The 100 Greatest Music Videos
In the wee hours of August 1st, 1981, someone flipping through their channels might have come across the image of a rocket blasting into space. The familiar sight of Neil Armstrong exiting his lunar module and walking on the moon would fill the TV screen. And then they’d hear a voiceover, with all the smooth patter of an FM disc jockey: “Ladies and gentlemen, rock & roll.” Cue power chords, and a flag with a network logo — something called MTV — that rapidly changed colors and patterns. This wasn’t a news channel; it was “Music Television.” If they kept tuning in, they’d see clips and hear VJs talk about bringing you the latest in music videos. At this point, viewers might have a few questions, like: Is this like a radio station on TV? What is a “VJ”? And what the hell is a “music video”?
A year later, no one was asking that last question. Virtually everyone knew what a music video was, and they wanted their MTV. The network revolutionized the music industry, inspired a multitude of copycat programming, made many careers, and broke more than a few. Entire genres and subgenres — from hip-hop to grunge to boy-band pop to nu metal — became part of the mainstream. The format proved so durable that when MTV decided to switch things up and devote its air time to game shows, reality TV, and scripted series, thus shutting down the primary pipeline for these promos, artists still kept making them. The internet soon stepped in to fill the void. Four decades after the channel’s launch and long after it stopped playing them, music videos still complement songs, create mythologies, and cause chatter and controversy. We no longer want our MTV. We continue to want our music videos.
In honor of MTV’s 40th anniversary, we’ve decided to rank the top 100 music videos of all time. You’ll notice some significant changes from the last time we did this. (Yes, Michael Jackson is on here. No, “Thriller” is not.) A few pre-date the channel; several have never played on MTV at all. But all of these picks are perfect examples of how pairing sound and vision created an entire artistic vocabulary, gave us a handful of miniature-movie masterpieces, and changed how we heard (and saw) music. From Adele’s “Hello” to ZZ Top’s “Gimme All Your Lovin'” — these are the videos that continue to thrill us, delight us, disturb us, and remind us just how much you can do in three to four minutes with a song, a camera, a concept, a pose, some mood lighting, and an iconic hand gesture or two.
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The Buggles, “Video Killed the Radio Star”
Trevor Horn didn’t know that MTV was coming when he wrote “Video Killed the Radio Star” for his synth duo the Buggles in the late Seventies, but he knew the music industry was on the verge of a major change. “I’d read J.G. Ballard and had this vision of the future where record companies would have computers in the basement and manufacture artists,” he told The Guardian in 2018. “I’d heard Kraftwerk’s The Man-Machine and video was coming. You could feel things changing.” That change came on August 1st, 1981, when MTV went on the airwaves at 12:01 a.m. The very first video the network played was “Video Killed the Radio Star,” a weirdly affecting sci-fi fever dream by Highlander director Russel Mulcahy that dramatized this changing of the pop-cultural guard. The choice amounted to the cable network brashly declaring its own importance before most anyone even knew it existed. But MTV was right. Within a couple of years, unglamorous groups like Toto and Kansas were on their way out, and fashion-forward acts like Duran Duran and Culture Club were ascendant. Horn himself played a big role in this process by producing hits for the likes of Frankie Goes to Hollywood, ABC, and Spandau Ballet. The Buggles dissolved in 1981 after releasing just two albums, but their place in pop music history is forever secure. They were prophets. —A.G.
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The New Pornographers, “Moves”
Because who doesn’t love a star-studded origin story involving fame, drugs, guns, knives, bad behavior, moving up, and selling out? WFMU’s Best Show host Tom Scharpling directs this “trailer” for the ultimate biopic on Canada’s the New Pornographers, with his fellow host and Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster as red-haired singer A.C. Newman, “the boy who had a dream … [and] became the man who challenged destiny.” He forms a band, they have a hit, success turns them all into coke-sniffing, money-grubbing monsters — you know the drill. Everyone from Donald Glover to John Oliver, Horatio Sanz, Ted Leo, Wyatt Cenac, and the mighty Julie Klausner drops by to recount “the rise and rise” of a cult power-pop band. It’s a brilliantly ridiculous clip, and a near-perfect piss-take on rock movie clichés. P.S. We really do hope the Paul Rudd–Bill Hader comedy Expectant Dads is coming to a theater near us soon. —D.F.
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Harry Styles, “Watermelon Sugar”
“This Video Is Dedicated to Touching,” says the title card at the start of Harry Styles’ ultimate fruit-orgy of a music video, filmed at the beach in Malibu right before the pandemic, starring a few friends and some erotically charged melons. By the time it debuted, to a world in lockdown, there was something poignant about seeing sensual party people lustily fondle fruit (and each other) in the sunshine, grinding on the rinds. And whatever the melons are into, he’s OK with it. Music videos have always celebrated the sexy-beach trope. Harry makes it feel brand new, crowning himself the consent king of the fructosexual future. —R.S.
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The Blow Monkeys, “Digging Your Scene”
A self-confessed “glam jazz obscurity,” the Blow Monkeys were London art-fops who became stars with this totally shameless master class in 1980s New Wave poseur brilliance. The gentleman crooner Dr. Robert preens and minces onstage, in a sleazy cocktail lounge, acting out all his fantasies of depraved vanity. He works his faux-Bowie and faux-Sinatra moves, all sneer and cheekbones, seducing the audience even though he’s just here to grab his cash and bolt. He even twirls a parasol to protect himself from hecklers throwing debris. But under the sleek surface, it’s a cerebral lament against Eighties homophobia. As Dr. Robert told the BBC, “‘Digging Your Scene’ was me tipping my hat to the club scene, and then specifically the gay scene within the club scene.” —R.S.
