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1-50 of 17,514
- The battle of the sexes erupts once again when Jenna and Tamara's Dude Database goes viral and reveals a secret that causes friction in their own friendship.
- The video, directed by Wayne Isham and choreographed by Darrin Dewitt Henson, features NSYNC as puppets controlled by an evil puppetress (played by Kim Smith). She cuts Joey and Chris loose first, and they run over the top of a speeding train, then hide among the passengers to escape her. She cuts Justin loose next, and he outruns her trained dogs through a warehouse, eventually escaping into the pouring rain. Then Lance and JC are cut loose and fall into a red Dodge Viper RT/10. They speed away from her, while being chased by her silver BMW Z3. All of this is interspersed with shots of the band dancing in a blue box with a fixed camera, making them appear as though they are on different planes of gravity.
- 'Til Tuesday performs in the music video "Coming Up Close" from the album "Welcome Home" recorded for Epic Records. The music video begins with Aimee Mann and her band on stage performing the song. She sings into the microphone as she plays guitar.
- 'Til Tuesday performs in the music video "Looking Over My Shoulder" from the album "Voices Carry" recorded for Epic Records. The music video begins with the band arguing with Aimee Mann about their last video. She sings in a ball room in a white dress. A group of people cheer as she walks down the stairs and sees visions of her band.
- 'Til Tuesday performs in the music video "Love in a Vacuum" from the album "Voices Carry" recorded for Epic Records. The music video begins in a convertible with a man driving Aimee Mann across a bridge. Clips of the relationship between them play throughout the video. Later, she sings with the band on a stage in front of a black background.
- 'Til Tuesday and Aimee Mann perform in the music video for "Voices Carry", from their debut album "Voices Carry" recorded by Epic Records. Mann is a woman in an abusive relationship with a controlling man, who criticizes her for playing in a rock band and demands that she change her look to fit into his upper-class lifestyle. In the end, she lashes out as the couple attend a concert at Carnegie Hall, shaming him in front of the audience.
- 'Til Tuesday performs in the music video "What About Love" from the album "Welcome Home" recorded for Epic Records. The music video begins with Aimee Mann kissing a man near a window. She sings and dances as she performs the song in a darkened room with the band.
- 'Weird Al' Yankovic performs a parody of Coolio's song "Gangsta's Paradise", but talking about the Amish culture.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1993 single "Bedrock Anthem" which is a mash-up of "Give It Away" and "Under The Bridge" by the Red Hot Chili Peppers as well as the Flintstones.
- In this parody of Bob Dylan's video for "Subterranean Homesick Blues," Weird Al presents a series of palindromes on cue cards.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1986 single "Christmas At Ground Zero". The video is a montage of archive footage, capped off with a live-action scene of Yankovic and some carolers wearing gas masks, singing with rubble around them.
- Animated music video for "Weird Al" Yankovic's song, "Close But No Cigar".
- The music video for Weird Al Yankovic's song "Dare To Be Stupid", with both the song and the video being a style parody of Devo.
- The music video for 'Weird Al' Yankovic's "Eat It", which is a parody of "Beat It" by Michael Jackson.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1996 single "Gump" in which he parodies the motion picture film "Forrest Gump (1994)" starring Tom Hanks as the titular character.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1994 single "Headline News" in which he sings about three news stories that were popular in late 1993 and early 1994, all while parodying the Crash Test Dummies' 1993 song "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm".
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1984 single "I Lost On Jeopardy" in which he performs as a contestant on the game show "Jeopardy! (1984)". The song is a parody of "Jeopardy" by The Greg Kihn Band.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1999 single "It's All About The Pentiums". It is a parody of "It's All About the Benjamins (Rock Remix)" by Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs and focuses on the narrator's obsession with his computer's hardware.
- Musiv video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1985 single "Like A Surgeon" in which he parodies several elements of Madonna's music video for "Like A Virgin", famously set in Venice.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1986 single "Living With A Hernia", a parody of "Living in America" by James Brown from the film "Rocky IV (1985)". The song mostly describes the terrible aggravation and back pain that a hernia causes.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1989 single "Money For Nothing/Beverly Hillbillies". Both a cover and a visual adaptation of "Money For Nothing" by Dire Straits with the lyrics replaced by those of "The Beverly Hillbillies (1962)" theme song.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1985 single "One More Minute" in which he parodies the styles of Elvis Presley (as heard in "Can't Help Falling In Love" and The Platters (as heard in "The Great Pretender").
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1983 single "Ricky" in which he performs the song in a black and white video in the style of "The Lucy Show (1962)" together with actress Tress MacNeille.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1992 single "Smells Like Nirvana" in which he recreates Nirvana's music video "Smells Like Teen Spirit" but with added comedic elements. It focuses on how difficult it is to understand the lyrics.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1996 single "Spy Hard" which is also the soundtrack for the film of the same name. The video is a parody of James Bond intros.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1999 single "The Saga Begins" in which he not only parodies "American Pie" by Don McLean but also pretty much guesses the plot of "Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)" without having seen the movie.
- Music video for Weird Al Yankovic's 1984 single "This Is The Life" in which Weird Al sings in a speakeasy filled with people while dressed as a gangster. The song is the soundtrack of "Johnny Dangerously (1984)" and features clips from the film.
- 'Weird Al' Yankovic performs a parody of various popular actors, TV hosts and musicians of the 80s.
- You won't believe what this new computer virus can do to you machine.
- "Weird Al" Yankovic performs in the music video "You Don't Love Me Anymore" from the album "Off the Deep End" recorded for Scotti Brothers Records. "Weird Al" Yankovic sings in this parody that recreates the music video Extreme: More Than Words (1991) but with added comedic elements. The song describes woman trying to kill her ex-boyfriend.
- Nicole Byer is living the Hollywood dream. Well, Hollywood adjacent--the Deep Valley to be precise--and it's more a struggle than a dream.
- A strange boy named Tsukasa appears in the online video game "The World". He claims to be alive, and without a computer.
- 10,000 Maniacs, joined by backing vocalists and several musicians, perform a set drawing heavily from their latest album (Our Time in Eden) in what would be the culmination of the first phase of their career before Natalie Merchant left.