Black Eyed Peas leave the party starting behind in favor of starting a movement, tackling the issues of of immigration, gun violence, police brutality, and mass incarceration through a video that's like a Ken Burns photo montage, but with "spot" animation to allow for some unlikely lip-syncs.
A crate-digging expedition where Black Eyed Peas go back to their roots with visual and audio recreations of everyone from De La Soul to N.W.A. to Public Enemy.
And as Erykah Badu pointed out, it is a similar concept to her "Honey" video, but the album homage is tried and true with examples from Liz Phair to Cornershop and, most recently and memorably, Roy Kafri —and, hey, sampling is as old as hip-hop itself.