The lyrics of the song tell the story of a couple who have lost romantic interest in eachother and split up but who occasionally still get together for casual sex - and how this is only superficially fulfilling. The video does not follow this scenario.
Instead, the video simply takes its cue from the idea of two people (Or groups of people) splitting up and going their own ways. In the video, these groups are the band themselves and the "production team" of the video itself - who in the video are portrayed as a group of chimpanzees - this is a manifestation of Fall Out Boy's tongue-in-cheek stylings.
Throughout the video, the chimpanzee director is frequently complaining about the band's quality, and criticising their way of doing things (For example, he shoves the bassist out of the way to show him how to kiss a girl by doing it himself), which prompts the band (Particularly bassist Pete Wentz) to become extremely frustrated with their director, eventually trashing the set and storming off.
Notably, just before storming off-stage at the end of the video, Pete Wentz knocks the "B" out of the band's backdrop - changing the writing from saying "FOB" to simply "FO", a widely used "clean" version of a vulgar colloquialism for "go away". This again represents the band's humorous take on life and also sums up the final state of the relationship between the band and the chimps.
Ironically, despite being the one who seems most put out by the chimpanzees' actions, it is Pete Wentz who initially reassures vocalist/rhythm guitarist Patrick Stump that "this guy is a...visionary" - referring to the chimpanzee director (Though at the time, the audience is yet to find out about the "visionary's" true nature. This sequence only serves to heighten the humour that is central to the video.
In terms of direction, the video frequently links edits with the rhythm and melody, making cuts on the beat and at changes in the melody - particularly during the chorus, which are the most performance-oriented sections of the video.
Also during these sequences, the movements of the band and, particularly, the chimpanzees and other ancillary characters, tend to be in time to the beat. This both helps the dynamism of the band and song come across during narrative-led sequences and gives the audience the idea of dancing, encouraging the idea that this is a song listeners can dance to.
The band are mostly dressed in a style which is fairly typical of them - low key suits worn without ties and with trilby hats for example. There are frequent closeups of Pete Wentz, including several in which he is shown intimately with American Celebutante Kim Kardashian. These are to sell (Particularly female members of) the audience on the idea that Pete is an attractive guy and win sales through sex appeal.
The video is a hybrid of performance and narrative, in that the narrative is the performance. The story of the video revolves around the band performing the song in the video itself - a kind of meta-storyline and inside joke.
And so we come back to the core of the Fall Out Boy style - jokes and humour. The video takes a song which is ostensibly about something that could be said to be quite upsetting, or at least provoke apathy (A failed relationship and unfulfilling casual sex) and instead turns it around into a comedy caper complete with semi-personfied monkeys. Classic Fall Out Boy.
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