Disaster Breaking community defends b-girl Raygun and is hopeful for return to Olympic program - Broken mind break dancing

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Associated Press
BY KEN MAGUIRE
Updated 11:47 AM CDT, August 11, 2024

PARIS (AP) — The breaking community wants the world to give b-girl Raygun a break as the Paris Olympics wrapped up.

The sport made its Olympic debut in Paris — it might never be back — and one of the lasting images was the performance of an Australian b-girl known as Raygun who did a “kangaroo dance” and scored zero points.

In a show of support on Sunday, the head judge of the breaking competition said 36-year-old university professor Rachael Gunn was just trying to be original. And the breaking federation says it has offered mental health support in the wake of online criticism.

“Breaking is all about originality and bringing something new to the table and representing your country or region,” head judge Martin Gilian — known as MGbility — said at a press conference. “This is exactly what Raygun was doing. She got inspired by her surroundings, which in this case, for example, was a kangaroo.”

The breaking and hip-hop communities “definitely stand behind her,” he added.

“We have five criteria in the competitive judging system and just her level was maybe not as high as the other competitors,” MGbility said. “But again, that doesn’t mean that she did really bad. She did her best. She won the Oceania qualifier. ... Unfortunately for her, the other b-girls were better.”

Sergey Nifontov, general secretary of the World DanceSport Federation, said they’ve been in direct contact with Gunn and Australian Olympic team officials



“We offered (the) support of our safe-guarding officer. We are aware about what has happened, especially on social media, and definitely we should put the safety of the athlete, in this case, mental safety in first place,” he said. “She has us as a federation supporting her.”

Breaking — known to many break dancing, a term its performers dislike — is not on the program for the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028.

The next Summer Games after that will be in Brisbane, Australia.

“We believe that this has nothing to do with our chances for Brisbane 2032,” Nifontov said when asked about the criticism of Raygun and getting back into the Olympics.

Japan’s Ami Yuasa, known better as b-girl Ami, won the gold medal and said she wished Los Angeles organizers had waited to experience the energy between the athletes and the crowd at Place de la Concorde.

“I feel so sad about it not happening in Los Angeles, because breaking was born in the USA,” she said Sunday. “Breaking is not just a sport, it’s also expressing myself and art.”

Federation president Shawn Tay defended the evolution — from what started as an art form in the 1970s in the Bronx to an Olympic appearance. Critics have questioned the commercialization of the sport.

“Right from the beginning we were warned that some of the breakers — the top breakers — may not take part,” he said. “But now we have achieved to bring them all in — we have all the best breakers. Now they are fighting for the glory of their country — it’s a totally different thing. And that’s actually pushed them to improve so much, to work so hard in a more scientific way.”

 
It wasn't just the terrible moves that made her performance amazing. It was everything. The gym-teacher track suit, the derpy faces she was doing, her attempts to look cool, all added to it.

But the crowd and judge reactions were amazing. It ranged from horrified to confused, to amused. There was a guy with goofy, oversized sunglasses and a shit eating grin that knew he was witnessing a legendary train wreck.

The judges either looked stone-faced or outright offended and her opponents were trying not to laugh.
 
Ballroom dancing is at least as credible a sport as breakdancing, maybe they should go whole hog and add that?

At one point they did have ballroom dancing, but it wasn't a medal event, IICR. It was just a demonstration event. There's not enough niggers in it, so it'll always take a backseat to breakdancing. Maybe twerking will make an appearance, finally a sport Lizzo can compete in. Two, if they do a competitive eating event. Wouldn't that make your American hearts just sing for joy?
 
(Minor PL: I have family that trains dressage horses.) There's definite skill involved in making a 1200lb prey animal do intricate choreography while you look like you're not doing anything at all. That's years of training to get said animal to trust you over its own instincts. Also you have to have a lot of fine motor control to stay as motionless as possible while the horse is moving around. It's less about displaying your hard work in the moment like track, swimming, etc., but displaying all the work you put in during the years leading up so that it looks like it's effortless at the actual event.
I mean, I guess it's better than hobby horsing.
 
Here's her segment because many sources are copyright striked

View attachment 6299847

They're absolutely certain this wasn't some sort of psychotic break, or complex epileptic syndrome? Possibly a new sudden rapid onset degenerative neuromuscular disorder?

Gymnastics and figure skating aren’t subjective bullshit for the most part and here’s why: Either the judges know ahead of time what the competitor is going to try to pull off, or there are clearly defined rules on how your routine can even qualify to be judged.

In gymnastics, you’re pulling from an approved move set (yes there are banned routines) that everyone and their grandma has full working knowledge of how it is supposed to look. You’re being judged on execution of your routine, how you perform each move, did you cover your ass properly when you messed up slightly, did you stick the landing, etc.

