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Three of the people who were seen singing in her "Hands Clean" video also appear who are shown as her dedicated fans. The man that cuts her hair at the beginning of the video is Jarabe de Palo's lead singer, Pau Donés. The music video is based on and is almost identical to the video for the song "Bonito" by Spanish group Jarabe de Palo, with the same director, Marc Donés. The discography of Alanis Morissette, a Canadian-American singer-songwriter, comprises nine studio albums, three live albums, six compilation albums, two extended plays, 37 singles, twelve promotional singles, six video albums, and 32 music videos. For the rest of the video she is accompanied by a group of people. At the start of the video, her hair is long, but ends up being cut off to signify one of many changes in her life. The song's music video was released in March 2004, and features Morissette walking down a road. The song also peaked within the top 20 of the Canadian, Australian, Italian, Austrian and Norwegian singles charts. Morissette: Somewhere around 22, I stopped reading everything because it wasn’t really relevant to my personal growth and evolution. The physical video-enhanced single, however, remains one of the most successful of Morissette's recording career, being certified 4x platinum by the RIAA on the 30th of September 2004 for shipment of over 200,000 copies. The song entered Billboard's main Hot 100 chart at #76, a position it would hold for four weeks, spending a total of nine non-consecutive weeks on the chart. Mainstream pop and rock radio stations were less supportive of the track. Upon release in the US, the song received considerable support and airplay from alternative and adult radio stations, peaking within the top 5 and spending 26 non-consecutive weeks on Billboard's Adult Top 40 chart. The video version of the track endured further edits, with the replacing of the word "asshole" in the opening line to "nightmare". The radio version of the song removed over 90 seconds of the track by taking the first two lines from the first section of a verse and placing it together with the last two lines from the second section of the verse, effectively removing a whole verse from the album version. Problems listening to this file? See media help.Ī heavily edited version of the song was released to radio stations for airplay on February 23, 2004.