ONE HIT WONDERLAND: "Macarena" by Los del Rio

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • It's the most insane dance craze to ever exist. Two decades later we are still no closer to understanding the phenomenon known only as the Macarena.
    Special thanks to Julio Franco Sánchez, translator and Spanish cultural advisor. Translation services here: www.linkedin.c...
    Support Todd on Patreon! / toddintheshadows

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @TheColonel
    @TheColonel 2 года назад +4346

    Was at a heavy metal festival and between acts there was a DJ set who at one point played the macarena. Seeing 30,000 Metallica fans aged 5-75 doing the macarena was a special event

    • @CHMichael
      @CHMichael 2 года назад +7

      Munich Octoberfest - people in lederhosen. ( and drunk Italians)

    • @bobtheball5384
      @bobtheball5384 2 года назад +321

      Idk if this is horrifying or beautiful

    • @regularshowman3208
      @regularshowman3208 2 года назад +249

      What a majestic image.

    • @pdeitz7
      @pdeitz7 2 года назад +322

      @@bobtheball5384 definitely beautiful, there are some things all people are allowed to like without losing face, relish those things.

    • @billhicks8
      @billhicks8 2 года назад +84

      @@bobtheball5384
      I'm going with horrifying. Sorry but this tune was pounded into my head until I couldn't take it anymore. A metal concert would seem like the one safe refuge, goddamnit.

  • @kurtliedtke1001
    @kurtliedtke1001 2 года назад +2044

    That horrifying summer of hell I sold peanuts in the stands at a minor league baseball stadium.
    At the start of the season the opening beats of the Macarena would play a couple times during the game.
    Then it was between every inning.
    Then it was between every batter.
    By season's end it was damn near between every pitch.
    And every. single. time. the crowd would stand up and start dancing it. I wanted to puke all over their peanuts.
    I hated the macarena then SO MUCH, and this episode caused severe PTSD to that horrendous summer of hell.

    • @edwarddorey4480
      @edwarddorey4480 2 года назад +61

      I'm sorry for your experience; the nineties was a relatively good decade for America.

    • @ho-hyongyoo3251
      @ho-hyongyoo3251 2 года назад +182

      This is like reading a recollection from a war veteran

    • @abcdefghij337
      @abcdefghij337 2 года назад +35

      I get that every Christmas with another song. All I want for Christmas … is to not hear it.

    • @marckyle5895
      @marckyle5895 2 года назад +56

      @@abcdefghij337 Mariah's 'All I Want For Christmas' is still used to torture dolphins worldwide...

    • @casteanpreswyn7528
      @casteanpreswyn7528 2 года назад +39

      @@marckyle5895 and retail workers.

  • @sam3851
    @sam3851 2 года назад +1007

    I'm saying this as a zoomer, the Macarena has felt as eternal and omnipresent in my life as Ave Maria

    • @Thedjbj2
      @Thedjbj2 2 года назад +153

      Ave Macarena

    • @really-quite-exhausted
      @really-quite-exhausted 2 года назад +94

      Yes!! I was born in 2000. Maracarena had only been around for 4 years and yet I feel like it's been around literally forever.

    • @blahblahghost
      @blahblahghost 2 года назад +2

      @@Thedjbj2 lmfao

    • @MrAjking808
      @MrAjking808 2 года назад

      A what

    • @razeezar
      @razeezar 2 года назад +14

      As omniprescent in my life as the Big Mac.

  • @GlennDavey
    @GlennDavey Год назад +1001

    "Oppa Gangnam Style!" is the closest we've gotten to "Heyyyyy Macarena aayyyy!" in recent times

    • @NG-cf7zh
      @NG-cf7zh Год назад +13

      Fair

    • @TacticusPrime
      @TacticusPrime Год назад +120

      Oh, yeah, that's not a bad comparison. It was even the first RUclips video to hit a billion views, so it has a form of ubiquity.

    • @aceking_offsuit
      @aceking_offsuit Год назад +103

      Even that doesn't come close. Gangnam Style got played on radio for a little bit and reached #2. It was *popular.*
      The Macarena was *inescapable.*

    • @Sixfortyfive
      @Sixfortyfive Год назад +81

      ​@@aceking_offsuit The popularity of the two can't really be compared of course, but I always thought that the energy and appeal of Gangnam Style could basically be summed up as "Macarena as done by LMFAO."

    • @artistwithouttalent
      @artistwithouttalent Год назад +21

      In fairness to the Macarena, part of why Gangnam Style became A Thing™️ was to stick it to Justin Bieber. Macarena just... _was._

  • @leftofthedial1378
    @leftofthedial1378 2 года назад +4390

    I love that the intro has Todd using the same solemn voice he used when describing the aftermath of 9/11 and the lead-up to the War on Terror.

    • @Karan-Aujla
      @Karan-Aujla 2 года назад +17

      When did he do that?

