Meet Japanese youngster Mame and her poodle guardians Riku, Gaku and Qoo. And, yes, this is real (well, Instagram real... unless the poodles are raising Mame as her own, which would be awesome).
A portraiture of a wandering dog at magic hour. Two lovers at the beach, dealing with each other and the dangerosly crashing waves. And a depressed woman who confronts an unhelpful counterman, to tragic results. "Don't Know Why" is a music video comprised of those three totally seperate acts, connected only on a subsconscious level.
Dressing up like gentlemen and ladies of the English court is a trend that comes around every now and then, and it may be making a comeback if the Lemon Twigs and director Brook Linder get their way in the Lemon Twigs' début vid.
Yes, this video can be easily described as "The Weeknd on fire," but that's only if you're willing to miss the larger point about the lengths an artist must go to appease the masses.
Speaking of which, this song is a star-making breakthrough smash.
Don't mess with that nightmarish gang of marauding pop-n-lockers who look like the satanic counterpart to Jabbawockeez — unless you happen to be Pusha T or Dennis Rodman, who might actually be the same person.
Punk rockers probably shouldn't age gracefully, but such is (debatably) the case with Mau Maus singer Rick Wilder in this portrait of the anarchist as a very old man for Ariel Pink. Wilder still looks the part — think Johnny Rotten, but older and skinnier — and still clings to his punk dreams, but his days are mostly spent just scraping by and surviving.
What if that 2001 monolith touched down in the middle of a nicely woozy parking lot rap video? It would be awesome, obviously, which is the case with director Grant Singer's video for Travi$ Scott, Young Thug and Rich Homie Quan.