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・ 1996 Monaco Grand Prix
・ 1996 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three
・ 1996 Mongolia Premier League
・ 1996 Montana Grizzlies football team
・ 1996 Monte Carlo Open
・ 1996 Monte Carlo Open – Doubles
・ 1996 Monte Carlo Open – Singles
・ 1996 Montreal Alouettes season
・ 1996 Montreal Expos season
・ 1996 Mosconi Cup
・ 1996 Mount Everest disaster
・ 1996 Mr. Olympia
・ 1996 Ms. Olympia
・ 1996 MTV Europe Music Awards
・ 1996 MTV Movie Awards
1996 MTV Video Music Awards
・ 1996 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final
・ 1996 Nabisco Dinah Shore
・ 1996 Nagoya Grampus Eight season
・ 1996 NAIA Division I football season
・ 1996 NAIA Football National Championship
・ 1996 NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament
・ 1996 NASCAR Busch Series
・ 1996 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
・ 1996 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
・ 1996 National Invitation Tournament
・ 1996 National League Championship Series
・ 1996 National League Division Series
・ 1996 National Society of Film Critics Awards
・ 1996 National Summer Soccer League


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1996 MTV Video Music Awards : ウィキペディア英語版
1996 MTV Video Music Awards

The 1996 MTV Video Music Awards aired live on September 4, 1996, honoring the best music videos from June 16, 1995, to June 14, 1996. The show was hosted by Dennis Miller at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.
The show centered on The Smashing Pumpkins, who led the pack that night with nine nominations. Having both lost their touring keyboardist days before this appearance to a heroin overdose and kicked longtime, original drummer Jimmy Chamberlin out of the band as a result of this incident, the band opened the show as a three-piece, performing an awe-clinching, emotional version of "Tonight, Tonight." What is more, the Pumpkins ended up winning seven of the awards they were up for: "Tonight, Tonight" earned six wins out of its eight nominations, including Video of the Year, thus making it the night's most nominated and biggest winning video; while their video for "1979" earned the one Moonman it was nominated for: Best Alternative Video.
The next biggest nominee and winner that night was Canadian singer Alanis Morissette, who won three out of her six nominations for her video "Ironic." Tying with her in terms of nominations was Icelandic singer Björk, who also received six; however, her video for "It's Oh So Quiet" only took home one Moonman for Best Choreography. Closely following with five nominations each were Coolio, the Foo Fighters, and Bone Thugs-n-Harmony. Out of these, though, only the former two ended up taking home some Moonmen for their videos. Coolio won three, as "Gangsta's Paradise" won two out of its three nominations, and "1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin' New)" won one out of its two nominations, while the Foo Fighters' "Big Me" took home one Moonman for Best Group Video. Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, meanwhile, went home empty-handed.
Highlights of the show included a pre-show set by little-but-soon-to-be-widely known No Doubt, who performed on the entrance marquee of Radio City Music Hall. There was also a short-lived reunion of the four original members of Van Halen, who had not appeared together at that time for more than a decade (and who did not appear together afterwards until the Van Halen 2007–2008 North American Tour), presenting the award for Best Male Video, as well as a live interlink with astronauts on the Mir space station. The show also marked Tupac Shakur's final public appearance before being shot multiple times in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas, Nevada three days later on September 7.
==Nominations==
Winners are in bold text.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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