Non-Fiction TV: I Reject Your Reality and Substitute My Own
This thread is for non-fiction TV, including but not limited to reality television (So You Think You Can Dance, Top Chef: Masters, Project Runway), documentaries (The History Channel, The Discovery Channel), and sundry (Expedition Africa, Mythbusters), et al. [NAFDA]
I was very excited to see Kherington (a) do a routine in shoes
Well, boots. But at least they had heels, although still not the spiky ones that everyone else has to dance in.
I did the fast forward/rewatch test this morning. For the first time, I didn't rewatch Mark/Chelsie. I did stop on the Joshua/Katee contemporary, Thayne/Comfort's smooth waltz, Will/Jessica's shirt number, and the bed number. The latter didn't seem any better, in fact it seemed even less dancy and more contrived. Although I still think the shirt number is too prop-based, it improved on rewatch. I half rewatched Benji's number, but it was just too damn slow for swing.
I do think it is time for Matt/Kourtni to go, I would sort of like to see Jessica and Thayne go and see what Will and Comfort could do together.
The problem with the WCS, it seems to me, is that it was too slow.
It looked like the could have picked it up just a notch and been successful. That cartwheel thing should have been taken out altogether because they just couldn't do it, but a different ending could have been choreographed.
OK, so I'm having a hard time finding a good youtube clip, because the problem is, much like competition ballroom waltzing is ridiculous looking oftentimes just because of the costumes, competition west coast swinging is often ridiculously cheesy. Much like how Benji does it.
But non-competition west coast swinging (which doesn't end up being the stuff on youtube) is HOT.
If you ignore the crowd cheering, and look the the individual moves (and not the group), you can kinda see it in this group dance here. Really, what I'm saying is, I like the basic stuff. Or when the really good people improv, rather than competition dance. But even then, there's a little too much performance to it, and not enough paying attention to your partner and the connection between you, which is what makes it sexy for me, as a performance.
There's a reason that everyone I know who sees it done in the club by people who are good at it goes "Ooh. I want to learn how to do THAT". Two step is fun and all, but people just want to learn it so they can dance. When they see people west coast swinging, it's like "Damn, that looks sexy"
This is maybe a dumb question, but is there East Coast Swing?
There is, and it is the swing I prefer.
Heh. There is East Coast Swing (I suddenly feel like I'm about to stir up an East Coast/West Coast rap rivalry too). I also do East Coast swing. It's probably more what you think of when you think of swing dancing. Boogie woogie bugle boy and all that. I think of East Coast stuff as being cute. Bouncy. Fun. But not sexy.
t runs away from msbelle
This is maybe a dumb question, but is there East Coast Swing?
Apparently yes! But I've read the descriptions of both on Wikipedia and still don't get the difference.
no need to run away. I don't think of east coast as sexy, just swingy. It is fun to dance. I've never done west coast, but the slides and pausing in it (of what I've seen) bother me. This is kinda sexy WC swing and I still don't like it to watch: [link]
Oh they're very different!! When you're not dancing in competition, just in a big group of people (which is how I do it--obvi, competition is going to be different from everything):
East Coast swing, the basic is step, step (side to side), backstep (or triple-step, triple-step, backstep, depending on the speed of the music and who's teaching you). It's bouncy and fun. You and your partner face each other, and don't tend to move out of your spot much, but may kinda go in circles. So you start with that side side backstep and then start throwing in turns and kicks and so on and so forth.
In West Coast, in theory, you and your partner are in a "slot", so you have a space on the dancefloor where the two of you may move back and forth in a line. It's more similar to a LindyHop, and I'm sure it is known as west coast swing because it somehow evolved from East Coast blah blah etc etc. There are a few different basic moves, but the first one they usually teach you is called a sugarpush, and the follow walks towards the lead (you're facing each other) (one-two) they are together for a sec (three-and), and then the lead pushes the follow away (four) and then there's a step (five-and-six). There's more hip action. Which I like. :)
I've never done west coast, but the slides and pausing in it (of what I've seen) bother me
Hah! And that's what I love. You can have a lot of fun with the music if there's pauses or sudden stops in the music and BAM! It's something people do a lot in LindyHop too.