It's not every day that a music video gets millions of YouTube views, and a senator's critique of it is also trending on the site.
On Tuesday, however, that was precisely where we found ourselves with respect to Snoop Dogg's slightly controversial video for "Lavender (Nightfall Remix)."
It depicts a world in which everyone is a clown, but the police are still bad clowns and the president is a clown with oddly straw-colored hair and the name Ronald Klump.
There's a scene in this video that will surely not be to everyone's taste.
Snoop, who for some peculiar reason of art or ego isn't a clown in the video, pulls out a gun and conducts a mock assassination of Klump.
It's a toy confetti gun, of course. But the feeling it leaves behind isn't exactly playful.
Indeed, Snoop told Billboard: "The whole world is clownin' around." He added that he believes the black community is suffering gross injustice, while the police and white elites are behaving with impunity.
Unsurprisingly, the video hasn't met with universal admiration.
The White House didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
However, the president's lawyer, Michael Cohen, told TMZ that the video was "disgraceful." He said Snoop owed the president an apology. "It's not funny, it's not artistic," he said of the video.
Art is a dangerous weapon, especially in the wrong hands. A little like the law, really.
Next to speak to TMZ was Sen. Marco Rubio, who claims to have a few rap credentials.
"Snoop shouldn't have done that," he said. "We've had presidents assassinated before in this country, so anything like that is something people should be really careful about."
He added: "The wrong person sees that, he gets the wrong idea and you can have a real problem." It's a little like the wrong person getting hold of a gun, perhaps.
Rubio's response was trending in the YouTube Top 50 on Tuesday afternoon, which perhaps goes to show the divided feelings the video understandably engenders.
On YouTube, Snoop's video enjoys significantly more upvotes than downvotes.
He's also had support from fellow rapper Ice-T. He was asked how he'd feel if the clown was President Barack Obama, instead of President Donald Trump, a very fair question. He told TMZ: "I think it'd be terrible, but Obama wasn't the same kind of guy as Trump. It was very hard to make an Obama joke because of his race, and Obama was such a smooth character. I think Trump brings a lot of these jokes onto himself."
Snoop insisted to Billboard that this was just art.
"When I be putting shit out, I don't ever expect or look for a reaction," he said. "I just put it out because I feel like it's something that's missing. Any time I drop something, I'm trying to fill in a void."
No, of course he didn't expect a reaction. What a surprise this all must be.
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