The Replacements' "Bastards of Young". Because back in 1985, their new record label, Sire, required them to produce a video. This a year after they came out with the cynically classic song, "Seen Your Video".
The entire video consists of a black and white, fixed video camera pointed at some guy's home stereo speaker as he puts the Tim album on the turntable, (and off-camera: ) sits on the sofa, has a smoke, pets a dog that walks by, and then trashes the speaker at the end.
This "anti-video" was one of the greatest middle-fingers ever lifted to the music industry and MTV in specific.