The video features three young women (named Mathilde, Sarah, and Marine) casually walking through the streets of Paris (specifically on Rue Montorgueil) in broad daylight, completely naked. Their only accessories are a portable boombox and strategically placed black censor bars containing the song's lyrics. The concept was a direct video response to Matt & Kim's "Lessons Learned" video, but with a far more provocative twist.

Three models/performers walking naked through public crowds. Production Style:

The entertainment value of "Baby Baby Baby" is rooted in its ability to . Here’s a timeline of its cultural footprint:

Praised it as an ingenious, lighthearted piece of French performance art that celebrated bodily autonomy and captured genuine human behavior in a public space. The Copycat and Parody Videos

While a heavily censored version circulated on mainstream platforms like YouTube, it was the search for the cut that drove millions of users to alternative video hosts, cementing the track's status as a masterclass in digital age provocation.

Much of the "story" is told through the genuine, unscripted reactions of the public. Pedestrians are seen stopping in their tracks, laughing, taking photos, or looking on in disbelief as the women pass by.

Or get off the floor.