Benny Blanco gets ready for the big BTS concert, just a bit earlier than you'd expect, in this video directed by Ben Sinclair of the HBO series High Maintenance.
Sissy Spacek and David Strathairn discover the formula for both love and teleportation in this effective sci-fi melodrama helmed by Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson, but it's tragic circumstances that lead to the couple's biggest breakthrough of knowing there's someplace better than here or there.
The world seems on the verge of glitching apart as Miguel stops on a desert roadside to dance as rockets blast off behind him in a video that seems very inspired by album title, War and Leisure.
Master Of None co-creator Alan Yang directs a genius video that pokes fun at the fact that Friends was an exceptionally white show, by recasting a remake with a who's who of current black stars, including Jerrod Carmichael, Issa Rae, Lakeith Stanfield, Tiffany Haddish, Tessa Thompson and Lil Rel Howery.
Little things, like the world ending, don't have quite the same effect on you if you're in love. Or, if you're covering The Cure like Georgia Hubley and her Yo La Tengo bandmates are in this first video off new "covers and then some" album Stuff Like That There.
The surprise release is now clearly the preferred marketing/sales stunt: And if you're a superstar like Beyonce, it's damn effective. Same goes for Drake, who dropped If You’re Reading This, It’s Too Late on Friday and is already looking to sell over 500k copies in just a few days. Promotion?
Empire Of The Sun always push the weird needle on-stage and in their videos, but it's all the more striking when you see the blue-spiked dude in the real world. And not so surprising that the cops get called.
Remember the days when every big Hollywood movie had a soundtrack and accompanying music videos? Mariah Carey and David LaChapelle sure do and this clip has all the classic hallmarks of the field — a gorgeously lit vocal performance, plenty of film footage and a sweeping crescendo. Mariah's performance is simple, which certainly works with a performer like her, but I couldn't help but hope for an Oz-like transformation from black and white into color for the big finish.