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- Sarah's immature, only thinks of herself and has no inhibition nor work. Her sister Laura pays her rent. She has a gay couple as neighbors. Laura's seeing cop Jay.
- The second video also known as the US version was filmed in Los Angeles, California during November 2004. It stars Flowers, Izabella Miko, and Eric Roberts in a love triangle, occurring within the context of a burlesque show.
- The music video for "Baby" by Justin Bieber featuring Ludacris.
- The video shows some rampant adventures on the night London from the first person view. In the full version of the clip, called the Most Controversial Version, there are all kinds of antisocial behaviors, such as drinking hard liquor and drunk driving, taking cocaine, attacking people, violence, vandalism, heroin use, a scene in which Car shoot down a man, a female striptease without censorship, and at the end of the clip the main character is engaged in sex with the same stripper.
- A collection of videos spanning Madonna's career, from 1983 to 2009.
- Music video for the 1998 Metallica song "Turn The Page". The video shows the band performing in a blackened area with red carpet as well as a single mother (played by Ginger Lynn) who performs at a strip club to provide for her daughter.
- "Tribute" is the first single of Tenacious D's self-titled debut album from 2002.
- A day in the life of the earth to show that we are rushing forward to the end of the 20th century at full speed. The music video for the second single from the album of the same name.
- Music video for the 2003 song "Bring Me To Life" by Evanescence feat. Paul McCoy. It features Amy Lee dressed in a nightgown and standing at the edge of a skyscraper. Paul McCoy. who performs in another room, climbs out to help her.
- "Hips Do not Lie" - the second single of the Colombian singer Shakira from her second English-language studio album Oral Fixation, Vol. 2 (2005), recorded with the participation of rapper Weiklef Jean, released on February 28, 2006. After the release, Hips Do not Lie received many positive reviews from music critics. The single received several awards, including the People's Choice Award, the MTV Latin America Video Music Award and the MTV Video Music Award.
- Music video by Gwen Stefani performing Cool.
- A career-spanning collection of 47 music videos and live performances by David Bowie.
- In the video for "Family Portrait" Pink plays a young girl who still has not moved away from the problems associated with the divorce of her parents. This is reflected in the little girl who depicts Pink as a child, played by Kelsey Lewis. During the clip, little Pink tries to draw attention to her childhood in many ways: she makes breakfast from oatmeal as she loved in her childhood, and interferes with her on therapy sessions. Pink at first does not listen to anything small, before moving to the song. After that, Pink agrees with the conditions of her childhood, as this is reflected in the fact that she joins the family in the TV.
- British performer, Sade, performed a live concert in San Diego, California in 1993.
- A promotional video for Madonna's 2000 single "American Pie."
- A teenage boy finds all around him has sexual overtones as he lives a teenage life of masturbation.
- Official music video for "This Love" by Maroon 5.
- A collection of Blur's music videos.
- Released alongside The Smashing Pumpkins greatest hits CD "Rotten Apples", this video collection comes with all of the Pumpkins music videos (excluding "The End is the Beginning is the End"). It also comes with a live performance of "Geek USA" and "An Ode to No One" which is taken from their final performance at the Metro. There is also a hidden video for the never-before-released song "Untitled". All of the videos come with commentary from the band and some have out-takes and behind the scenes footage.
- A collection of Madonna's favorite videos from 1993-1999. Contains the 14 videos: Bad Girl, Fever, Rain, Secret, Take A Bow, Bedtime Story, Human Nature, Love Don't Live Here Anymore, Frozen, Ray Of Light, Drowned World, The Power of Goodbye, Nothing Really Matters, and Beautiful Stranger.
- Several videos from the personal vault of Weezer's Rivers Cuomo, showing several videos they shot over the course of their Blue Album and Kitchen Tapes beginnings to the Green Album's revival of the band. Starring Rivers Cuomo, Matt Sharp, Brian Bell, Patrick Wilson, and Mike Welsh.
- Concert film of Sade's 2001 tour promoting their new album Lovers Rock. They perform new tracks from that album and many old favorites. Also features backstage footage, a music video of "King of Sorrow," and other bonus features. Recorded Sept. 2001 in California.
- Music video for "Stay" by Rihanna featuring Mikky Ekko.
- The US Version stars the band in a diner (Dick's Restaurant and Cocktails, in San Leandro, California), where other patrons are involved in dramas of their own, which are revealed through the use of flashbacks. A couple and the diner's cook are involved in an unspecified crime. A businessman is hiding something in his briefcase. In the end, the two dramas are resolved when the guilty parties are betrayed, the cook gives the couple a time bomb and the businessman is ambushed and killed (though the murder is only suggested).
- The text of the song is a story of a robber who, having committed a robbery of a government official, turns out to be betrayed by a woman named Molly, or Jenny (it is impossible to answer unequivocally if she is his wife or lover). Different versions of the song refer to various cities in Ireland; such geographical diversity is caused by the folk roots of the text. The song also mentions the name of the robbed official: this is Captain Farrell or Colonel Pepper (as mentioned in the other version of the song). The song ends with a couplet in which the robber dreams of escaping from the place of detention for a subsequent return to the beautiful life. In 1998, the version of Metallica received a Grammy Award in the category "Best performance in the style of hard rock".