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A lyrical music video was made available onto YouTube on October 31, 2011 to accompany the release of "Ass Back Home", at a total length of three minutes and forty-four seconds. [18] An official music video, directed by Dugan O' Neal was then made available on December 9, 2011—amassing over eighty-three million views as of June 19, 2021. [ 19 ]
The music video for the song was directed by Michael Oblowitz, who had a $25,000 budget. [1] The video included cameos by hip hop groups The Fat Boys and Whodini . [ 1 ] Although Blow had wanted the video to include footage of the players mentioned in the song, the National Basketball Association would only provide clearance for use of still ...
The video begins with Aaron riding a scooter with a dog playing Frisbee, followed by various scenes of Aaron playing basketball. It then shifts to him telling the story of how he met Shaquille O'Neal, who challenges him to a one-on-one basketball game. In the second verse, Aaron plans to distract Shaq in order to score points.
Macklemore showed up the day of the shooting of the video in a middle school gym in Los Angeles where he says that he was informed that they might: [1] re-arrange the structure of the song to fit the NBA event. He added that in any licensing deal, they are going to edit anyway. A "4-minute song does not fit into a 30-second movie trailer.
The day before the song was posted online, Anthony shared a 9-and-a-half minute video filmed in his car introducing himself to potential fans whom he hoped would discover the song. (It’s since ...
The video starts with the band driving up to a casino with the song "Viva La White Girl" playing. After checking into their rooms, Travie McCoy makes his way down to the casino floor and runs into an Elvis impersonator, played by Pete Wentz, playing a slot machine. Travie engages in a game of strip poker with several girls, and seemingly wins ...
In a fractious America, there’s still one thing that people can agree on: Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy).” The Virginian’s country flip of an old J-Kwon hit rang out from bars ...
Beyoncé's "Texas Hold 'Em" has topped Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart. She is the first Black woman to top that chart. The song also entered at No. 2 on the Hot 100 chart.