After Kai Cenat shared on stream that he wanted to direct a Drake video, Drake put the idea in motion. Instead of keeping it to one, Drizzy opened the door for 19 directors to reinterpret the song in their own way, personally backing their visions to bring new life to the track. Check out all 19 videos below:
Director – SEYI.KG
Our 1-minute video for “Somebody Loves Me” by Drake and PARTYNEXTDOOR takes place in a snowstorm inside a vintage banquet hall. We find ourselves in the middle of a surreal and provocative showcase, filled with costumed feminine figures—each one representing the unreachable lover Drake and PND are singing about and it’s snowing inside.
Director – JUSTICE SILVERA
This short-form version of the video (1st minute of song) introduces a surreal journey of a group of women chasing PARTYNEXTDOOR and Drake across Miami. What begins as a grounded night out quickly fractures into visual absurdity. And the obsession for searching for connection is the metaphor of this visual. Throughout the visual, the camera never moves just simply glides forward, committed to its perspective no matter how chaotic or irrational the world becomes.
Director – EDGAR DANIEL
We launch an open casting call inviting real female fans to submit videos or come to an in person casting where they will get their head shots taken and are interviewed for a chance to appear in the “Somebody Loves Me” music video.
Director – RILEY ROBBINS
Love in Motion. A single forward moving one shot that travel through six distinct worlds. Each one a love letter to a different corner of somebody’s love universe. Intimate details create seamless transitions.

Director – AARON RICKETTS
“Inside the interior of a luxury party, we follow a woman known only as Angel as she leads her group of girlfriends away from the noise — into the sanctuary of the bathroom — where a new kind of truth gets spoken. It’s intimate, playful, and emotionally charged. Set to the outro of “Somebody Loves Me,” this is a visual monologue about modern femininity, performative celibacy, and the truths we say out loud when the doors are closed.”
Director – RICH HALL
This idea is for the first 45 seconds of the song. Using miniatures, we create frozen dioramas of the party mid-air on drake’s plane. Camera movies through a frozen scene.
Director – TARAN
Naturalistic, intimate, beautifully lit “fly-on-the-wall” storytelling with organic moments of glamour & warmth. Overall, our video places PartyNextDoor & Drake as the soundtrack to feel-good body positivity & self-love – something they’ve been doing for women around the world their entire careers.
Director – HANNAH SIDER
This song is a meditation on longing, ego, and the tension between desire & detachment. The mood for this short visual should feel dark, atmospheric, and slightly surreal. Like emotional weight being carried through space and luxury. This video follows a beautiful, magnetic woman as she moves through the empty streets of NYC after dark. The concept is simple, but the tone is anything but.

Director – JALEIGHA B JONES
When a woman feels truly safe – when she knows ‘somebody loves me’, she’ll do anything to protect that feeling. Even if it means eliminating every threat that dares to challenge it. During an exclusive party in a lavish home, someone was found dead with no clear motives.. Everyone is a suspect
Director – JABARI DANIEL
In a looping hotel hallway, a man opens three doors – to betrayal, distraction, and loneliness – reliving the emotional void of searching for real love in a world of illusions. This treatment tells the story of the emotional disorientation of modern love through the eyes of a man caught in a surreal loop of heartbreak, temptation, and isolation. Set within a single hotel hallway, the story unfolds as the protagonist repeatedly opens the same door – each time revealing a new emotional state that reflects a different phase of his inner struggle.
Director – JLEAN
The whole video takes place in two adjacent fitting rooms, focusing on the beautiful women that are playing dress up and getting intimate. They hope to have someone that loves them. It’s a playful video that has stunning camera effects, colour schemes and lots of fun.

Director – JORDAN SOOK STUDIOS
A playful take on a velvet-wrapped dreamscape. This is uniquely positioned puppet-fueled odyssey of lust, status, and late nights told though the detached gaze of Drake and the smooth counterbalance of PND. Together they look for true love as they float through a carousal of indulgent scenes. The women (some real, some puppets) come and go. Some flirt, some dance, some converse… but in the end they are there for superficial reasons. The extremes of the Miami-Toronto nightlife is counterbalanced by the tension and texture of the “puppet style approach”.
Director – ANNIE BURKE
AI-Art Based treatment, showcasing Drake in a therapy/group session discussing conflict between him and a girl we assume is his lover, while PartyNextDoor supports him throughout.
Director – MATIAS SARRIA & CARLOS RODRIGUEZ
SLM is a sexy yet melancholy track. Pretty much like the life of a stripper… a constant battle between “wtf am I doing with my life” vs “getting the life I deserve”. This is the story of a late night driving home from a stripper who just got out from a successful night of work in a club in Miami.
Director – AMEYA TOKYO
A one-take Tokyo myth about a girl so toxic she becomes the embodiment of clout. At the center: Angel, a girl whose lovers destroy themselves for her. Drake is never seen — until the final seconds. A story about obsession, myth, and emotional collapse.This is a psychological thriller set on a Tokyo rooftop. The film uses one unbroken take to explore what it means to be desired, used, and worshipped in the age of digital love and ghosted DMs.
Director – ELIAS & TAMARA MAJIN
A poetic visual exploration of emotional disconnect and longing. We follow a young man drifting through moments with women who don’t really see him — and who he doesn’t truly see either. Each person is emotionally checked out, chasing the memory or fantasy of someone else. Until he meets her. In the final seconds of the film, for the first time, he and a woman lock eyes — and both are truly present. It’s quiet, it’s unspoken — but in that moment, something aligns.
Director – DT JULY
Animated. Three bad bunnies moving through the city. Not in a rush. Not in danger. Just doing what they want. Each scene hits quick. No talking. No wasted shots. They steal what they want, leave something pretty behind, and vanish before anyone even thinks to stop them. At the end of every heist, a lyric floats across the screen. “Her name is Angel, but she’s far from God.”
Director – DITO ANDRES
PND and Drake’s Moms are celestial guardian angels, looking down at their sons. Loving them from a distance and secretly guiding them towards good things and protecting them from trouble.
Director – KRISTEN LAMBIE
A 70-something year old black man as he journeys back to the very places where love first took root. With every step, memories ignite – his younger self bursting to life, reliving the sweet innocence, joy and tenderness of first love. Past and present collide in a beautiful dance, celebrating the timeless power of black love, memory and devotion.