Skip to main content

OK Go’s new music video is an explosive, slow motion visual feast

OK Go – The One Moment – Official Video
Where do you go after making some massively popular, and highly innovative music videos? If you’re rock band OK Go, you slow things down. Right down. The video accompanying the band’s song The One Moment has just 4.2 seconds of footage, that’s shown is spectacular slow motion to last the entire length of the just over 4-minute song.

OK Go previously caught video fans attention ten years ago with Here It Goes Again, shot while the band dances on treadmills, and more recently, the incredible zero gravity video for Upside Down & Inside Out. The One Moment continues the tradition of visually arresting, excitingly creative music videos.

More: 12 of the greatest Rube Goldberg contraptions, from OK Go to Mythbusters

The video opens with the 4.2 seconds of footage played in real time, then when the song begins, it’s played back at a fraction of the speed. Highlights include many, many exploding balloons, breaking glass, oversize flip books, and a lot of colourful paint being spilt. There are 318 special events in the video, all set in motion by digital triggers, synced up to cameras attached to robotic arms. If you’re counting, these include 128 gold water balloons exploding, 54 salt bursts, and 23 paint buckets spilling their contents.

Although it may look it, the action isn’t actually played back at a single speed; but it’s the frame rate that varies, going as low as 60 frames-per-second, up to 6,000 frames per second when the guitars explode. All the timings were worked out on a spreadsheet 400 rows long and 25 columns wide, meaning the video is as much a mathematical masterpiece as a visual one. It was also impossible to capture the footage with a single camera movement, as no rig can match the speed needed to do so, so it ends up featuring seven movements all connected together.

The band’s lead singer Damian Kulash directed the video, and also made a short making-of video, which can be seen on the band’s Facebook page. If you’re wondering where the #WalkHerWalk hashtag comes from, it’s a campaign run by Morton Salt, supporting young people working on environmentally important projects. Morton Salt worked with OK Go on the video, having approaching the band after thinking the song’s message suited the campaign.

Download The One Moment now

Andy Boxall
Senior Mobile Writer
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
What is spatial audio? Apple’s 3D sound feature fully explained
Person listening to spatial audio using Apple AirPods Max headphones.

At WWDC 2021 (Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference), Apple officially added support for spatial audio with Dolby Atmos Music for Apple Music. It quickly became a popular format among consumers, too: Apple estimates that by February 2022, playback of spatial audio tracks had quadrupled from just a few months prior as people experimented with the format. But what exactly is spatial audio? How is it different from (or the same as) Dolby Atmos? And what kind of audio equipment do you need to listen to it?

There's a lot of ground to cover, and some of it is a bit technical, but we're going to break it all down in easy-to-understand terms. You'll be a spatial audio expert in minutes, and you'll know exactly how to access this growing trend in movie and music streaming.
What exactly is spatial audio?

Read more
The best podcasts of 2022
best podcasts

Whether you've already stored all your favorite podcasts in your app of choice, ready for listening, or are new to the world of podcasts, there's no denying their popularity. Podcasts are everywhere these days and have become some of the most beloved entertainment and education mediums worldwide. Whatever you're into, from tech and video game chat to world news and politics or true crime, there are plenty of specialized interest shows to choose from.

With so many podcasts available, there’s no way that you can listen to all of them. To help you out, no matter your interests, we've gathered a variety of shows to turn you on to your next great listen.

Read more
How to convert your vinyl to a digital format
Rebirth of cool: Is vinyl ready for a second wind, or just a fad?

It doesn't matter one bit if your vinyl collection consists of just a single milk crate or if it fills several Ikea Kallax shelves and is slowly taking over your home — we can all agree that there's just something about vinyl.

Maybe it's the warm, uncompressed sound spinning off a solid turntable, or the feel of holding a physical piece of art in your hands while the record spins — it's a special experience that has regained much of its glory in a world dominated by digital streaming. The problem is, records are fragile, and crates full of them don't fit in your back pocket.

Read more