Electric Slide

The Electric (better known as The Electric Slide) is a four wall line dance set to Marcia Griffiths and Bunny Wailer's song "Electric Boogie".[1]

Choreographer, pianist and Broadway performer Richard L. "Ric" Silver created the dance in 1976 from a demo of the Bunny Wailer recording. There are several variations of the dance. The original choreography has 22 steps,[2] but variants include the Freeze (16 step), Cowboy Motion (24 step), Cowboy Boogie (24 step), and the Electric Slide 2 (18 step). The 18-step variation became popular in 1989 and for ten years was listed by Linedancer Magazine as the number-one dance in the world.

Controversy

In 2007, Silver filed DMCA-based take-down notices to YouTube users who posted videos of people performing the 18-step dance variation.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed suit on behalf of videographer Kyle Machulis against Silver, asking the court to protect Machulis's free speech rights in recording a few steps of the dance in a documentary video posted to the Internet.[3]

On May 22, 2007, the EFF came to an agreement to settle the lawsuit: the settlement states that Mr. Silver will license the Electric Slide under a Creative Commons noncommercial license[4] and to also post the new license on any of his current or future websites that mention the Electric Slide.

gollark: Sounds exciting! What is "banano" and what can I do with it?!
gollark: Oh.
gollark: What is everyone doing?
gollark: > you know the guy who bought a pizza for a lot of bitcoins back in the day?Bitcoin wasn't worth much then, so it is not stupidious.
gollark: tfw?

References

External sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.