0:01
As the video begins, you’d be hard-pressed to know it wasn’t the original. Director Jay Levey – Al’s longtime manager, who also directed another dozen or so of his videos and his cult movie UHF – set out to ape the original as closely as possible. Jay told Spin: “All the stars aligned. We were able to track down and book the same soundstage. The soundstage, in essence, is four bare walls, so you could be in any soundstage and not know it was the one. But from a karmic standpoint, it was pretty heavy to be in the exact same place where they shot theirs. The vast majority of the fans in the bleachers were from the original Nirvana video.”
0:08
The drummer wearing a shirt labelled ‘DRUMMER’ and not being Dave Grohl is pretty much the first sign that this isn’t the real deal. That is Al’s longtime drummer John ‘Bermuda’ Schwartz doing his best Dave Grohl impression.
0:13
That one particular cheerleader isn’t in the original video either. Some of them were though. Kurt had complained about the cheerleaders used on the Smells Like Teen Spirit shoot, saying they were too slim and pretty.
0:17
This janitor, Tony De La Rosa, is the same guy as in Nirvana’s original. “I don’t know that he even knew a thing about Nirvana. I believe he was a real janitor,” said Jay. Al later brought him back for another video, You Don’t Love Me Anymore, a parody of Extreme’s More Than Words clip.
0.23
That is the late Dick Van Patten, as seen in Spaceballs and Soylent Green, and long-running U.S. sitcom Eight Is Enough. Dick also founded pet food company Natural Balance. His being in the video came about because of a decision that they should get someone famous in the video, and someone on the shoot having Dick Van Patten’s number for some reason.