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A Tribe Called Quest feat. Leaders of the New School, “Scenario”
There are music videos that are indebted to their time — and then there’s the clip for this Tribe Called Quest song, both the raucous closer to their sophomore album The Low End Theory and a strong contender for one of the best posse cuts of all time. Directed by Jim Swaffield, the video features Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, and a whole lotta friends (from De La Soul to Spike Lee) crowding a frame that mimics a retro PC mixing display, which controls everything from Phife’s wild hairstyles to Busta Rhymes’ long-sleeved top. It’s like a digital fun house, with special effects that couldn’t feel more Windows ’95 — which only adds to the goofy, retro charm. And whether they’re scowling for the camera or acting silly, the dream-team pack of rappers all look like they’re having the time of their lives. —M.C.
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The Chicks, “Goodbye Earl”
30 Rock’s Jane Krakowski is Wanda, an abused housewife who teams up with her best friend Mary Ann (Dumb and Dumber‘s Lauren Holly) to kill her husband, Earl (Dennis Franz). They poison his black-eyed peas, wrap his body in tarp, and toss him into the lake — celebrating with a party that includes a zombie Earl as a participant. Meanwhile, singer Natalie Maines belts out the track in a red bandana top that’s undoubtedly the most 2000s look ever, as she and her bandmates lend these women a helping hand. Written by Dennis Linde, the song was deemed controversial upon its release; its themes of domestic violence and murder caused radio stations to include a hotline number or refuse to play it altogether. The video may turn the concept into a bit of cartoon, but still manages to keep the ditty’s sting. “The Chicks do not advocate premeditated murder,” the band wrote in the album’s liner notes. “But do love getting even.”—A.M.
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Sinéad O’Connor, “Nothing Compares 2 U”
Sinéad O’Connor kept it simple with the video for her 1985 hit, written by Prince, about a love affair that’s left its narrator in tatters. There’s little more to this clip other than the Irish singer wandering past statues and brooding, along with a close-up of her face, singing against a black background — but you can’t underestimate the power of that last part. Tears stream down her cheeks as she appears to be lamenting her loss inches away from us; tapping into the then-recent loss of her mother, it’s as if the famously confrontational, brash O’Connor is refusing to let the audience look away from her pain, grief, and anger. And then she caps it off by staring directly into the camera before casting a look downward, unable to go on. It’s like watching a heart break in real time. —B.E.
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Cardi B feat. Megan Thee Stallion, “WAP”
The most joyous ode to vaginal lubrication ever put to video featured a political conservative’s concept of hell: Two strong, rich, confident, and massively influential black women openly embracing their sexuality. Director Colin Tilley’s clip for this Cardi B/Megan Thee Stallion joint juxtaposes this brash love of the “king cobra” (or “big Mack truck,” dealer’s choice) with a whimsical, pastel-covered innocence and exotic cats that earned the ire of everyone from members of Congress to Fox News pundits to … Carole Baskin? Score one for Cardi and Megan. Few videos dominated culture more in 2020, hitting all the water-cooler benchmarks: a Jenner or Kardashian cameo, countless think pieces on the video’s meaning, and pseudo-outrage of the self-proclaimed moral majority. —J.N.
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Adam Ant, “Stand and Deliver”
“I just hope showbiz never becomes a dirty word,” Adam Ant told Rolling Stone in 1980. “I love it.” He was the greatest New Romantic swashbuckler of his era, a dandy highwayman who dressed up in pirate drag. His videos for “Prince Charming,” “Antmusic,” “Goody Two Shoes,” and the yes-it-really-happened “Ant Rap” declared war on everything safe and dull about the Eighties — but “Stand and Deliver” is his ultimate glam manifesto, with Adam robbing stagecoaches to proclaim, “I spend my cash on looking flash and grabbing your attention!” The aristocrat lady here: future British movie star Amanda Donohoe, Adam’s real-life muse. Like Adam, she knew ridicule is nothing to be scared of. —R.S.
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Blur, “Coffee & TV”
By 1999, guitarist Graham Coxon’s drinking problem and creative grievances meant that he was increasingly distant from the rest of Blur. “Graham wasn’t happy and he didn’t always turn up,” the Britpop group’s bassist, Alex James, recalled in his memoir, Bit of a Blur. “It was frustrating because, when he did, everything he did was brilliant.” That intra-band drama found unexpectedly whimsical expression in the video that production duo Hammer & Tongs created for “Coffee & TV,” a single written and primarily sung by Coxon (and a top example of the brilliance James was talking about). Coxon plays the missing son of a sad suburban English family, first seen pictured on the side of a milk carton — a milk carton that promptly comes to life and becomes the video’s happy little protagonist. Milky bops along his merry way, hitches a ride into the big city, falls in love with a carton of strawberry milk, experiences wrenching grief, and finally finds Coxon right where he belongs: in a room jamming on “Coffee & TV” with the other guys from Blur. (Spoiler alert: Coxon goes on to chug Milky, who is later resurrected and reunited with his true love in beverage-container heaven.) —S.V.L.
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Madonna, “Justify My Love”
In a post-“WAP” and “Montero” world, it might be difficult to remember just how skilled Madonna once was at stirring up controversy with a new music video. She managed to outdo herself with the erotic reverie of 1990’s “Justify My Love,” which was so spicy that MTV actually banned it — and thus guaranteed its immortality. Filmed in noirish black and white, the clip (directed by Jean-Baptiste Mondino) depicts the pop star experiencing a sexual awakening through a series of encounters, including a three-way with a passionate same-sex kiss. There are also brief glimpses of gay life and kinkiness in shots of a trio of gay men cuddling on a couch and a bare-chested femme domme practicing BDSM on her male partner. Those are considerably less taboo topics 30-plus years later, and this clip — and the woman at the center of it — deserves at least a little credit for pushing them in that direction.—J.F.
