Last nite, I found myself watching the BET Hip-Hop Awards Show. Although I actively boycott the network, I took some time out to see how this second annual debauchery would go down. Luckily, I only caught the closing act, Soulja Boy. During the performance, a pan shot across the audience showed various middle-aged men and women, doing their best impressions of Crank That (Debra Lee had a little bounce in there, too; but I’ll get back to her later). As the credits rolled, I began to wonder what it would look like if Young B and DJ Webstar came out and battle-danced Soulja Boy. I’ve wrestled with that scenerio ever since. In all seriousness, I can’t come to a solution. So, I’ve decided to share it with you in order to get your opinion:
Chicken Noodle Soup or Soulja Boy Crank That?
Let me start off by saying, that there is a long history behind these new crazes. Despite what these lil’ chil’ren may think, black music and dance are intertwined entities. Lindy Hop, The Twist, Moonwalk, Electric Slide, Cha-Cha slide, Hokey Pokey, Tone Wap, Crip Walk, Tootsie Roll, Butterfly, the list goes on. Used to be you could get away with a couple two-steps and an abstract hand movement, but the current Hip-hop dance crazes are quite involved. Now you gotta jump, turn around, touch your toe, dip, and grab a partner, slide, kick a foot up, lean with it and walk with it.
I digress.
Both songs/dances have their pros and cons. Content-wise, I just can’t understand what Crank That is about. With lines like, “Watch me crank that roosavelt. . .and super soak that. . .” or the ever-catchy “superman that. . ” I’m often left standing around confused until the hook comes (for a defnition of the "Superman" you'll have to reach out to your nearest fifteen year-old; I can't put that into print . . .). Chicken Noodle Soup, on the other hand, tells the story of a summer afternoon in Harlem. Dance-wise, Chicken Noodle Soup was cute the first couple times I saw it, but then I realized the blatant coonery that is projected from this dance craze. Another knock against CNS is the degree of easiness. Now I’ve never been much of a dancer. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve got rhythm, but I don’t follow directions well. Even after watching the kids at Rucker Park practice their Noodle skills, I still can’t get it right. Crank That, on the other hand, went hi-tech and provided various instructional videos for people like me. After my YouTube tutorial, I feel confident enough get my “crank” on. I have to admit, its fun! And quite the work-out.
With all that being said, I still haven’t come to a conclusion. So drop a line in the comments section on your dance-craze guilty pleasure.
N
3 comments:
Lol. You are hilarious! Debra Lee doing ‘Crank That’? It doesn’t surprise me. Not to mention the lyrics. I mean, he kid is talking about super soaking little girls or rather… ho’s.
I wish we did more partner dancing. I love watching my mother get down. That artform has long been lost. We just started grinding on each other and ‘doing the butt’ rather than hand holding and dancing. Sometimes I’ll catch an episode of Dancing with the Stars and I wish I could do that. It isn’t so far removed. I’ve asked a few guys I dated whether or not they’d take a ballroom dancing class with me (yeah, I know you weren’t strictly talking about ballroom dancing) and they said yes. We can get our groove on and not only ‘crank that’ or go ‘to the left, to the left, to the right, to the right… now slide, come now dip baby dip! I said dip baby dip!’... Oh. I got a bit caught up.
Apparently, the Black person’s favorite wedding dance is being done wrong. Electric Slide as per the inventor, Ric Silver: http://www.black20.com/news/?s=203
Yeah, just my thoughts.
Chicken noodle soup! I just can't get past the lyrics of Crank That.
And partner dancing? (sigh) Definitely need more of that. I rarely dance with men these days. It's like you can be dancing with your girlfriends, having fun, being creative, and a dude comes up and it's just GRINDING. Nothing else. It gets old real fast.
And wow- the electric slide video. I have to hand it to the man, he can really get down. He would show up everyone at any wedding, I've ever been to.
Lol. Yeah. He's really into it. It's a bit weird, sad and funny rolled into one 22 step dance. Not 18 as most people do.
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