Although coming a few years too late to actually get used in a John Hughes film, the latest song from We Are The In Crowd perfectly captures that '80s Breakfast Club vibe.
Sometimes the news is so urgent it should be delivered with the intesnsity of hardcore metal. --> watch "Arguing With Thermometers"
Enter Shikari "Arguing With Thermometers" (Hopeless/Ambush Reality/PIAS)Raul Gonzo, director | Stefan Anderson, producer | RSM, production co.| Raul Gonzo, DP/editor/colorist | Robby Starbuck, exec. producer
Director Robby Starbuck updates the old "Right Now" video model for Yellowcard but with a more personal (perhaps more emo) slant with on-screen text detailing the adversity that each person on-screen has been dealt. Cynics take note: All the folks featured here are real people talking about their real situations.--> watch "Sing For Me"
If music videos were real life, we'd all be really annoyed at people who keep busting into song. That's the case in this dialogue-driven clip for Yellowcard, in which singer Ryan Key just can't shut up. Not when he's working the Drive-Thru as his fast food job and not when he's trying to woo his estranged ex back. Not until the song ends. --> watch "Hang You Up"
If the Jonas Bros were an emo band, they'd probably be There For Tomorrow, a group of pretty boys from Orlando. This video from new production company Variable Films mixes performance with a rapidfire storyline in which singer Maika Maile romances a waitress who is far prettier than the usual help at classic NJ eatery, the Bendix Diner. --> watch "A Little Faster"
Well, it looks like the effects of Barack Obama's nuanced speech on race relations — "the most honest speech on race in America in my adult lifetime," according to pundit Andrew Sullivan —are already being felt in the pop-punk constituency. All Time Low actually seem to exist in a sort of Colbertian post-race world where poking fun of hip-hop video stereotypes is no more