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Psy, “Gangnam Style”
What’s that, Billy? What was 2012 like? Well, sit on your grandpa’s knee and listen. See, there was a South Korean singer-rapper who released a manic, whirlwind video with explosions, goofy-yet-contagious choreography, and horses. Yes, horses. The whole world embraced this clip that transcended “video” into “global phenomenon,” with seemingly every TV show and commercial either emulating or parodying its equus-themed strutting. We also said “sexy laaaady” a lot. For a minute, Billy, the dying monoculture was revived to celebrate the shlubby guy in the tacky suit — so much so, in fact, that the video became the first video to hit 1 billion views on YouTube. Here, let me show you the horse dance. —J.N.
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The Notorious B.I.G., “Hypnotize”
Shot weeks before Biggie’s death in March 1997, the “Hypnotize” video took the rapper out of the streets of Brooklyn and into much warmer climes: specifically, “Florida Keys, 5:47 pm,” as the title card announces. (It was actually shot in Santa Monica.) The video is a Michael Bay-ified version of the high-life aesthetic Puff Daddy’s Bad Boy Records became known for: all strewn-about cash, champagne, expensive suits as Puff and Biggie speed-race both a boat (while being chased by a pack of helicopters) and a convertible luxury sedan, backward (while being chased by a pack of motorcycles). The best part, though, is much simpler: Biggie grinning like a kid, showing the boyish charm that was his not-so-secret weapon. The rapper never got to see the final cut. “I showed him about a minute and a half in the early rounds, and he was really excited,” director Paul Hunter told Spin in 2017. “He smiled like a kid: this big, warm smile.” —C.H.
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Soundgarden, “Blow Up the Outside World”
Yes, the “Black Hole Sun” video is surreal, and disturbing, and helped introduce Soundgarden to a whole new, non-grunge-fanatic audience. But this clip, directed by Devo’s Jerry Casale, arguably one-ups the things-fall-apart factor from its predecessor, while simultaneously capturing the vibe of this stellar Down on the Upside track to a T. It’s no coincidence that Chris Cornell bears a strong resemblance here to Alex the Droog from A Clockwork Orange, as he’s forced to watch scenes of serenity interspersed with snippets of sex and violence. And viewers familiar with the Seventies cinéma du conspiracy theory classic The Parallax View will pick up on the similarity between that film’s brainwashing sequence and what’s going on here. Then the band begin blowing the place apart — first figuratively, then literally — and what starts as a double homage turns into some nuclear-grade catharsis. —D.F.
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Neil Young, “This Note’s for You”
In the late Eighties, David Bowie, Madonna, Eric Clapton, Tina Turner, Michael Jackson, and many other A-list artists not only licensed their music to commercials but actually appeared in the ads as well. Neil Young was so sickened by the phenomenon that he spoofed it on the title track to his 1988 LP, This Note’s for You. “Ain’t singin’ for Pepsi,” he snarled. “Ain’t singin’ for Coke/I don’t sing for nobody/Makes me look like a joke.” He took things a step further when he made a video for the song that viciously mocked Clapton’s Michelob ad, Calvin Klein’s Obsession commercial, Bud Light’s Spuds MacKenzie’s spots, and the infamous Jackson Pepsi commercial where his hair caught on fire. Initially, MTV refused to air it under the specious grounds that it would open them up to “copyright infringement.” “You spineless twerps,” Young write them in an open letter. “You refuse to play ‘This Note’s for You’ because you’re afraid to offend your sponsors. What does the ‘M’ in MTV stand for: music or money?” MTV ultimately backed down and not only aired the video but awarded Young Video of the Year at the 1989 VMAs. —A.G.
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“Weird Al” Yankovic, “Eat It”
Before “Eat It” hit the MTV airwaves, “Weird Al” Yankovic seemed like he’d go down in history as a fringe novelty artist who gave the world clever parody songs like “My Bologna” and “I Love Rocky Road” before vanishing into obscurity. But the brilliant “Eat it” video showed he was operating on a level of genius and obsession that nobody had ever seen before. It’s a shot-for-shot spoof of Michael Jackson’s “Beat It” video where the gang members fight with forks instead of knives, and a rather large one gets stuck in a manhole. He even tracked down some of the same dancers from the original and told them to spoof their old moves. Amazingly, Jackson was fine with the parody, and some love from MTV helped the song reach Number 12 on the Hot 100. It was the start of a long run of genuine hits for Yankovic. “‘Eat It’ basically changed me from an unknown into a guy that got recognized at Burger King,” Yankovic later told Rolling Stone. —A.G.
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Azealia Banks, “212”
Azealia Banks’ “212” dropped like a bomb on music in 2011, and its spare, black-and-white music video only strengthened the case for Banks as a bona fide star — as soon as she spat, “I’ma ruin you, cunt” to the camera, you knew you weren’t going to forget her. It’s hard to see past the in-your-face bravado here, but it really is all the small details that make the clip such a memorable artifact: the Mickey Mouse sweater, the quick cuts through a Harlem bodega, the Yung Rapunzel’s confrontational rapping into the ear of a bespectacled (and amused) Jacques Greene. In the years since, Banks has not always lived up to what this promised, but the dream of “what could have been” for her — and what may still be possible — carries on every time you see that extreme close-up of her, destroying haters one bar at a time. —C.S.
