

The music video shows the band performing the song live at the Electric Factory in Philadelphia.
Made of Scars
Released: 2007
Album: Come What(ever) May
Director: Doug Spangenberg


A video for the song was released in February 2007, combining images of corporate America with pictures of clenched fists of resistance, revolutionists such as Mao Zedong, Ayatollah Khomeini, Che Guevara, and AK-47 assault rifles.
According to the Roadrunner Records website: “The video for Stone Sour’s “Silly World” takes a crack at all the bullshit going on in the world today…apathy, tyranny, poverty, violence, and greed are all targets.”
Sillyworld
Released: February 2007
Album: Come What(ever) May
Director: David Brooks


“The music video for “Through Glass,” was written and directed by Tony Petrossian. It takes place in the most plastic of scenarios: the cliché, vacant, Hollywoodesque party where we’re seeing all these plastic people. We’re seeing celebrity culture and consumer culture magnified in a way that distracts people from thinking about what they should be thinking about.
As the video progresses, the people at the party abruptly become cardboard cutouts and are carried away. Eventually the whole building where the party was being held becomes a cutout as well and is removed. The band members are shown in the party and they eventually head outside and begin playing in front of what appears to be the Hollywood sign (which actually reads “Hollowood”, a point made at the hollowness of the current music business). This also is revealed to be a cardboard cutout at the very end of the video.
Some versions of the video have a guitar interlude that is different.
Corey: “‘Through Glass’ was actually inspired by sitting in a hotel room in Europe watching MTV in Europe, which is probably worse than the MTV that’s here. I mean, there’s a lot of Pop, well it’s true man. There’s so many plastic Pop bands and Pop people and it’s like what is this. It’s very devoid of emotion as far as I’m concerned and it slowly started to make me angry and this is the song that came out of it. Surprisingly enough it’s actually a pretty angry song that is railing against musical convention today. The fact that there’s very little substance or soul to it.”
Through Glass
Released: 2006
Album: Come What(ever) May
Director: Tony Petrossian


The video shows the band members individually in high-contrast black and white superimposed over a timer counting down from “3030.150″ and occasionally large close-ups of Corey Taylor’s mouth. The numbers seen in the background appear to count down the time remaining in the clip in tenths of a second, beginning at 3030.150.
30/30-150
Released: 2006
Album: Come What(ever) May
Director: Paul Brown


The video shows the band in the studio during the Come What(ever) May recording sessions.
Reborn
Released: April 2006
Album: Come What(ever) May


In this music vide the band is shown as homeless people, who wander through a city. They look for food in dumpsters, play guitar for money on the corner, just try to survivw.
Later on the band is shown wearing white suits performing in an elegant restaurant. When Corey starts to scream the band members turn into untidy people with torn suits. People from the audience start to disappear. At the end of the video the band is once again shown as homeless people living under the bridge.
Inhale
Released: 2003
Album: Stone Sour
Director: Gregory Dark, Corey Taylor


The music video shows Corey standing face-to-face with an exact copy of himself in a large room. As the two sing, Corey’s copy begins to rapidly age, and eventually dies and turns to dust as the other band members surround the two Coreys. All that is left of the copy is his Spider-Man ring, which the other Corey puts on his own finger, underneath his own Spider-Man ring.
Bother
Released: 2003
Album: Stone Sour
Director: Gregory Dark


“Get Inisde” was the first video released by the band, almost a decade after the band was created. The video shows the band performing in front of an audience at a club. The video is shown to be in black and white. A strong white light highlights the contrast between the darker lyrics of the song, and the brightness of where they are performing.
Get Inside
Released: 2002
Album: Stone Sour
Director: Hal Carter