Can director Eric Wareheim do slow and sexy? Hell yes. But will he throw in a twist that will make this the best NSFW video ode to female power this year? Heller yes.
And will facesitting fans (Google at your own risk, people) especially love this? Hellest yes, indeed.
Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson comes out strongly here for gay marriage, an issue that is turning heads around the world. She sings as two men celebrate each other and get hitched, despite the qualms of one parent. JHud even makes it to the wedding party and belts it. Hot!
John C. Reilly (and friend) will go to great lengths in order to get a stuffed Flat Eric doll. As happens with hot toys, it's a difficult quest, filled with competition and great violence.
Let this be a reminder to do your shopping from the safety of your home on Cyber Monday, or to but the new Jash On-Demand Rubberhead special, which features this clip and lots of other weirdness.
Call it The Dentist Dilemma. Getting poked, prodded and worse? Terrible. Getting a halluinatory buzz from laughing gas? Awesome. Or frightening, as is the case in this Elliphant video.
Problem? Consider it solved. This is a coming out party for Ariana Grande as the pop star of the moment. And having the nearly as hot Iggy Azalea on-board also ain't a problem (and ditto for Big Sean in a cameo as The Whisperer).
it's not an Outkast cover or homage — in fact, it's more of a Janet reference. And Panic singer Brandon Urie has clearly been up to nasty things at a motel room, which in Vegas apparently qualifies you for a surreal Samurai sword knighting ceremony (and, I would hope, a free buffet).
Director Jordan Bahat delves into the heart of Fitz And The Tantrums in this stylized performance piece, using all sorts of tricks from Kinect camera mapping to duplications and kaleidoscopic effects.
Walking Dead fans will likely recognize this song from the show's soundtrack, but any music nerd worth their salt should be able to recognize familiar straings in this Jamie N Commons folk dirge — think: Joe Cocker singing "Natural Blues" in a
Lost luggage sucks. But, maybe it sucks even more for the poor, stranded bag. Director Jordan Bahat casts a battered and brown suitcase in the lead role for "Why Am I The One," putting it on a far-flung adventure that eventually leaves it where it belongs.