Filmed over the course of one night on Fremont Street in Las Vegas, the music video for I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For accomplished two things. First, it showcased the members of U2 at their most approachable and likable. Secondly, it did wonders to improve the image of Las Vegas as a city. Instead of focusing on people gambling away their life savings, I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For portrayed Vegas as a friendly and diverse city where, if you go out on the right night, you might even run into one of the biggest bands in the world. According to civic leader Pat Christensen in a 2002 interview with the Las Vegas Review Journal, “”The whole perception of Vegas changed with that video. Now all the big names come here, some of them five, six times a year.”
As usual, in this video, the focus is on Bono and the Edge. Larry Mullen, Jr. and Adam Clayton are both present but it would be easy to mistake them for being a part of the crowd that gathers to watch The Edge play his guitar. Perhaps that is why, at the end of the video, Adam appears to just wander away from the shoot and get in a waiting taxi cab.
For today’s music video of the day, we break down the video that the New Musical Express named as being the 16th worst video of all time. Ladies and gentlemen, it’s time to get … Numb!
0:06 — Drip drip drip. Someone’s in for an unpleasant shock when they get the water bill.
0:30 — Numb is one of the few U2 songs to feature lead vocals from The Edge. The Edge’s real name is David Howell Evans.
0:35 — That’s U2’s bassist, Adam Clayton, blowing smoke in the Edge’s face. Clayton is the only member of U2 not to sing on this track but he still plays an important role in the video, as we’ll soon see.
0:50 — Who doesn’t love a good massage?
1:00 — The Edge is learning that singing lead has its advantages.
1:17 — “You’re not Bono!”
1:23 — Holding the rope in the background is, once again, Adam Clayton.
1:45 — As Clayton ties up The Edge, drummer Larry Mullen, Jr. makes an appearance. It was actually Mullen’s idea to start the band that would eventually become U2.
1:53 — However, Mullen has obviously been overshadowed by Bono.
2:11 — Oh no, they killed the Edge!
2:13 — Hello?
2:15 — Is anyone there?
2:20 — With the Edge apparently dead, now seems like a good time to tell you that Numb was the first single released off of U2’s 1993 album Zooropa, which many consider to be the moment that U2 went from being an energetic group of rockers to the most pretentious band on the planet. Numb, like the rest of the album, is about sensory overload.
2:23 — Numb was originally recorded for Achtung Baby and was called Down All The Days. No one in the band liked the song but they still reworked it for Zooropa.
2:27 — Edge, can you hear me?
2:33 — Larry Mullen, Jr. is the new Edge.
2:41 — Adam considers tying Larry up but realizes that he wasted all of his rope on The Edge.
3:00 — The Edge lives!
3:18 — But with those feet in his face, The Edge might wish that he was dead.
3:36 — The Edge catches the bouquet.
3:51 — That is Morleigh Steinberg dancing in front of the Edge. Nine years after the release of this video, the Edge and Steinberg got married.
4:12 — Just the fact that the fans are using cameras instead of phones proves this video was made in the early 90s.
4:17 — “Excuse me, Mr. Edge, but we have a wedding party coming in so if you and your friends could please vacate the room…”
4:25 — The Edge ain’t going nowhere.
Numb was originally release as a video single, so if you wanted to listen to it outside of Zoorupa, you had to buy it on VHS. Also included on the tape was a video for Love is Blindness.