film
and either you fail
or you come out of it stronger.
In the late 1980s,
Noir was actually still in college.
He'd been directing music videos
for local artists
when the opportunity
to work on these karaoke videos
fell into his lap.
Somehow I wound up on a panel
for music videos
at Panavision in Dallas
and I'm like 20 years old
and one of the guys on the panel
said, hey, I've got these karaoke videos.
You want to think.
come to shoot some of them, and I would shoot anything. I mean, I love shooting film, and the idea
of shooting music videos sounded really fun, and of course I said yes.
Pioneer had a division called Laserdisc Corporation of America, also known as LDCA.
They contracted production companies and directors from Los Angeles, New York, Dallas, even London.
And Norie remembers early on, there was one specific directive for these videos.
They wanted stories. So I remember they.
They really wanted a narrative weave.
They wanted a beginning, a middle, and an end.
They really wanted you to stick to the story line of the song.
By the time Pioneer got into this, I think they needed to have some sort of story.
Brian Raftery again.
Because at that point, Western audiences, especially after seven or eight years of MTV,
they knew that every video had to have either a wild collage or a very easy-to-follow narrative.
Pioneer wanted these narratives to adhere to the vibe and message of the song,
but that came with one big stipulation.
The footage used in these videos had to be completely original for copyright purposes.
Pioneer only licensed the music, not the artist's likeness or any existing music video,
so you couldn't reference their vision of the song.
You know, if it was a song, if it was Thriller, they did not want you to do like the Thriller dance.
They didn't want you to come to something original.
There were, of course, a few other minor ground rules of what you could or could not show.
I know they did not want people singing.
I think that's one thing is to have no one singing along to the song,
almost like not acknowledging that it's there
because the focus should be on the singer.
Pioneer also didn't want anything too violent or too salacious.
I just had to keep it clean.
So I had to be careful with, you know,
nothing was too sexualized or whatever it was.
Saad Nisheli was a producer at LDCA.
She worked with dozens of directors during her time there
and was a liaison between the higher-upset Pioneer
and the production companies actually making the videos.
It was a wild time where you kind of have,
free rain. It was scary in a way, but it was also really a lot of fun.
Sauna said that aside from those family-friendly rules, they almost never got any creative
notes from the company. I don't think anyone was probably watching them except for us.
Which also meant that the people making these videos had near complete artistic freedom.
I don't even think that making a good karaoke video was the thing. It was just making good art,
you know, not necessarily for karaoke.
I don't think any of us had that in mind when we shot it.
It was just making beautiful art.
But that beautiful art came with a pretty big limitation.
Pioneer was a huge company with capital to throw behind these new karaoke videos,
but not like that much capital.
In the late 80s and 90s,
the average cost of a music video on MTV could run $50,000 to $60,000.
These karaoke videos, on the other hand,
ranged from $3,600 to $10,000 because, well, this wasn't MTV.
That budget had to cover production costs like locations, camera rentals,
film stock in development, props, accrue, actors,
and whatever payment you can walk away with for yourself.
So these videos became a real filmmaking test
of what directors could do with a micro-budget, limited resources,
and the creative wiggle room to go wild.
I mean, when the idea first came to you,
where you're going to pay us to do this thing that it seems very clear that do you really need
like a high production video?
Like what were your thoughts when?
Never even thought that just went, oh, great, brilliant, yes.
You don't question at all.
I wasn't biting the hand that fed.
Yeah, I can do that.
And I like the sound of it.
Let's do that.
This is Nikki Smedley.
She produced a handful of karaoke videos for Pioneer in London and has had a long career in
entertainment. I started out as a dancer and an actress. I ran a cabaret club. I went on to be a
telitubby and now I'd do one woman's show for grownups and that's me. You did hear that correctly.
Nikki was one of the original teletubbies. She played Lala, the yellow one. I always say to people,
I'm not famous. I just had one very famous outfit. So yeah, that's what I did. People won't recognize
but they recognize me boy.
At the time, Nikki had very little to no production experience.
Her friend Neil was hired to direct some videos and brought her on as a producer and choreographer.
I found her name on the credits for Pioneer Laserdisc Volume 307,
which I was actually holding in my hand during our Zoom call.
Well, I think you've got ain't nothing going on but the rent.
I do.
You recognize it from the back of the...
