Jonas Brothers feature Corgis in new music video
The Jonas Brothers have reunited as a band.
If you paid attention to pop culture at all this week, you’ve probably heard that the 2000s Disney pop band the Jonas Brothers are back together as a group.
Kevin, Joe and Nick Jonas released a music video for their brand-new song “Sucker” a few days ago, and it’s pretty weird, honestly. But the best part, that we’re going to focus on, is how it features a lot of Corgis in several scenes.
It also features their real-life wives, as the six of them frolic around an Alice in Wonderland style English castle estate, complete with opulence, grandeur, eccentric clothing and strange behavior, like taking a bath in the yard.
Because it’s set in an English castle, naturally a lot of Pembroke Corgis are taken on walks and are free to loll about the grounds, as in real life they are associated with British royalty, particularly being a favorite breed of Queen Elizabeth II.
Corgis, both Pembroke and Cardigan, are also adorable, and are a main part of author Mildred Abbott’s cozy mystery series, available on Amazon. (See our interview with her about the books.)
The Jonas Brothers also starred in the Disney Channel Original Movies Camp Rock in 2008 and Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam in 2010, both times costarring along with fellow pop singer Demi Lovato and dancer Alyson Stoner.
They also had a two-season Disney Channel TV series called Jonas from 2009-10, and during this time often hung out in real life with fellow dog lover and Disney Channel alum Miley Cyrus.
As far as actual music the Jonas Brothers have put out together, they made four albums in four years, from 2006-10 – It’s About Time, Jonas Brothers, A Little Bit Longer, and Lines, Vines and Trying Times. They also were heavily featured on both Camp Rock soundtracks.
This is mildly newsworthy simply because the Corgis are a interesting true-to-life detail in an otherwise very bizarre music video, and also because most of their fans, tweens or teens at the height of their popularity, are now adult pet parents and dog moms.