Marcel Winatschek

Do You Want More

The Aston Shuffle’s Do You Want More is interested in one thing: watching people descend into bodily chaos. They eat, they vomit, they get led through a door by an attractive person in underwear. That’s the entire structure. That’s the offer, and the title isn’t asking—it’s daring you to answer.

What works about it is the refusal to apologize. The video doesn’t frame the vomiting as ironic or subversive, doesn’t add a layer of commentary that would let you off the hook. It’s just there, crude and direct, competing for your attention with the promise of something appealing on the other side. The contrast is the point. Disgust and desire living next to each other, feeding into each other.

There’s something almost nostalgic about music videos that still believe in shock value as an actual tool rather than a marketing tactic. Most of what passes for transgressive now is just algorithmic edginess—calculated offensiveness designed to trigger shares. This is older than that. It commits to the bit without explanation, trusts that the discomfort will do the work.

I watched it once. Probably won’t watch it again. But I get what it’s doing, and there’s something honest about a music video that knows exactly what it is and doesn’t pretend otherwise. No irony, no winking, no layers of plausible deniability. Just people eating, people vomiting, and the eternal question: what are you willing to sit through to get what you want?