
Ozzy Osbourne to get special tribute at this year's MTV Video Music Awards
Van Toffler, who spent nearly three decades at MTV, recently inked a deal between his production and distribution company Gunpowder and Sky and MTV, and he has a key role in the upcoming ceremony on September 7.
The music legend's family are MTV legends thanks to their hit reality series The Osbournes - which aired between 2002 and 2005 - and in the wake of the Black Sabbath frontman's passing on Tuesday (22.07.25), at the age of 76, they want to give him a fitting farewell.
Toffler told Variety: 'I have no doubt we will spend the next month figuring out the proper tribute and send off to Ozzy on the Video Music Awards, because he was such a large figure in music history, and the family [had] such an impact on MTV history, and we need to acknowledge that.'
The former MTV boss helped launch the infamous reality show, years before the likes of Real Housewives or Keeping Up with the Kardashians had fans hooked.
Toffler told the outlet: 'We were deep in the throes of reality television in the early 2000s but I don't think we'd ever had someone over 50 years old featured on any show on MTV in its history.
'We were looking to launch Cribs, and we shot a bit with the Osbournes, and we all kind of looked at each other and just felt there is some wonderful, serendipitous chaos and insanity in this house that people would eat up.
"What a loving, dysfunctional, chaotic, musical family they were. And it just hit us to keep shooting, which went on for years.'
Ozzy's death was confirmed by his family in a statement which read: "It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love.
"We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time. Sharon, Jack, Kelly, Aimee and Louis."
The Mr. Crowley singer's passing came just weeks after he played his final concert in Birmingham on July 5.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ABC News
7 hours ago
- ABC News
Creepy Guy Meets Recording Device: The True Origins of Reality TV
If you thought reality TV began in the '90s or early 2000s with MTV's The Real World or Big Brother, think again… According to Pulitzer-Prize winning critic and New Yorker staff writer Emily Nussbaum, the genre actually pre-dates television altogether, beginning with audience participation shows on radio in the 1940's. But she tells host Marc Fennell (Stuff The British Stole, Mastermind) that it's really thanks to a guy named Allen Funt that we have shows like Survivor, The Kardashians, and MasterChef today. His weird obsession with making secret recordings of people and spying on them eventually turned into a hit TV show called Candid Camera and laid the foundations for a phenomenon that would not only change television, but would affect us as a society, to the point where a reality TV star now sits in the Oval Office (yes, Donald Trump). Binge all the episodes of No One Saw It Coming now on the ABC listen app (Australia) or wherever you get your podcasts. And check out Emily's book on the history of reality TV: Cue the Sun! The Invention of Reality TV. Candid Camera (CBS) theme created by Bob Crane. Get in touch: Got a story for us? We'd love to hear from you! Email us at noonesawitcoming@


Perth Now
8 hours ago
- Perth Now
Sharon Osbourne 'heartbroken' over Ozzy's death
Sharon Osbourne is being "held up" by her family following Ozzy Osbourne's death. The Black Sabbath frontman passed away on July 22, aged 76, and Sharon has been left feeling "heartbroken" by her husband's passing. A source told People: "Sharon's heartbroken but very proud of the life the family built together. "Everyone's rallying around her. She's been the rock of this family for decades, and now it's her turn to be held up." Sharon had Aimee, 41, Kelly, 40, and Jack, 39, with Ozzy, and "the kids are making sure she's never alone". The insider added: "There's a lot of pain, but also a lot of comfort from the family time that they got to enjoy up until the very end." Ozzy's death was announced by his family, who revealed that he was "surrounded by love" when he passed away. They said in a statement: "It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time." Meanwhile, Ozzy's autobiography is set to be released in October. The upcoming autobiography will explore the ups and downs of Ozzy's life, including the cheating scandal that almost ended his marriage in 2016. A source told The Sun on Sunday newspaper: "This book was basically Ozzy's last confessions and contains a lot of passages about how he is sorry for the affair. "As he was always brutally honest during his life, it's been decided not a word will be changed, even about painful times in his life and how his affair affected Sharon." The 72-year-old TV star - who married Ozzy in 1982 - is expected to write a foreword to the book, which is titled Last Rites. The source added: "Sharon is made of stern stuff and the publishers know she will want to leave her fingerprint on this book. Writing its foreword will also be cathartic for her and act as a way of laying Ozzy to rest."