Nikki instantly clocked the Laserdisc volume in my hand.
And a song for a video she worked on called Ain't Nothing Going On But the Rent.
That's the first one that Neil and I did working together.
If you've never heard it, it's an R&B song by Gwen Guthrie about a woman looking for a man
who's, at the very least, financially stable.
No romance without finances the refrain.
Nikki and her director Neil, on the other hand, plotted out a different story for the video.
It was about a couple who throw a house party in order to come up with money for rent.
It's definitely a different interpretation of the song's original meaning, but it works.
She broke down the process of how that video was planned.
I would have a meeting with Neil and give him a general idea,
and we would talk through the different shots that we thought we needed,
and yes, and start doing a bit of loose budgeting coming for what we need.
And then at the same time, I would be working with the music and drawing,
like I have like a kind of beat map of the construction of the song.
And then we'd meet up with a cameraman and go, this is what we want,
maybe have to make or find some props.
And then go, voila.
It has a look of any British synth pop video you might see on MTV in the 1980s.
High contrast lighting, graphic wipes, glamorous, melancholy.
If you blinked, you might think you were watching a Kajuku music video.
And it went down so brilliantly well that they asked us to do more, so we started a little company.
In order to keep things within budget, producers needed to get creative.
They'd borrow a friend's apartment to shoot in, or work out deals with actors trying to get footage for a demo reel,
or stack shoots on top of each other so they could reuse the same sets and crews for multiple videos.
I remember mostly in the early days.
You're just getting stuff shoved at you.
Norie Nibben again.
He says that it wasn't exactly a glamorous life in the beginning.
We had a stage, and in order to shoot on the stage, we had to shoot like four in one day,
I'm literally not sleeping and trying to shoot in 24 hours before you.
It was just stupid.
And why?
Because we had a soundstage.
But despite the slog of it all, Nori was really grateful for an opportunity like this.
Learning how to shoot a film is incredibly expensive.
And Pioneer was basically subsidizing the whole process.
Nori directed a ton of videos for Pioneer, and he was always experimenting with technique.
His videos always had different types of color grading or frame rates or transitions.
He took advantage of those three minutes of laser disk space to create something interesting.
We shot on black and white, on reversal film stocks.
We would load the film backwards.
We baked the film.
We pushed exposures.
We did everything you could imagine experimental-wise just to push it,
just to see what we could do to try to create different looks and different styles.
It really pushed the science of film just to go for it.
After the break, the rise and inevitable fall of the karaoke video Golden Age.
Stay with us.
By the early 1990s, Pioneers Marketing Execke Neil Altnew
says that the company was doing exactly what they had hoped.
They were selling a ton of these karaoke laser discs,
and they were making a lot of money.
Let me tell you, when I started back in 1988,
we had zero volume coming in.
Two years later, we were in the millions.
They just couldn't wait for that next laser disk to come.
They didn't care what was on it.
They just needed to have the next one.
So I would get 5,000 discs on an initial order.
They were gone.
They were already sold before I even got them.
It was like watching a serial on HBO,
like, you know, Game of Thrones,
and you can't wait until the next episode comes.
It was the same thing with the laser disc.
But Neil says that he actually doesn't think the karaoke videos were part of the success of laser disks.
If anything, the videos were kind of an afterthought.
His take is that laser discs were flying off the shelves because they were just a good product.
Like for one, Pioneer was able to license an incredible library of music.
Their discs had tracks for current popular songs, old standards, classics, something for everyone.
I got disc one, the first one that was ever made.
and on side A, they had a really good cross-section of music.
On side A was rock around the clock, great balls of fire, long-tall Sally,
can't keep a fall in love with you, Michelle, eight days a week.
These are all Beatles songs that they gave us.
Also, Neil and his division at Pioneer were doing exactly what they were supposed to,
marketing this product out in the field.
He says that they were going out into the trenches to convince bars around New York City
to adopt their karaoke system.
And we said to them, look, we got this thing.
The customers will be entertaining customers.
So they'll be buying drinks.
They'll be doing everything.
It'll be good for you, a good business.
And what we're going to do is we'll give you the equipment, we'll give you the software,
we'll teach you how to use it.
The only thing we ask is if you're successful,
we're allowed to bring other people in to show the success that we're having with the karaoke.
Word spread, karaoke spread.