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Blind Melon, “No Rain”
O Bee Girl, where is thy sting? The morose, bespectacled girl in a black-and-yellow costume, wandering around in search of someone who really gets her, may well be the most Nineties image of the Nineties. But playing off Blind Melon’s debut album cover — which featured drummer Glenn Graham’s 10-year-old sister dressed up as a bee — and in contrast to the far more darker videos of the era, director Samuel Bayer matches the hippie lilt of the band’s music by providing a movingly gleeful, one-of-us ending, as the young misfit finds her people and frolics with them in a paradisiacal, Shire-like green field. Singer Shannon Hoon would later bemoan the fact that the image would become so associated with the group, yet it suits the song’s tone to a T. And Heather DeLoach, who played the buzzing kid in the clip? She stills refers to herself as “the Bee Girl.” —B.H.
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Nicki Minaj, “Anaconda”
“Anaconda” was a massive moment for Nicki Minaj — and the video, directed by Colin Tilley, would only make the song’s bawdy lyrical content that much more explicit. (If nothing else, it proves that the sample of Sir Mix-A-Lot’s “Baby Got Back” wasn’t a coincidence.) The rapper channels everyone from Josephine Baker to Jane Fonda, pivoting from twerking in a resort to conducting an asserobics course. After a messy cooking class, she surprised fans with a Drake cameo as her Young Money ally gleefully receives a lap dance from Minaj. A power move in more ways than can be counted, the “Anaconda” video has racked up a billion views, which made Minaj the first female rapper to do so. —B.S.
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Talking Heads, “Once in a Lifetime”
“Once in a Lifetime” is one of the most uniquely incredible songs in the history of pop — so it’s only fitting the video is its own distinctly weird trip into the subconscious. Co-director Toni Basil (who’d score a smash hit with “Mickey” the next year) shot it on videotape, on next-to-no budget. She and David Byrne visited the film and video archive at UCLA, where, as Basil told Uncut in 2007, “they had a huge library of preachers, evangelists, people in trances, African tribes, Japanese religious sects.” Some of the footage ended up in the video, while Byrne — wearing a suit, a bow tie, and a layer of flop-sweat — channeled the anxiety of a man in peak midlife crisis. The video helped establish Byrne as one of the most distinct stars of the Eighties, blessed with his own brand of oddball charisma. There’s a strange logic to his herky-jerky movements, even a little bit of funk, as if somewhere, deep down, he realizes the secret to life is always flowing just below our perception. —C.H.
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Rick Astley, “Never Gonna Give You Up”
Incredibly little happens in the “Never Gonna Give You Up” video, the three-and-a-half-minute clip that launched the stickiest music-related meme in the history of the internet. Rick Astley dances and lip-syncs in a few different settings; a bartender and some bystanders pick up on the vibe and start showing off their own strangely acrobatic moves. But there’s a reason why no other clip has swarmed the web to this extent — or spawned its own bait-and-switch link prank: The video that accompanied Astley’s dance-pop smash is an unstoppable juggernaut of care-free late-Eighties charm. Astley’s immaculate red pompadour; his parade of audacious outfits, from an ill-advised baby-blue-and-denim ensemble to a now-iconic tan trenchcoat; and of course his legendarily dorky shimmy — all of it adds up to a series of images that’s impossible not to smile at. The clip’s director Simon West, who went on to helm Con Air and Tomb Raider, has said that the video “haunts [him] like a bad poltergeist,” but for the rest of us, each time we get Rickrolled becomes a welcome moment of zen. (As if on cue, “Never Gonna Give You Up” reached 1 billion views on YouTube in July 2021.) —H.S.
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Björk, “All Is Full of Love”
If a couple of plastic androids getting freaky on the factory floor isn’t your idea of a good time, this one might not be for you. You wouldn’t be alone — plenty of people found director Chris Cunningham’s slick, sticky robot fantasy to be every bit as creepy as the nightmares he conjured up for Aphex Twin around the same time (see number 47 on this list). That was a plus for Björk, who was drawn to Cunningham’s flair for disturbing imagery: “Most video directors have one trick that they use all the time,” she’s been quoted as saying. “Then there are people who build a whole world around them. Chris is like that.” Looked at another way, “All Is Full of Love” is a surprisingly sweet sci-fi fable in which human feelings manage to survive even the most alienated future. Either way, it’s the perfect expression of the uncanny beauty of Björk’s Homogenic, and a key exhibit in the case for her as one of the great oddball auteurs of the music-video age, across her work with many directors. — S.V.L.
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Haim, “Valentine”
Like his idol Jonathan Demme, Paul Thomas Anderson knows that sometimes, all you need is the right musician in the right setting to make a visual spectacle. He’d explored that simple concept on past music videos for Fiona Apple and Joanna Newsom before taking it to new heights with this 13-minute short film that places the Haim sisters in the studio and says, “Do your thing.” The camera movement and lighting are a bit more complex than Demme’s “The Perfect Kiss,” but not by much, and they don’t need to be — Haim remain one of the most engaging live acts of their generation, and the studio walls can hardly contain their energy and dynamism. —C.S.