The Australian
11 hours ago
- The Australian
Tributes flood in for Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne
Tributes poured in Wednesday for hell-raiser singer Ozzy Osbourne as Black Sabbath bandmates mourned the death of their legendary frontman and tearful fans laid flowers in his hometown Birmingham, just weeks after he played an epic reunion concert there. Osbourne, nicknamed the "Prince of Darkness" who famously once bit off the head of a bat while on stage, died on Tuesday at the age of 76, his family said. The heavy metal star, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2019, passed away just over a fortnight after playing the final gig before a sold-out crowd in his home city of Birmingham, England. Fans there laid floral tributes in memory of the singer at a mural honouring the band. "There are no words, truly. Thank you for everything, for all the music," read one. "Even recently at your last gig you brought us so much happiness, it's unreal," added another. - Bandmates' tributes - Original bandmates led the tributes on social media, with guitarist Tony Iommi saying, "there won't be another like him". Bassist Geezer Butler added: "So glad we got to do it one last time, back in Aston. Love you." And drummer Bill Ward said Osbourne would forever be in his heart, signing off his post with "Never goodbye. Thank you forever." Band co-founder Iommi said Osbourne's death so soon after the well-received musical reunion -- their first in 20 years -- had been a "terrible shock". The concert had been "brilliant for Ozzy because he really wanted to do that, you know, he felt at home there (in Birmingham) and it was really good for him", he told BBC radio. "It was good for all of us... we didn't realise it was going to be this final," he added. - 'So much more than metal' US rocker Alice Cooper hailed Osbourne on Instagram as "an unmatched showman and cultural icon". Music icon Elton John praised him as "a huge trailblazer who secured his place in the pantheon of rock gods -- a true legend". "He was also one of the funniest people I've ever met. I will miss him dearly," John wrote on Instagram. Osbourne was instrumental in pioneering heavy metal -- an offshoot of hard rock -- as Black Sabbath enjoyed huge commercial success in the 1970s and 80s after forming in Birmingham in 1968. Black Sabbath's eponymous 1970 debut album made the UK top 10 and paved the way for a string of hit records, including their most famous song "Paranoid". Black Sabbath went on to sell more than 75 million albums worldwide and were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2006. Osbourne was added for a second time last year as a solo artist. - Rabies shots - He gained huge notoriety along the way for his outlandish stunts, many of them fuelled by his hard-living style, which included the lavish use of drugs and alcohol. His live performances at the height of his hedonism have gone down in rock folklore, particularly a 1982 gig in Des Moines, Iowa, when he bit the head off a bat on stage. Osbourne said he thought a fan had thrown a fake rubber bat onstage, and it was not until he took a bite that he realised it was real. "I can assure you the rabies shots I went through afterwards aren't fun," he told US TV host David Letterman in 1982. His public persona took a new turn with the reality television series "The Osbournes" in the 2000s, which followed the ups and downs of his family life alongside wife Sharon, whom he married in 1982, and their three children. Osbourne, who had been battling ill health for over 20 years, went public with his Parkinson's diagnosis in 2020. He reportedly died at his mansion in Buckinghamshire, northwest of London. Caroline Rassell, chief executive of the charity Parkinson's UK, said by "speaking openly" about his diagnosis he and his family had helped many in the same situation. "They normalised tough conversations and made others feel less alone with a condition that's on the rise," she said. Osbourne brought the curtain down on a wild career on July 5, when Black Sabbath rattled through their most iconic songs in front of 40,000 adoring fans at Villa Park, home of Premier League football club Aston Villa. Stylish to the very end, he held court from a giant leather throne, topped with a bat. pdh-har-cla/jj