It can reveal something or certain things about the human race, which particular clips are the most popular... Oddly, they are almost never the ones featuring the music that made the particular artist famous on the radio or music scene. To some extent I find this fact a little strange. For me, I 'see' very heavily produced, I would say, over-produced video clips, and these are the ones that attract the common mind set.
From New York you get the Pastrami sandwich - you get a good one and it's heaven |
Far far FAR be it from me to divulge anything about Donald Trump at this moment, which could even accidentally throw tinder on a presently non-existent fire the DC elites want to ignite - and so I'll not be disclosing the artists the Don has been seen with in various gatherings in NY. But it's no particular secret that the zillionaire Noam Gottesman funds or funded, the career of Jay-Z. And he's an exact example of the type of over-producing but which nevertheless seems to grab the heads and the eyes of the public at large. I recall he has this song about New York which pushed his career but it's a tragedy of strained, forced, over-producing - in my mind... Though that's not what the public saw. They lapped it up.
Which is good for you in a way because you are clearly not 'the public.' Not when you consider that a few hundreds of people look in here compared to the billions who watch Taylor Swift's most popular video clips!
Will I therefore reveal here, things that are not in the general public's interest, but that might be in your interest? Possibly.
Soon. Maybe soon.
For now, here's a music video from a friend of a friend - Armin v. B., - which becomes mildly humorous around 1:45 in...