Once MTV came onto the scene, a corporate mentality came into play: “We don’t want any radical ideas, nothing political.” For directors like me, who were smart enough, you learned to be subtle. I did a video for Musical Youth, “Pass the Dutchie,” five little black guys playing a reggae track. I placed them in front of the House of Parliament, which is a postcard shot of what England is supposed to be. Instead, I replaced it with my vision of London. It was a subtle way of acknowledging the importance of black culture in the UK.
People often say “Billie Jean” was the first black music video on MTV. “Pass the Dutchie” was first. Because they were little and spoke in funny British accents, Musical Youth were deemed as nonthreatening, and therefore non-black. (Tannenbaum and Marks 140)
However, these cases were few and far between and substantial representation of African-American and diaspora acts wouldn’t happen in earnest until after Michael Jackson’s explosive trilogy of videos broke the so-called color barrier.