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Twisted Sister, “We’re Not Gonna Take It”
No video has ever summed up heavy metal’s anti-authoritarian spirit better than this clip, which complemented Twisted Sister’s fist-pumping ode to fed-up-ness with a barrage of pure visual slapstick. Aggro dad Mark Metcalf (Animal House’s ROTC maniac Doug Neidermeyer) bursts into the room of his guitar-playing son and bellows, “What do you wanna do with your life?!?” The kid magically transforms into the band’s glam-kabuki frontman, Dee Snider, who proceeds to subject the offending patriarch to a hilariously over-the-top sequence of bodily harm. He falls out a window, gets dragged down the stairs, and gets knocked around by a slamming door. The song’s tone was angry, but as Snider explained during a 1985 PMRC hearing after the track was included on Tipper Gore’s infamous “Filthy 15,” actual violence was the last thing he wanted the clip to portray. “The video ‘We’re Not Gonna Take It’ was simply meant to be a cartoon with human actors playing variations on the Roadrunner/Wile E. Coyote theme,” he said. “Each stunt was selected from my extensive personal collection of cartoons.” —H.S.
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Weezer, “Buddy Holly”
Despite everything that Weezer have achieved over the past three decades, the first image that comes to mind when many people think of them is Fonzie and the Happy Days gang dancing to “Buddy Holly” at Arnold’s Drive-In. That’s because the 1994 Spike Jonze–directed video for the song left an indelible impression after countless plays on MTV in 1994 (not to mention the fact that it was included on a Windows 95 CD-ROM the following year that went out to a decent chunk of the population). And even though bringing Weezer back in time to the Happy Days universe seems like an enormous technical feat, the clip was actually filmed in a single day on a Hollywood soundstage that re-created the Arnold’s set, complete with a cameo by Al Molinaro reprising his Arnold character from the show. The hard part was combing through the enormous Happy Days archives to find little bits to intersperse into the video. “My editor and I went through hundreds of episodes,” Jonze told Spin in 2003, “pretty much every one that had anything in Arnold’s. When we found the footage of Fonzie dancing, it was like a gold mine.” —A.G.
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Run-DMC, “King of Rock”
Nearly 25 years before their Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction, Run-DMC entered the fictitious “Museum of Rock N’ Roll” to wig-snatch the Beatles, unplug a Jerry Lee Lewis video, and crush Michael Jackson’s bejeweled glove. “I remember people were saying that was kind of prophetic,” DMC said in 2009. No one used rock in hip-hop better to both bolster and upend the sound. And the video, featuring Letterman regular Larry “Bud” Melman saying, “You guys don’t belong in here,” is iconoclastic enough in its idol-busting to make the line, “There’s three of us / But we’re not the Beatles” (somewhat) forgivable. —J.N.
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Beck, “Loser”
Much like the bricolage that was Beck’s early sound, the video that put him on the map was a jumble of disparate images that somehow hung together. The “Loser” clip’s $300 shooting budget yielded shots of DIY cheerleaders dancing in a graveyard, a Grim Reaper–like figure squeegee-ing a car window with blood, assorted West Coast weirdos strumming acoustic guitars, and a coffin spookily making its way through woods and streets (director Steve Hanft’s nod to Luis Buñuel’s Simon of the Desert). In the midst of it all, Beck boogied in a white suit and stocking cap, wielded a leaf blower onstage, and set his own guitar on fire. The whole thing is completely devoid of narrative, but absolutely brimming with vibe (the shot near the end of a shaggy-haired Beck strolling the beach in half a wetsuit screams “Nineties California”). No matter what state of mind you view it in, it conjures up a hypnotic wake-and-bake haze that you can’t help but sink into like a threadbare crash-pad couch. —H.S.
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Kendrick Lamar, “Humble”
In case you were wondering whether the video for Kendrick Lamar’s first Number One hit would be as bare-bones as the song, well — the first shot is the rapper dressed as the pope, clad in full regalia and standing in a beam of light. From there, Lamar and director Dave Meyers pile up images like memories in a fever dream: Kendrick on a cash-strewn table; Kendrick teeing off on top of an old hoopty; Kendrick passing Grey Poupon from car to car; Kendrick as Christ in Leonardo’s Last Supper. Part of it could be a jab at the conspicuous consumption of hip-hop videos (not to mention Grey Poupon commercials); part of it is likely Lamar engaging with a Christianity whose dictum of humility might be tough to stick to when you’re the greatest rapper alive. In a 2017 Rolling Stone cover story, Lamar made clear whom he was talking to. “It’s the ego,” he said. “Ultimately, I’m looking in the mirror.” —C.H.
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Mötley Crüe, “Home Sweet Home”
Mötley Crüe may have been in an extremely dark place when they shot the video for their 1985 power ballad “Home Sweet Home” thanks to bassist Nikki Sixx’s severe heroin addiction and the recent aftermath of Vince Neil’s car accident that killed Hanoi Rocks drummer Razzle, but you’d never know it from watching the end product. It begins with Neil at the beach, guitarist Mick Mars at a spooky castle, Sixx at a bar, and drummer Tommy Lee at a party. They all answer a phone call by saying, “I’m on my way,” and are immediately transported to a magical arena concert where the female fans need to be physically restrained from lunging themselves onto the stage. This was the height of the hair-metal movement, and the video ran on MTV for several months in heavy rotation. Looking back on that era, Lee told Stereogum, “We were coming off the success of the video for ‘Home Sweet Home,’ of which they made the ‘Mötley Crüe rule’ for over at MTV. We’d held the top position for requests for so long that they were like, ‘This isn’t fair.'” —A.G.