Figure skating is a floor routine at rotational speeds that will snap you like a twig if you screw up. With the gymnastics bit mentioned above, especially the move set bit.

Women’s floor routines have become more subjective over the years, sure, but don’t knock those sports, they’re hardcore as hell.

Rhythmic gymnastics is still bullshit.
 
pa is more known for originality
For me, the issue with Paranoid Android was always his flow.
It's too choppy, he's not fluent in his transitions.
I like his concepts but his execution is lacking.

Menno's flow is perfect.
All his technical mistakes don't really matter when he can just go from move to move so smoothly.
That's why he managed to beat pretty much everyone over the last 10 years.
There was a "Menno smoked your favorite bboy" meme going around a wile ago.

Another thing is that PA is like 50 now.
He's not exactly inspiring the kids.
 
Olypics.jpg


She's starting to believe.
 
For me, the issue with Paranoid Android was always his flow.
It's too choppy, he's not fluent in his transitions.
I like his concepts but his execution is lacking.

Menno's flow is perfect.
All his technical mistakes don't really matter when he can just go from move to move so smoothly.
That's why he managed to beat pretty much everyone over the last 10 years.
There was a "Menno smoked your favorite bboy" meme going around a wile ago.

Another thing is that PA is like 50 now.
He's not exactly inspiring the kids.
a lot of the originality cats are pushing 50s, rawbzilla, midas, dyzee, pa, poeone. jams arent as fun since everyone dances the same. threads used to be hyperspecific but now every has rhe same shitty threadsets
 
a lot of the originality cats are pushing 50s, rawbzilla, midas, dyzee, pa, poeone. jams arent as fun since everyone dances the same. threads used to be hyperspecific but now every has rhe same shitty threadsets
Yeah, some of my inspirations like Style Elements are middle aged men now.

As for the threads, I think it's the standardization of breaking that caused it.
I'm from the last generation that started before Youtube.
People weren't all doing the same shit because they weren't all getting their breaking exposure from the same source.
Also, back in the day, threads were just something that you did when you wanted to get creative.
Now, threads are just as standardized as everything else, there are foundations and everyone learns those so they look the same.
Personally, I try to watch as little of other people's dancing as possible.
What is important is to be better than myself from the past.
I've been doing it for a long ass time, I've got enough inspirations.
 
Yeah, some of my inspirations like Style Elements are middle aged men now.

As for the threads, I think it's the standardization of breaking that caused it.
I'm from the last generation that started before Youtube.
People weren't all doing the same shit because they weren't all getting their breaking exposure from the same source.
Also, back in the day, threads were just something that you did when you wanted to get creative.
Now, threads are just as standardized as everything else, there are foundations and everyone learns those so they look the same.
Personally, I try to watch as little of other people's dancing as possible.
What is important is to be better than myself from the past.
I've been doing it for a long ass time, I've got enough inspirations.
yeah man, those golden years of seeing some cat whip out some new style are over. whats funny in the youtube era is that alien ness made a little comeback in 2011-2012.
 
OMG!!! Kiwi Farms is talking about breaking and I wasn't the person who made the thread.

As the resident expert in this, let me give my 2 cents:
I completely understand what she was trying to do.
One of the key aspects of breaking is originality.
If you're not original and you're only doing things that other people have done before, you don't get respect.
You have to innovate to some extent, you have to have your own style and moves.
...
That being said, her technique was seriously lacking.
The level these days in the competitive scene is really high.
You have to reeeeeeeeeally try to get anywhere.
Here's what breaking looks like today on a high level.

I honestly have no clue how this woman managed to qualify for the Olympics, there are so many good bgirls out there and they got this bitch to represent a nation.
Granted, Australia has one of the lowest levels in the world but still, this is some bullshit.

They all look like the midget monkey-style black fighter in Bloodsport that the Judo guy crushed. There's always guys breakdancing down by the Riverwalk in New Orleans, the tourists seem to like it. And the pickpockets working the crowd definitely like it.

 
Here's Rachael "Raygun" Gunn's full three rounds in high quality 1080p60. This is hard to come by as the copyright owners are very aggressively trying to remove this from all corners of the Internet near and far. Don't know how long it will stay up; download it while you can. Tried to attach it here but got message saying the attachment is too large for the server to process (it's 697,738,598 bytes). Don't want to degrade its quality with a shitty low bitrate re-encode and/or downscale.


(In case it gets removed, LBRY videos don't actually get deleted, they get blacklisted. You can try this LBRY client to access blacklisted videos. It hasn't been updated in a while so I don't know how well it works.)
 
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