And it got the point where karaoke was being done seven nights a week.
in Manhattan.
Karaoke was so popular,
it was essentially keeping
laser disc technology afloat in the 90s.
It was also generating a ton of work
for the production companies.
Pioneer printed at least 80 laser disc volumes
in the original English language series alone,
each one with 28 tracks disc.
This meant that literally thousands
of original karaoke videos
needed to be produced alongside those tracks.
You know, it had reached a peak
and there was a lot of money
and there was a lot of stuff going into the production.
Nori and I flew to Paris for one of them.
I mean, it's crazy, you know, for a karaoke video.
But it was beautiful, you know.
Culture writer Brian Raftery refuses to call himself a karaoke expert,
but he does have a shed crammed full of these discs at his house
and has logged an ungodly amount of hours watching these videos.
Oh, my God.
It's probably probably one of those things where if I got to have,
and an afterlife and they gave you like a rundown of what you did, I think that would be like the one regret where I'm like, I spent how many hours? I mean, I guess it's in the hundreds of hours range.
And it was during these hundreds of hours that he started noticing some bizarre subgenres across the pioneer karaoke uvra.
There were, of course, the things you might expect from your 80s music video, women dancing in fluorescent unitards and brooding men on motorcycles.
But Brian also picked up on the fact that a lot of these videos were definitely filmed at the tail end of the Reagan administration.
There's so many 80s yuppie karaoke videos where it's like a guy in a convertible and he's driving to like a bluff to go to his house on Malibu and he's got blondes in his car.
It's just like this weird 80s idea of excess and success.
I call them serial killers.
Norie Niven again.
I thought that all the love songs, the male actors they hired looked like they wanted to kill everyone.
When they look like they were in love, it just looked like they wanted to kill everyone.
There was also the genre of videos that Brian describes as the first three minutes of a porno.
Nothing explicit, just the exposition.
The whole era of like these couples that were kind of either together or wandering around the city,
they're either like grand sweeping pastoral nature scenes where they're both on horses together on the beach
or they're like walking through and like wearing incredibly boxy suits, both the man and the woman,
like very, very boxy lady's power suits.
And they're not pornographic or skin flicky, but they're definitely like, this is the beginning.
of their romantic night.
Looking back now, I've never thought about this,
but people talk about boomers a lot now.
If you want to know about the boomer life in the 80s,
I think these karaoke videos,
it's like a lot of middle-aged guys in convertibles,
a lot of couples wearing boxy suits,
walking around forever.
It's like, it's an interesting look at what boomers did
before they found Facebook, I guess.
It's like they love, they live, they rode horseback,
they had sat in sheets.
They had very big lives.
This is why they're so angry now, I get it.
In Brian's opinion, the very best karaoke videos were the ones that were absolutely uncategorizable.
The ones with storylines that were so nuts or so irrelevant to the song itself that you couldn't help but turn your head towards the screen.
There was some stupid things that were done.
Neil Altnew clearly does not share this opinion.
Despite Pioneer not really intervening much on creative, Neil says that of course these videos had to at least be reviewed.
And for the most part, he wasn't super impressed.
I've got to be honest with you.
These production companies, they made these videos,
and they really didn't look at the music that well
because a lot of these videos really didn't fit the music.
One video for the Cheers theme song,
which is a television show about a group of regulars at a bar,
had a storyline where a man gets thrown into a jail cell
full of scary-looking inmates.
But instead of getting the crap kicked out of him,
everyone breaks into spontaneous dance.
It was one where they had the two Barbie dolls.
they were showing. And it was a love song and they had the, somebody was holding them in their hand
and they had the Barbie dolls kissing each other. There's one where it's just like a woman feeding a goose
seductively or something like that and we're just like, what is this gem? In one surreal video
for the song Israelites by Desmond Decker, a man in shirtless overalls uses a pickaxe to turn a lump
of salt into bread while small children attempt to hoist him into the air with a play parachute,
which is so David Lynchie and I half expected Laura Dern to show up.
The conversation between the song and the video, I guess you could say,
we're not always in the same room, tune, or key,
but they didn't always make sense of the songs they were going along with,
but they were amazing to watch.
While several of these music videos were insane or cheesy or just aged poorly,
like don't get me started on the video for David Bowie's China Girl,
a lot were actually made well.