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Lil Nas X, “Montero (Call Me by Your Name)”
Have you ever lapdanced with the devil in the pale moonlight? Lil Nas X co-directed (alongside Tanu Muino) the clip for the title track of his 2021 album, and it’s a riot of color, historical allusions (from Genesis to Revelations, Greco-Roman architecture to medieval artwork), sound, fury, ecstasy, and vision. But what grabbed the most attention was our man Montero — the artist’s real first name — sliding down a pole into hell and giving Satan (also played by Lil Nas X) the single hottest crotch grind that the Prince of Darkness has likely ever experienced. Though satanists seem to give the video one sign-of-the-beast up, the far right predictably went nuts. (We’re not even going to go into the whole thing with Nike.) There was a method to Lil Nas X’s baroque madness, however. “I wanted to use these things that have been around for so long to tell my own story,” he declared, “and the story of so many other people in the community — or people who have been outcast in general through history. It’s the same thing over and over.” You can’t say Lil Nas X doesn’t have a point. And haters: You can’t ever call him a one-hit wonder again. —D.F.
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Hole, “Violet”
Courtney Love has never been one to shy away from autobiographical themes, and in this video from Hole’s 1994 album, Live Through This, she leans into her past, from childhood ballet classes to her time spent working as a stripper. As she explained at the time, the clip’s visual feel drew on “acid flashbacks, old film stock.” Helmed by Rolling Stone’s then–chief photographer Mark Seliger and art director Fred Woodward, the sepia-drenched video takes place in a Victorian-era theater, cutting between young ballerinas and scantily clad women as Love sings about a lover who abandoned her (likely Smashing Pumpkins’ Billy Corgan). “I wanted to degrade stripping,” she continued of the intent behind the video. “Rather than all of the videos that have put stripping or half-naked women on a pedestal, I wanted to sort of show the degrading experience that it is.” —E.G.P.
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The Replacements, “Bastards of Young”
To say that the Replacements, arguably Minnesota’s finest (and inarguably its drunkest) punk band of the 1980s, hated MTV would be an understatement: They bad-mouthed the channel at every opportunity, and devoted a whole song on their 1984 masterpiece, Let It Be (“Seen Your Video”), to slagging bands who preened for the camera. ”If we do a video,” singer Paul Westerberg said, ”we want to do one that nobody would want to watch all the way through, much less twice.” Still, for their major-label debut, Tim, they decided to make an exception regarding their no-video policy, albeit completely on their own terms. Which is why none of the Replacements appear in this exercise-in-minimalism clip — instead, we get a single-shot close-up of a speaker in director Jeff Skinner’s living room playing the song. The camera eventually zooms out just in time to capture a disgruntled, unidentified listener kicking the speaker over. It was a beautiful fuck you from a band known for their eloquent kiss-offs. The irony: 120 Minutes started playing the clip regularly and turned it into an audience favorite. They watched it all the way through, even twice. Joke’s on you, gents. —D.F.
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Sonic Youth, “Bull in the Heather”
Sonic Youth’s video summed up everything cool about the summer of 1994 — it was the essence of mainstream rock, which would have been unthinkable a few years earlier. (Or a few years later, unfortunately.) Kim Gordon stars as the extremely pregnant punk matriarch, showing off her collection of fearsome glares. Bikini Kill singer Kathleen Hanna co-stars as the kid-sister agent of chaos, dancing with the band in her high-tops and pigtails, disrupting all their rock moves. She also surprises Kim with a distinctly un-filial kiss on the cheek. Directed by Tamra Davis, “Bull in the Heather” reaches across generations, genders, genres — everything sparkles with revolution-grrrl-style-now energy. —R.S.
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Taylor Swift, “Blank Space”
By the time of Taylor Swift’s synth-pop pivot 1989, the star found her life both exhaustively documented and unfairly critiqued in the public eye. As Swift put it at the time, the media characterized her as a perpetually jilted lover who “goes to her evil lair and writes songs about it for revenge.” So on “Blank Space,” helmed by her frequent collaborator Joseph Kahn, she had some fun with the commentary on her dating life and love-obsessed image by playing a perfect girlfriend in a picturesque relationship who goes full Swimfan in the mansion she shares with her partner. She stabs a blood-filled cake, cries mascara tears, drops an iPhone in a fountain, and destroys the decor, all with a wink at both her fans and detractors. —B.S.
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Lady Gaga feat. Beyoncé, “Telephone”
Lady Gaga once again teamed up with Swedish filmmaker Jonas Akerlund to craft a singular piece of pop propaganda, picking up where her crimes in their “Paparazzi” clip ended. A nearly 10-minute-long odyssey, the video shows Gaga headed to prison for murder. A (slightly confused?) Beyoncé breaks her pal out, and the duo take a joyride in the Pussy Wagon from Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill before getting revenge in a desert diner by killing model Tyrese Gibson for stealing her honey. “We shot the whole thing in two days, which is pretty incredible,” he told Variety for the clip’s 10-year anniversary. “Beyoncé and Gaga were practicing, like, literally there on the spot, figuring out the choreography while we were waiting. It was crazy.” —J.P.
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The Verve, “Bittersweet Symphony”
The premise is simple: Richard Ashcroft walks down a busy London street, aggressively bumps into people headed in the opposite direction, and totally ignores their agitated responses. The original cut showed the Verve frontman getting his comeuppance when a group of thugs beats him to a bloody pulp; the end result, however, he’s simply joined by his bandmates and walks off unscathed. Director Walter A. Stern drew inspiration from the video for Massive Attack’s “Unfinished Symphony,” in which Shara Nelson takes a similar stroll down a Los Angeles street. (Though she didn’t assault anyone, however.) The clip turned “Bittersweet Symphony” into a huge hit, but it also set them up for years of litigation since the song samples a symphonic version of “The Last Time” by The Rolling Stones … and they didn’t exactly have the rights to it. Still, the video remains a time capsule of a moment when Britpop was ascendant, Ashcroft radiated with coolness, and it was OK to randomly assault pedestrians for absolutely no reason at all. —A.G.
