The first music video from
Dirty was for "100%". It was directed by
Tamra Davis and
Spike Jonze, and shot in
Los Angeles. Much of the video footage was shot by Jonze while riding on a skateboard, following others in the streets (including then-skateboarder, now-actor
Jason Lee). The video also alluded to the shooting death of Cole, but is not specifically about him, and more about friendship between two skateboarders. Sonic Youth is shown playing a house party throughout the film. In the video, Gordon plays a yellow Fender
bass guitar which she had borrowed from actor
Keanu Reeves. The second music video, for "Youth Against Fascism", was directed by
Nick Egan. The video was shot in the concrete flood control channel of the
Los Angeles River with the band playing while
FMX bikers ride around. Imagery of
fascism,
Nazism and
communism was spliced into the video, plus an insurrection mixed with pictures of
punk bands and fashion. The third music video was for "Sugar Kane"; like "Youth Against Fascism", it was directed by Egan. The video was shot in New York City and portrayed Sonic Youth performing in the midst of a fashion show that showcased "grunge" clothing. The clothing, in fact, was one of the collections ("Grunge Collection") done by
Marc Jacobs for
Perry Ellis in 1992. Jacobs was a close friend of Gordon and the band. The video also marked the first film appearance of
Chloë Sevigny. The fourth video from
Dirty was for "Drunken Butterfly", directed by Stephen Hellweg, the winner of an
MTV 120 Minutes contest in which fans were asked to send in videos for any song on
Dirty. It featured puppets and dolls made up to look like Sonic Youth performing the song onstage. The fifth (for "Swimsuit Issue", which featured shirtless men smoking together in a room listening to
Dirty) and sixth (for "Nic Fit", showing someone running around in a field holding up a flaming stuffed animal) videos stemmed from the same contest. == Track listing ==