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Korean Job Discussion Forums "The Internet's Meeting Place for ESL/EFL Teachers from Around the World!"
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| What do you think about this guy's dancing? |
| He rocks! |
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50% |
[ 4 ] |
| He gets an "A" for effort, but ... |
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37% |
[ 3 ] |
| Wannabe poser |
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12% |
[ 1 ] |
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| Total Votes : 8 |
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skinhead

Joined: 11 Jun 2004
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 9:35 am Post subject: |
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| Qinella wrote: |
| JongnoGuru wrote: |
Okay, the clip played this time.
Oh yeah. The idol of every dongdaemoon nightclub tout or pizza delivery boy. Highschool dropout hits the big-time -- Intermission act at the strippy-girl adult cabaret & discotheque.
Korea's young male lumpenproletariat don't have a lot of interesting, highly rewarding things to do. Though this one may be onto something.
The little kids there aren't brave, they just think it's a circus all for them. "Someone's putting on a show for us! We're being doted on again!! " But you see their mothers all keeping a safe distance. And the shopkeeper ajumas walking around, dodging the camera, pretending they're not rattled. It's not the rap music or the dancing or the way he's dressed, it's the setting. It makes him _icky_.
Hopping around on the MBC stage, he basks in the blue, pink & magenta of acceptability and even fame. In a shopping mall, he's one step up from the legless panhandler on the subway, two steps across from the old men with pus-oozing facial disfigurements who hang out at wedding halls until the bride's family pays them to go a-way.
What was the... Right. Yes, Koreans can dance. |
This is one of my all-time favorite posts. Splendipidous.
As to the OP.. thanks for the clip; it was interesting. I could criticize, and say that he has watched too many 80s Michael Jackson music videos, but I can't do what he did. And it's fun to watch.
Can Koreans dance? Rhythm is not racist. �˾���. |
HAHAHA - thanks for making me read that guru post properly, Quinella! Mustard. |
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Satori

Joined: 09 Dec 2005 Location: Above it all
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Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 12:40 pm Post subject: |
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| I've seen plenty of really hot modern style breakdancing here. You just have to be in the right place. So yeah, some Koreans can dance bloody well. |
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endo

Joined: 14 Mar 2004 Location: Seoul...my home
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Posted: Sun Jan 22, 2006 12:38 am Post subject: |
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Pete Rock & CL Smooth!
that's old school..... |
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peony

Joined: 30 Mar 2005
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 8:48 pm Post subject: |
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pretty cool! the guy made himself look like he has no bones
yeah, breaking and popping is old school but its still very popular all over the world and fun as heck to watch
it was funny, i guess the whole thing is a setup so they could record that video
the girl walking around carrying his boombox cracked me up |
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JongnoGuru

Joined: 25 May 2004 Location: peeing on your doorstep
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Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2006 10:13 pm Post subject: |
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ehh. My previous post was real late, right before bed. Just a gut-level reaction to the video and everything in & about it, the whole gestalt and what it "really means". Like going to a concert and instead of just getting into the scene, you step back and observe that scene, you watch the crowd's reactions and wonder what they're all thinking, you wonder what socio-cultural function rock concerts play, etc. To a degree, I think Korean culture can encourage or reinforce a foreigner's aesthetic distance in that way, no matter how long you've lived here. Or perhaps even the longer you're here, the more it does that.
Anyway, as to the guy's ability... Not that I'm any judge, but I thought he was quite funny and very practised. People have said his dancing is 'old skool', but I don't care. I enjoy watching (good) tapdancers, tumbling Chinese acrobats and Charlie Chaplin films -- how 'old skool' is that!?
However, everything under the sun has its own setting. For the life of me, I'll never be able to disassociate this guy's routine from the intermission acts at Korea's seedier, old-foggey, strippy-girl cabaret nightclubs. And for most young Korean males who devote the time necessary to get that good and are that serious about it (presumably because they're not in school and are semi- or unemployed), one must conclude that success and the "big time" is precisely such a setting. Sandwiched there between the fire-eater and the mock lesbian love act. They often wear clown garb and clown makeup, the breakdancers (or hiphoppers, or whatever they call them) do. I suppose super-mega-stardom for them is a crack at becoming a second-tier MBC background dancer type person. I don't really know.
This isn't to suggest that the most talented hiphop dancers on the sidewalks of NYC have much rosier employment prospects. But jeez, what do I care about his future? I'm here to giggle at his antics today. And I did.  |
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