Director Dave Meyers does dystopian sci-fi in a video that seems to take place in the not-too-distant future, if not the here and now, with Justin Timberlake coming out of the dark to spread some light and plant some seeds for the rebuilding to come.
A TV shows within a video with a movie and more. Things get ambitiously meta as Camilia Cabello finds love and adventure, first by living vicariously via her on-screen doubles, and then all by herself.
Just when it seems like Katy Perry and team are gonna stumble, they pull off a slam dunk. "Swish Swish" is a star-studded, comedic basketball romp that's massive, but also laced with perfect details that keeps pushing to absurd new heights over its 6+ minute runtime. Cameos of note include Molly Shannon, Terry Shannon, announcers Rich Eisen and Bill Walton, football star Rob Gronkowski, Doug The Pug, and, of course, Backpack Kid.
A relationship that has Kendrick and Rihanna living on the edge, sometimes literally, as the precipice of death and destruction comes dangerously close again and again.
Kendrick Lamar and The Little Homies are back, this time collborating with director Dave Meyers for a video that's "just" a series of striking images one after the other, ranging from a Last Supper to a Grey Poupon break and on and on and on.
Magic abounds in this glossy tie-in to the live action Beauty And The Beast remake in which Ariana Grande and John Legend serenade the aforementioned beauty and beast.
Put on your disco ball suit and rejoice the reteam of Missy Elliott and director Dave Meyers — "Work It" and "Lose Control," just to name two collabos — who unfurl the kind of looks and set-ups (plus marionettes!) that make clear that Missy is just as fresh despite the 10 year gap.
Here's hoping the end sequence isn't a reference for disappearing for another large gap.
Jackson Family lore haunts this surprise return for Janet Jackson, who slinks around a modernist home slyly references the past and let's J. Cole pop in for a visit.