Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

News

Clipse and Tyler, the Creator Dine With an Animatronic Band in ‘P.O.V.’ Video

The visual for the Let God Sort ‘Em Out single was directed by Cole Bennett

An animatronic band performing in a dining hall has an audience of three in the music video for the Clipse single “P.O.V.” Pusha T and Malice are seated at a table littered with glasses of red wine and white napkins, which remains miraculously intact when Tyler, the Creator hops onto the table during his guest verse. Really, they’re the ones performing for the cartoonish band.

The video was directed by Cole Bennett for Lyrical Lemonade. “Unreal experience bringing the show out to New Jersey for the return of @clipse,” animatronics producer Jack Turner of Jack’s Animatronics Warehouse wrote on Instagram. “P.O.V.” appears on Let God Sort Em Out, the first album from Pusha T and Malice since 2009’s Til the Casket Drops.

The record was worth the 16-year wait. Rolling Stone named Let God Sort Em Out the best hip-hop album of 2025 and the eighth overall best album of the year, writing: “In the first decade of the 2000s, there were few hip-hop acts with standards as exacting as the Clipse. Their first album since 2009 shows that Pusha T and Malice are still the ice-cold lyrical kingpins you remember. ‘P.O.V.’ is a showcase for their finest luxury-car wordplay.”

Trending Stories

Speaking about the collaboration earlier this year, Tyler, the Creator told Zane Lowe, “Just pressing play and hearing your voice on a Clipse album. I don’t think folks know the weight that shit really got. I got Grammys, I got whips, I done did it all. That might be top eight moments of my life. So thank you to Pusha, Malice, [Pharrell]. For real, love y’all down.”

Let God Sort Em Out is nominated for five awards at the 2026 Grammy Awards including Album of the Year and Best Rap Album.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Lists

From comeback albums by established legends to more experimental offerings from the younger generation, 2025 was a marquee year for rap, streaming numbers be...

Lists

Soul divas, country rebels, shot callers, rock monsters, and more This was one wild year for music — as the late, great Ozzy would...

Lists

Culture-shifting blockbusters, return-to-form statements, brilliant debuts, and more The music world refused to stand still in 2025. This wasn’t a year for playing it...

Features

I t took 16 years, but they did it: Pusha T and Malice, a.k.a. Terrence Thornton and Gene Thornton Jr., a.k.a. the Clipse, reunited...