This week  we  going  to  hit  you with  our  eighties  rhythm stick.
Not only did 80s pop music     define who we were, but the music held the anthems of our daily     lives. We woke up to “Manic Mondays” with the Bangles just to     find ourselves “hangin tough” with the New Kids On The Block by     the time Wednesday or Thursday rolled around. By the end of the   week, it was "Friday, I'm in Love."  When the weekend     came, Kylie had us doing the “Locomotive” and Debbie Gibson     taught us that youth was electric.  The best way to revisit   all the great pop music of the 80s is to re-watch the music videos of   your favorite songs.  After all, MTV was a product of the early 80s   - what better way to enjoy the fashions, dance moves and musical   stylings of the decade's music?  We have a big collection of our   favorite 80s music in our video section: watch   
80s music videos here.
One Hit Wonders of 80s Pop
As with any decade of pop music, the 80s   had its share of both pop icons and one hit wonders.  The king and   queen of the 80s pop music prom would certainly be Michael Jackson and   Madonna.  But, there is a lot to 80s pop music beyond the Material   Girl and the Kind of Pop.  Some notable one hit pop wonders include   Dexys Midnight Runners with "Come on Eileen," Murray Head's "
One   Night in Bangkok," and Timbuk 3's "The Future's So Bright, I Gotta   Wear Shades," and our personal favorite Men Without Hats' "
Safety   Dance."  What was your favorite one hit wonder of the 80s?    
Tell on us Facebook.
Hair Metal
No rundown of 80s pop music would be   complete without mentioning the hair metal mega-bands of the late 1980s.   From Poison and Def Leppard to Guns n Roses and Bon Jovi, these bands   topped the pop charts in the second half of the decade.  Bon Jovi   was the first to hit the #1 Billboard spot in November of 1986 with "You   Give Love a Bad Name."  1987 saw two number ones from hair metal   bands, Bon Jovi again with "Livin' on a Prayer" and then Whitesnake with   "Here I Go Again" later in the year.  1988 would be the apogee of   heavy metal's penetration into the pop charts with number one songs by   Cheap Trick, Guns N Roses, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and Poison