Many were shot on film stock, well-lit,
and you could tell that the people who made them
took this as an opportunity to practice a craft.
And because Pioneer hired production companies
from all over the country,
lots of different types of people
had the opportunity to try this work on for size.
There were camera people,
production designers, grips, makeup artists, actors,
and some of them eventually went on
to do big things in entertainment.
I think one of the Dixie chicks wound up in a video apparently.
You know, Dylan McDermott may have been in one,
if I remember correctly.
Dermot Roney. Oh my God. I mean, Dermalroni may have, too. I mean, Bill Paxson and Bill Pullman may have done these. I don't know.
One producer on a ton of karaoke videos named Paris Barkley was eventually elected as president of the Directors Guild of America.
And Nory Niven, who you've been hearing from, has been a successful commercial director for around 30 years now.
Brian Raftery also spotted a pretty prominent name listed on the credits on a couple of these videos.
Jay Roach, who directed Austin Powers and many other big movies, he's.
His name is on one or two of these things, maybe more than that.
I directed two videos.
One was based on the Barbara Streisand song.
I am a woman in love, and the other one was based on my funny Valentine.
This is Jay Roach.
As Brian mentioned, he directed the Austin Powers films, also The Roses, as well as Meet the Parents.
It's kind of funny because he would actually go from directing a Barbara Streisand karaoke video
to later directing Barbara Streisand herself.
You know, I worked with her on Meet the Poker's later.
and if I had remembered, I would have embarrassed myself until I did that video.
He was still a grad student at the time when he was given the chance to make a couple of these videos.
And apparently, these karaoke videos are some of the very first short films he ever directed.
I'm sure those were my first paid gigs directing anything for sure.
So it might have been kind of steps across that threshold,
because I really never considered myself a director until I just started doing it.
He says that he had always seen himself as more of a cinematographer, the technical person who hid behind the camera.
But because the stakes and the budget of these music videos were so low, he was kind of forced to give directing actors a try.
Directing actors as a young person, as a new person, is probably the most intimidating thing.
I knew about camera, I knew about sound and editing and everything else, but I hadn't really worked with actors that much.
So it also gave me a chance to just try that.
Can we say that if it weren't for karaoke videos, we wouldn't have the Austin Powers films?
Of course. Would it be true? Probably not. Jay Roach is a talented guy who would have figured out how to direct either way.
But talking to him, he seems to have the same gratitude for these videos as everyone else I spoke with for this story.
Every opportunity to make something is a chance to learn. And he's carried a little bit of those early karaoke lessons with him throughout his career.
You have to develop a little bit of tolerance from misery when you make movies.
I mean, it's obviously a lucky thing to get to do, but there's never enough budget.
There's never enough time.
You're always trying to do something, you know, again, that may exceed your resources
and exceed your own capabilities.
So it was an accidental film school in a way.
It was an accidental opportunity that turned out to be, you know, good for everybody involved.
But the karaoke video Golden Age couldn't last
forever. And ironically, a big reason why it was doomed was the very same reason why it caught on,
the music. I say this transition really started to happen in 1994, where you could start seeing
the karaoke business going down. When the Laser Karaoke Division started back in 1988,
Pioneer was able to license a ton of popular music, but they only licensed those songs for around
seven years. Maybe it was because karaoke was so new and unknown to music publishers, but it was a lot
easier to secure the rights at those early stages. By the time those licenses expired,
publishers either didn't want to renew them or charged way more money to use those tracks.
We had, like, I'm looking at disc three, there's 28 songs on it, so they had to come out
with a disc where they had to take maybe five songs off the disc because they weren't licensed
anymore. But the final nail in the coffin for pioneer laser karaoke ended up being an
emerging media format called CD Plus Graphics or CDG. CDG was basically,
a regular audio CD that was capable of displaying very simple graphics on a screen.
They weren't advanced enough to show something like a full-on movie, but they were capable of
displaying lyrics synced to a song. They were also a fraction of the price of Laserdisc. Video production
got hit immediately. Oh, it was a train wreck.
Norie Niven and Sad Nishelly both had a view from inside the train as it was crashing.
I remember I was in a loft downtown.
And the guy came in from L.A.
And, oh, gosh.
And he was like,
he said, we're going to cut the budgets in half.
And we'd like for you to start using stock footage.
How much stock footage can you cram into these things?