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Queen, “Bohemian Rhapsody”
The video for Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” was shot in just four hours and cost the band only £4,500, but it changed the music industry forever. They created it because they knew the song was a spectacular achievement that needed to be heard by the entire world, but they’d look ridiculous pretending to play it live on shows like Top of the Pops since it’s largely a studio creation. And so they hired director Bruce Gowers and conceived of a video that begins with a re-creation of their pose from the cover of 1974’s Queen II and slowly builds to a climax where they’re playing the finale on a bright soundstage. Along the way, we see a “little silhouetto” of Freddie Mercury and an innovative honeycomb effect that presents multiple images of the band at once. The video helped make the song an enormous international hit, inspiring many other groups to follow their lead and make their own videos. Soon enough, the idea was hatched for a cable channel devoted to nothing but these videos. —A.G.
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R.E.M., “Losing My Religion”
What did it feel like to be young and sad in February 1991? Somehow, it felt just like the weirdly gorgeous burnt-umber backdrop for Michael Stipe’s dancing in R.E.M.’s greatest music video. Its mandolin-driven quietude made it an unlikely hit, and the video was an equally improbable candidate for the commercial success it achieved: Director Tarsem Singh shoved playful homoeroticism and art-school pretension (its images were inspired by Caravaggio’s paintings, a Gabriel García Márquez short story, and the photos of the French artists known as Pierre et Gilles) into an MTV mainstream that, just months earlier, had hosted the crass antics of “Cherry Pie” by the hair-farming quintet Warrant. —B.H.
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Radiohead, “Just”
Originally written as a short film, this bizarre-even-by-Radiohead-standards clip from Jamie Thraves drew inspiration from Hitchcock movies and Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Conformist. The band perform the Bends track inside a London flat as they witness chaos unfold from a window: A man has collapsed on the pavement, and no one can figure out why. Through subtitles, he refuses to explain to bystanders why he’s lying on the ground until the very end; he then silently reveals the secret, bringing everyone to their knees. Neither the group nor the director has ever confirmed what the man actually said, leaving fans to speculate for years. “I will probably take the answer to my grave, unless a rich billionaire Radiohead fan wants to buy the secret from me,” Thraves told Rolling Stone last year. “It’s like I stumbled upon the answer to the universe. … Please don’t make me tell you. You don’t want to know.” —A.M.
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The Go-Go’s, “Our Lips Are Sealed”
A day in the life of the Go-Go’s: The five coolest punk-rock girls in town hop into a convertible and cruise in the Southern California sunshine, until it’s time to go splash in the fountain. It was impossible to watch the “Our Lips Are Sealed” video and not wish you were one of the Go-Go’s. It captures all the band’s different personalities, from Belinda Carlisle’s cheerleader-gone-bad to Gina Schock’s punk enforcer. Best moment: Jane Wiedlin sits alone in the car to sing the “hush now darling” bridge, then Gina playfully drums on Jane’s head. It was a vision of a feminist New Wave utopia that made every other band look hopelessly boring. —R.S.
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Janet Jackson feat. Q-Tip and Joni Mitchell, “Got ‘Til It’s Gone”
Janet Jackson and director Mark Romanek re-create an apartheid-era South African lounge in this jubilant paean to Afrocentricity. With a nattily-clad Q-Tip in tow, Romanek’s stylistic choices — including sharp clothing and use of African dance — channel Malian photographers Seydou Keita and Malick Sidibe, while Jackson’s portrayal of a lounge singer evokes an effortless cool that stands in sharp contrast to her Rhythm Nation 1814 militarism. Even Joni Mitchell, whose song “Big Yellow Taxi” was sampled for the track, said that the video “had dignity, and it was full of life.” And Joni Mitchell never lies. —J.N.
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Kylie Minogue, “Come Into My World”
Combining the unique vision of director Michel Gondry with peak-form Kylie Minogue was bound to produce something extraordinary. This 2002 video initially appears to be fairly no-frills — a quick stroll around a Parisian neighborhood for the Aussie pop star, set to her blissed-out disco tune. A couple argues, kids zoom down the sidewalks on skateboards, lovers embrace in this quaint little scene. Then Minogue walks by her starting point, and new iterations of the singer keep appearing every time she doubles back, all following similar yet distinct paths. Meanwhile, the chaos in the background multiplies to comical proportions, from four identical sets of motorists in physical altercations to four identical men frantically slapping posters on a building wall. It’s a marvel of planning and meticulous choreography, making repeat viewings to scan for lapses in continuity half of the fun. Long live the Kylie multiverse! —J.F.
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Van Halen, “Jump”
When Van Halen went to film their “Jump” video, they had one collective request: no clichés. “This thing of standing next to the Venetian blinds with the light coming through, making bars on your face,” David Lee Roth told Rolling Stone. “How many times have you seen that in the last two hours on MTV?” So they made this low-budget minimalist masterpiece themselves, with a 16mm hand-held camera. No special effects, no concept, no lasers, no dancing girls. Just personality — more than enough of it to make your TV explode. From Diamond Dave’s slapstick leaps to Edward’s grin to the whole band’s eye contact, “Jump” captures all the sex and swagger of the original Van Halen. The way Dave rolls his eyes in that first “cantchoo see what I meeean?” is a three-second rock-star charisma seminar. —R.S.
