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Geek Glee: A drone, Uni-Cubs, and a cast of 2,214 Japanese school girls

OK Go's latest video, 鈥淚 Won't Let You Down,鈥 is a synchronized blend of technology, cinematography, and thousands of Japanese school girls. Who could resist? 

It's official. The music group OK Go has graduated from Rube Goldberg machines to their own brand of geek Glee.

The group's latest music video, 鈥淚 Won't Let You Down,鈥澛爀mploys a fleet of Honda's sleek, , a platoon of Japanese school girl dancers, and a whole lot of colorful parasols.

It's a spell-binding blend of technology, cinematography, and, well, synchronized fun.

The song in the video is from the band鈥檚 new , out now in North America on iTunes:聽

In this video the four band members ride white, chrome detailed, personal transportation devices that look like someone decided to strip-down a Segway, shrinking it to a single wheel with a tail for balance.

At the outset of the video it鈥檚 tempting to think this will be nothing more than four guys wheeling in circles in a more sophisticated version of the 1960s TV boy band The Monkees, who made famous a similar music video stunt on聽tricycles. However this video聽scene quickly expands to fit the expectation of an over-the-top OK Go video scenario.

OK Go gained notoriety thanks to its elaborate videos that put everyday items to unusual uses. In 鈥溾 treadmills become dance partners.聽

In the video 鈥溾 everything from soccer balls to paint cans are woven into spectacularly over-engineered devices - ala Rube Goldberg.聽.

Now the band has graduated to a presentation using new technology in the form of s聽are controlled by body shift.聽

However, as with previous OK Go productions, the power to engage the audience comes not from the simple use of new technology, but by the over-the-top proliferation of the devices.

In this case, a myriad of Japanese school girls ride in synchronized drill team fashion holding colored parasols in order to eventually form a massive pixelated GameBoy screen style message board display.聽The field was 41 school girls down by 54 girls wide: 2,214 Japanese school girls?

All this is thanks to Creative Director Morihiro Harano, Art Director Jun Nishida,Director: Kazuaki Seki and Damian Kulash, Jr. and .

As if thousands of school girls isn鈥檛 enough the video itself is shot using another Honda invention, 鈥渁聽custom 鈥榤ulti-copter camera鈥 from Honda that was, apparently, developed especially for the project,鈥 according to Gizmodo. 聽Basically, a sophisticated drone.聽

The video is the second release by a fringe artist that relies heavily on a partnership with a major tech company for it鈥檚 gravitas.

Back on聽August 14聽violinist Lindsey Stirling released her 鈥Master of Tides鈥 video in cooperation with UE BOOM, a subsidiary of the tech company Logitech, to introduce both the song and the wireless Bluetooth speaker technology.聽

Both OK Go and Stirling鈥檚 work appear to have benefitted from the new technology, and perhaps the deep pockets of the apparent sponsors, without losing their artistic integrity.

While this may signal an emerging trend of musicians pairing with big sponsors whose products become the de facto co-stars of the videos, for now the result appears to be a happy marriage of technology and the arts.

In this case Honda鈥檚 cycle seems to serve well as a third wheel.

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