Music Video Of The Day: Christmas At Ground Zero by Weird Al Yankovic (1986, directed by Weird Al Yankovic)


“The sad part is, I can’t really play the song live anymore because too many people misunderstand the connotations of Ground Zero. It’s not a reference to 9/11, obviously. It was written in 1986 when ‘ground zero’ just meant the epicenter of a nuclear attack.”

— Weird Al Yankovic

Try to force Weird Al to do a Christmas album and this is what you’re going to get.

In 1986, Weird Al’s record label insisted that he record something for the holiday season.  In response, Yankovic came up with Christmas At Ground Zero, a Phil Spector-style production about Christmas in the aftermath of a nuclear attack.  It wasn’t really what the record company had expected and, at first, they refused to release it.  Yankovic responded by creating his own music video for the song.  This video was not only his first stab at directing but it also proved to be popular enough to convince the record company to change their position on the song.

Though the majority of this video is made up of stock footage, the live action scenes of Weird Al and the carolers performing surrounded by rubble were filmed in The Bronx.  No nuclear explosions were needed to get the bombed-out feel.  Instead, they just filmed in New York in the 80s.

Enjoy and Merry Christmas!

Music Video Of The Day: Christmas in Hollis by Run-DMC (1987, directed by Michael Holman)


Christmas in Hollis is one of the most famous Christmas rap songs, though it nearly didn’t happen.  When Bill Adler first approached Run-DMC and asked them to contribute to the holiday compilation album, A Very Special Christmas, the band turned him down.  It wasn’t until Adler suggested the title Christmas in Hollis that the band changed their mind.

All of the proceeds of A Very Special Christmas went to support the Special Olympics.  (Other contributors included Madonna, Bruce Springsteen, Sting, Eurythmics, U2, and Pertenders.)  Christmas In Hollis was the only original composition to appear on the album and it has gone on to become a holiday mainstay.

Hollis, of course, refers to the neighborhood of Hollis, Queens, where the members of Run-DMC grew up.

This video was named the “Best Video of 1987” by Rolling Stone Magazine.

Enjoy and Merry Christmas Eve!

Music Video Of The Day: After The Fire by Roger Daltrey (1985, directed by ????)


In 1985, After The Fire was a minor hit for The Who’s lead singer, Roger Daltrey.  It appeared on Daltrey’s sixth solo album, Under A Raging Moon, and it was helped, on its way up the charts, by a music video that was put into heavy rotation on MTV.

After The Fire was written by Pete Townshend and it was originally meant to be a Who song.  The plan was originally to debut After The Fire at Live Aid but, because of a scheduling mishap, the band did not get a chance to rehearse the new song before performing and so After The Fire was dropped from the band’s set list.  It was instead given to Daltrey, who included it on his solo album.

This is perhaps the only song to name drop both Dom DeLuise and Matt Dillon.  Judging from the lyrics about Dillon riding “his brother’s motorcycle” in black-and-white, the lyrics were probably referring to his performance in Rumble Fish.  The reference to Dom DeLuise is a little more cryptic.  Was Pete Townshend a fan of The Cannonball Run?  Or was he watching The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas while writing the song?  We may never know.

Enjoy!