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Nine Inch Nails, “Closer”
“Closer” likely never would have badgered its way into the mainstream if it weren’t for director Mark Romanek’s disturbing video, filled with imagery of Trent Reznor in various bondage positions, a crucified monkey (next to a Jack Nicholson poster), and a nude woman spinning eggs on her fingers, among other surrealistic frights and delights. ”Trent said, ’Fuck it … If MTV won’t show it, fuck MTV,'” Romanek once recalled. The clip, which blends the vibe of David Lynch’s Erasherhead with the voyeurism of Blue Velvet, was just so weird that the channel couldn’t help but play it — albeit in a heavily censored version with “scenes missing.” But the truth was while most of the uncanny imagery was indeed real (yes, that’s a decapitated pig’s head), they kept things professional (the monkey was supervised and not harmed). And Romanek shot the video with a hand-cranked camera from 1919 and distressed the film by hand with cigarette lighters and aerosol shellac, adding to the mood. “[The video] set a tone that made the song sound better to me,” Reznor said, “and I think that’s an achievement.” —K.G.
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Backstreet Boys, “I Want It That Way”
As the lead single for Backstreet Boys’ Millennium, “I Want It That Way” would usher in a powerful era for boy bands and pop music. Directed by Wayne Isham, the video takes place at LAX, with the boys in matching white or black outfits, dancing and slow-walking throughout the airport. As they prepare to board their plane, they’re surrounded by screaming girls with loads of headshots and merch for the group to sign. It’s one of the most popular visuals in the boy-band canon, embodying the type of fervent fandom that acts like BSB bask in. The clip became so popular and pervasive in the late Nineties that Blink-182 parodied it for what would become their equally iconic “All the Small Things” video. —B.S.
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LL Cool J, “Going Back to Cali”
Ric Menello, a college dorm security guard and film savant who befriended Rick Rubin at NYU, had already co-directed the insanity of Beasties’ “Fight for Your Right” video. Now, taking cues from his favorite films Touch of Evil and Rebel Without a Cause, Menello turned LL Cool J’s ambivalence about moving cross-country into rap’s greatest arthouse video. Mimicking the song’s unhurried pace, images of LL slowly cruising in his Corvette and Automaton dancers robotically dancing remain indelible more than three decades later. LL originally hated the video. He has since gone on to embrace it as the masterpiece that it is. —J.N.
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Madonna, “Material Girl”
Not everyone can out-icon Marilyn Monroe, but Madonna just about pulled it off with this 1984 clip — nearly a shot-by-shot remake of Monroe’s “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” number from 1953’s Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. While Monroe swooned over sparkles, however, Madonna is after something deeper: financial security and, sure, love. During the course of the video, she’s wooed by a rich director (played by Keith Carradine) who pretends to be poor to win her heart; in the end, she’s more impressed with his humble daisies than a fleet of suited men laden with bling. Shot by Mary Lambert — who also directed the 1989 film adaptation of Stephen King’s Pet Sematary — “Material Girl” would become the blueprint for feminist videos for decades to come. —B.E.
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Janet Jackson, “Rhythm Nation”
If this video made you want to suit up and join the fight against … well, anything, you were not alone. Militarism has never seemed so cool as when Janet — Miss Jackson, if you’re nasty — began executing her precision moves with an army of stone-faced dancers behind her, all clad in matching uniforms, gloves, and boots. (Janet’s in particular now lives in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.) Filmed in smoky black and white and set in what appears to be an abandoned power plant, the video announces the singer and her crew as soldiers of social justice, as she sings about breaking color lines and joining our voices in protest. Does the title track of her 1989 concept album, Rhythm Nation 1814, propose that we can end racism through dance and music? Yes. Is that incorrect? Patently. But there is no denying that it snapped a bunch of people the hell awake. —M.F.
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Herbie Hancock, “Rockit”
It’s the scratching that gets you first — that needle-on-the-record squeal that still sounded novel enough in 1983 to stop you in your tracks. No sooner had GrandMixer DXT’s work on the wheels of steel kicked in then: Boom! We’re transported to an apartment full of robots, each jittering and whirring along to the beat. Three pairs of legs kick in sync over a couch. Two mannequin heads, rocking an admirably vintage Carl Sagan look, watch something mechanical splashing in a soapy sink. A robo-wife hits her robo-husband at a robo-brekafast table. And when the camera pans past a tiny TV set, you can glimpse a pair of hands — human hands — plinking out a keyboard line. Without MTV O.G.s Kevin Godley and Lol Creme’s video for Herbie Hancock’s unclassifiable melding of jazz, electro-funk, and early hip-hop, it might have been just another musical gumbo from a longtime fusion pioneer. With it, the song became the soundtrack to some sort of techno-utopian future and a genuine WTF mindblower. You’d never seen anything like it. You still haven’t seen anything like it. —D.F.
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Run the Jewels, “Close Your Eyes (and Count to Fuck)”
The twentysomething African-American everyman looks battered and exhausted. So does the white cop, who’s yelling, “Don’t you fucking move!” as the other man turns and runs. They tussle in the street, punch-drunk and exhausted. Day turns to night. They move the fight to an apartment, eventually sitting on opposite ends of a bed, catching their breath. This isn’t the first time they’ve done this. It won’t be the last. Filmed in black and white and featuring Lakeith Stanfield and Boardwalk Empire‘s Shea Wigham, this video for Run the Jewels’ standout RTJ2 track (featuring an incendiary verse from Rage Against the Machine’s Zack de la Rocha, who makes a cameo alongside the rap duo) turns the hot-button issue of police violence against the black community into an endless rinse-repeat cycle of agony. Whoever wins, we all lose. “This video represents the futile and exhausting existence of a purgatory-like law enforcement system,” Killer Mike said in a statement after the video hit the internet. “There is no neat solution at the end because there is no neat solution in the real world.” —D.F.