And I was like, oh, my gosh, red flags everywhere.
It just kind of got to that point where we were shooting scenic stuff.
And it just wasn't as fun.
There wasn't as much budget anymore.
And I was like, I'm out.
Nothing looked good at that point.
So we politely resigned to job.
Eventually, they became the worst kind of karaoke video.
Boring.
Just stock footage of people walking in a park, by the ocean, on the street,
the kinds of videos that I remember watching as a kid.
Pioneer released their last English-language karaoke laser disc in 1999
and announced the end of all laser disc products in 2009.
You know, flame went out.
But it was a fun ride.
It really was a fun ride.
Neil Altnew stayed with the company until 2008,
and he thinks that had Pioneer come out with their karaoke products on CDG format from the beginning,
karaoke would have probably been just as popular.
When I was singing or when most people sing, they don't even look at the videos.
You know, they're looking at the words because they want to get the right words,
because nobody cared about the videos.
That could be true.
And had Pioneer not commissioned their karaoke videos,
they would have saved millions of dollars.
But in making these laser disks,
they provided a lot of people with something
that seems increasingly rare these days,
the opportunity to make something cool.
I think if they were inventing karaoke in these days,
they'd never even think to put a video there
because that wouldn't be the motivation.
The motivation would be how to do it the most profitably
rather than creating something more interesting.
Nikki Smedley again.
She was the producer that worked on these videos in London.
And in case you forgot, was also a f***ing telitubby.
Nikki still works in the arts.
She practically has her whole life.
And she says that it was a blessing to receive
even a little bit of money to support herself when she was younger.
When you asked me about whether or not I questioned it,
you just went, no.
No, that's great.
It's a creative thing.
It's working with my pals.
It's doing what I love.
It's making things out of nothing.
thing to music. Tick. Yeah, absolutely. Every single bit of paid work that I got in those days was,
yeah, that was manner from heaven, completely and utterly. Actually, I have got a question,
which is why are you interested, I suppose. I got asked this question a lot as I was sending
emails to the legends of karaoke past. And yes, the idea of talking about weird-ass karaoke
key music videos was the initial draw.
But really, I think it's probably because I wish I could have been there.
I originally moved to Los Angeles to work in production, and had Pioneers still been
commissioning these videos, I 1,000% would have done this.
Making even the worst short films is so hard and so expensive and so exhausting, and I loved it
so much.
I'm kind of in awe that at one point, a whole artistic industry existed
where people got paid and people got to take chances,
and it was all because an electronics company wanted to sell some laser discs.
Well, as you know very well, it was a relatively short period of time
that they were prepared to pay out for these videos to happen.
And just a little breaking wave, we managed to surf.
Karaoke, as a form of entertainment, of course, made it out of this period just fine.
It's been surfing the wave of technology from the very first machine to eight tracks to laser disc to CDG to being available on every single phone because of YouTube.
Singing at the top of our lungs in a dark room with our best friends is a pastime that will never go out of style.
But for a very brief, spectacular moment, karaoke also created an opportunity for a lot of people to explore something they loved and make something that they cared about.
even if no one was watching.
99% Invisible was produced this week by me, Vivian Lay,
and edited by our senior editor Delaney Hall.
Mixed by Martine Gonzalez.
Music by Swan Royale, George Langford, and Jamila Sandoto.
Backchecking by Graham Hesha.
Special thanks this week to Hardy Haberman and Jackson Roach.
Brian Raftery has a new book out now about, of all things, Hannibal Lecter.
It's called Hannibal Lecter A Life.
Also if at any point during this episode you found yourself wondering,
I wonder what it's like to play a telitubby.
Well, you're in luck.
Nikki Smetley also has a book.
It's called Over the Hills and Far Away, My Life as a Telatubi.
It is a delightful read, so you should check it out.
Kathy 2 is our executive producer, Kurt Kolstad, as our digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Brubay, Jason DeLeon,
Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher Johnson, Lachamadon, Joe Rosenberg,
Kelly Prime, Jacob Medina Gleason, Tallinn and Rain Stradley,
and the boss man, Roman Mars.
The 99% Invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We are part of the Sirius XM podcast family now headquartered six blocks north
in the Pandora building in beautiful, uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find us on all of the usual social media sites, as well as our Discord server.
There's a link to that, as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.
