Shooting a video inside a prison could come across as exploitative. What was top of your list of things not to do, to guard against this?
“Well, I’d say it was hard to know what not to do. But what I would say is that I felt that, at that time in music and in culture, being in a prison that heavy, maybe the only artists who could have pulled it off were Metallica, and maybe, say, 50 Cent. When I was in there I was thinking, ‘Dude, thank God we’re with this band, because if we were with anyone else, people wouldn’t have wanted us crashing their day.’ Metallica have a presence, and that seemed to lend itself to the heaviness of the day. There were times where you’d get stark reminders that this was a prison not a set, like when a buzzer sounds and every prisoner suddenly hits the ground, and you’re left standing – that’s a reality check.”