The music video for "Beat It" helped establish Jackson as an international pop icon. The video was Jackson's first treatment of black youth and the streets. Both "Beat It" and "
Thriller" are notable for their "mass choreography" of synchronized dancers, a Jackson trademark. The video, which cost Jackson $150,000 to create after
CBS refused to finance it, was filmed on
Los Angeles' Skid Row—mainly on locations on East 5th Street—around March 9, 1983. To add authenticity to the production but also to foster peace between them, Jackson had the idea to cast members of rival Los Angeles street gangs
Crips and
Bloods. also featured 18 professional dancers and four breakdancers. Besides Jackson,
Michael Peters, and
Vincent Paterson, the cast included
Michael DeLorenzo, Stoney Jackson,
Tracii Guns,
Sean Penn, Tony Fields, Peter Tram, Rick Stone and Cheryl Song. The bar location shown in the latter part of the first minute of the video was also featured 13 years earlier in the gatefold and on the back cover of
the Doors 1970 album,
Morrison Hotel. Coincidentally, the name of that skid row bar, the Hard Rock Café, was also the inspiration for the
London original of the famous chain of restaurants begun in 1971. The video was written and directed by
Bob Giraldi, produced by Ralph Cohen, Antony Payne and Mary M. Ensign through the production company GASP. The second video released for the
Thriller album, it was choreographed by Peters who also performed, alongside Vincent Paterson, as one of the two lead dancers. Despite some sources claiming otherwise, Jackson was involved in creating some parts of the choreography. Jackson asked Giraldi, at the time already an established commercial director but who had never directed a music video, to come up with a concept for the "Beat It" video because he really liked a commercial Giraldi had directed for
WLS-TV in Chicago about a married couple of two elderly blind people who instead of running from a run-down neighborhood all the other
white people had fled from, chose to stay and throw a block party for all the young children in the area. Contrary to popular belief, the concept of the video was not based on the Broadway musical
West Side Story; in reality, Giraldi drew inspiration from his growing up in
Paterson, New Jersey. neither "Beat It" nor "Billie Jean" were, as is often claimed, the first music video by an African-American artist to be played on MTV. Soon after its premiere the video was also running on other video programs including
BET's
Video Soul,
SuperStation WTBS's
Night Tracks, and
NBC's
Friday Night Videos. In fact, "Beat It" was the first video shown on the latter's first ever telecast on July 29, 1983. The video opens with the news of a fight circulating at a diner. This scene repeats itself at a pool hall, where gang members arrive and the song begins to play. The camera cuts to Jackson lying on a bed as he contemplates the senseless violence. Jackson dons a red leather J. Parks brand jacket and dances his way towards the fight through the diner and pool hall. A knife fight is taking place between the two gang leaders in a warehouse. They dance battle for an interlude of music until Jackson arrives; he breaks up the fight and launches into a dance routine. The video ends with the gang members joining him in the dance, agreeing that violence is not the solution to their problems. The video received recognition through numerous awards. The
American Music Awards named the short film their Favorite Pop/Rock Video and their Favorite Soul Video. The Black Gold Awards honored Jackson with the Best Video Performance award. The
Billboard Video Awards recognized the video with 7 awards; Best Overall Video Clip, Best Performance by a Male Artist, Best Use of Video to Enhance a Song, Best Use of Video to Enhance an Artist's Image, Best Choreography, Best Overall Video and Best Dance/Disco 12". The short film was ranked by
Rolling Stone as the No. 1 video, in both their critic's and reader's polls. The video was later inducted into the Music Video Producer's Hall of Fame. In November 2023, the music video reached 1 billion views on YouTube. It was Jackson's third music video (after "
Billie Jean" and "
They Don't Care About Us") to achieve this milestone. The music video of the song appears on the video albums:
Video Greatest Hits – HIStory,
HIStory on Film, Volume II,
Number Ones, on the bonus DVD of
Thriller 25 and ''
Michael Jackson's Vision''. ==Live performances==