Iglesias groans at the director's idea, mutters to his manager, "Este cabrón está loco" (lit: "This fucker is crazy"), and leaves. He becomes distressed, though, as she goes closer to the edge. As he catches up with her at the edge of a cliff, she mimes the words "I love you", at which Iglesias is visibly pleased. The two interact before she playfully runs away. When Iglesias shows little interest at the clichéd idea the director pitches him a second: he is in the woods with his high-school sweetheart, played by Argentine model Yésica Toscanini. Iglesias watches her and is seen interacting with her in a bed before the scene shifts to Burgos arguing with her lover outside the hotel and then walking into the road, only to be run over by a car. The director suggests that the video to Iglesias's newest single start out with Iglesias dressed in a white suit next to a hotel swimming pool, surrounded by women, when one in particular, played by Mexican model Pamela Burgos, catches his eye.
When they arrive, the director, played by Jon Abrahams, is surrounded by scantily clad women, some of whom are occupying themselves by playing ping pong. The video starts with Iglesias and his manager, played by legendary Big Brother player Mike Boogie, meeting up with one of the hottest directors in the business.
The video cuts back and forth between scenes in which the ideas for the videos are being proposed to Iglesias and the videos themselves. The song's music video is directed by Jessy Terrero and is ostensibly a parody of the thought process that many directors have when making Iglesias music videos. Some American radio stations have taken to playing a different version of the song which contains a more rhythmic beat. The single was not released physically there due to the diminishing single sales market and the growing importance of digital downloads there.
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The single was released to radio in his home country, Spain, peaked at number six on the official download Spanish chart and reached number one in the airplay chart. It also broke the four-year-long tie with Luis Miguel for most number-ones on the chart with 17. Holding off strong competition from Daddy Yankee and Chayanne, the song is Iglesias's seventeenth number one on the chart, the best-performing single on Hot Latin Songs that year and Iglesias' best-performing single on the chart since " Enamorado Por Primera Vez" in 1997. It was then knocked off once more before regaining it for a week, accumulating a total of eleven weeks atop the chart. The Spanish version of the song, entitled "Dímelo" (which, notably, uses completely different lyrics to the original English version), made a 48-point jump from number 49 to number one on the Billboard Hot Latin Songs chart and held top spot for six weeks before being knocked off by Marco Antonio Solís's single "Ojalá", but it reclaimed the number one spot three weeks later and held it for another four. The song has reached number three on the UK Singles Chart. The song reached number three on the UK iTunes Store, making its debut on the UK Singles Chart at number 28 and climbing to number nine in its second week, and was released as a physical CD single format on Monday, 11 June. It reached the top ten on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play, peaking at number 3. The song soon made its debut on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 33. iTunes Store as a digital single, where it eventually reached number 13. Iglesias performed the song on Dancing with the Stars on, on the day that the song was made available in the U.S. The song was officially shipped to radio stations and, a week later, reached number 102 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart. Iglesias premiered the song on Ryan Seacrest's radio show on KIIS-FM on Tuesday, 10 April 2007. The opening piano, guitar chord riffs, and lead sound synthesizer which is heard throughout the song are directly lifted from the individual sample loops. These samples include all of the original tracks in "Otiga Verde" from the sample library. The instrumental backing tracks are based on sampled loops from the production company Bunker 8 Digital Labs. Iglesias generally refers to the song as simply "Do You Know?", as it was his record label's insistence to add on "The Ping Pong Song" in parentheses (for the obvious sound of a ping pong ball bouncing to start the song and set the beat) to make it more distinctive and marketable.