    • @leftofthedial1378
      @leftofthedial1378 2 года назад +260

      @@Karan-Aujla Both for his Trainwreckords video on Madonna’s “American Life” and (albeit in a roundabout way) Lindsay Ellis’ video on music during the Bush administration.

    • @Karan-Aujla
      @Karan-Aujla 2 года назад +18

      @@leftofthedial1378 thank you big man!

    • @tylerhackner9731
      @tylerhackner9731 2 года назад +139

      Truly life changing moments the world will never forget. The Macarena and 9/11

    • @bronco5591
      @bronco5591 2 года назад +56

      Yes! I was gonna say this played out like a WWI doc leading to the assassination of Franz Ferdinand

  • @Dresdenflower
    @Dresdenflower 2 года назад +4303

    I was there in 1996. Everything Todd says is true. You could not escape it. My sixth grade art class once danced to this an entire class for no reason at all.

    • @SirChubbyBunny
      @SirChubbyBunny 2 года назад +312

      It's was like the dancing plague of 1518. You really couldn't escape it.

    • @kittykittybangbang9367
      @kittykittybangbang9367 2 года назад +103

      H3ll the Macarena was still there even by the 2010s. I remember I was in kindergarten, elementary, or preschool and we have celebration for Cinco de Mayo and we did some traditional Mexican themed stuff (well traditional as Tex-Mex go) and for one the dances we did the Macarena.

    • @Pheonixco
      @Pheonixco 2 года назад +75

      No you couldn't, its one of those rare ones that all AGES knew this song. There's only like 1 or 2 of these types of song in a generation.

    • @kanyon8734
      @kanyon8734 2 года назад +25

      At least the 90s sounds like a good time compared to now.

    • @DrMcFly28
      @DrMcFly28 2 года назад +35

      Yep, at the time our main place for a night out was a tiny club that almost exclusively played rock and grunge... and yet Macarena wormed itself in somehow, occasionally getting played 3-4 times in one night

  • @aidanschuttler4371
    @aidanschuttler4371 2 года назад +989

    i have genuinely never considered that the Macarena was even released. like it feels like it simply exists. i didnt even know it had a video

    • @jessehammer123
      @jessehammer123 Год назад +129

      That’s how I feel about the Macarena too. I was born in 2003 and I’ve always felt like the Macarena is just a fact of the universe.

    • @CoingamerFL
      @CoingamerFL Год назад +50

      it might as well be the first song ever made

    • @EllieC130
      @EllieC130 Год назад +23

      @@CoingamerFL Right? Put it up against some 1930s Cole Porter song and it's like "nah the Macarena's been around long than that".

    • @JustWowNick
      @JustWowNick Месяц назад +1

      This literally also describes my thought process exactly. I’m pretty sure *every single event* with music I’ve been to has played the Macarena at least once.

  • @TheGreatDanish
    @TheGreatDanish 2 года назад +2329

    Honestly this is probably the most wholesome OHW ever. Los del Rio seem like a pair of pretty talented men who have a lot of pride in their culture suddenly picking up random international fame and just... going bsck home to be national celebrities. Only now they're even richer.
    No drug induced spirals, no lasting resentment over no one appreciating their musical talent, just two honest artists making a charmingly cringe Christmas remix and living life.

    • @CoralCopperHead
      @CoralCopperHead 2 года назад +21

      You had me until you used the word 'cringe' as an adjective while expecting to be taken seriously.

    • @LarryRouse
      @LarryRouse 2 года назад +79

      Have you seen the Scatman one?

    • @JohnSmith-mk1rj
      @JohnSmith-mk1rj 2 года назад +235

      @@CoralCopperHead Yeah, I'm sorry, but 'charmingly cringe' is actually a perfectly apt description of the Macarena: Christmas remix. I actually prefer 'cursed,' cuz that thing is _bad,_ but kinda in a cute way.

    • @TheGreatDanish
      @TheGreatDanish 2 года назад +94

      @@CoralCopperHead kinda cringe of you, ngl

    • @RaveDecoy242
      @RaveDecoy242 2 года назад +80

      @@CoralCopperHead "eXpEcTiNg tO bE tAkEn sErIoUsLy" 🤡🤡🤡

  • @ksplatypus
    @ksplatypus 2 года назад +669

    I had no clue Fangoria had part in creating the Macarena. You have to understand, the lead singer, Alaska, is very well-known in Spain and Latin America as a sort of goth-punk-new wave-electropop act and her aesthetic is purposefully out there. This is like finding out that Robert Smith had a hand in creating Barbie Girl.

    • @CharizardMaster69
      @CharizardMaster69 2 года назад +13

      wait this man is from Spain/Latin America and her name is Alaska?!

    • @Belgand
      @Belgand 2 года назад +78

      Or if Trent Reznor had been the one who remixed "Who Let the Dogs Out?" from the original version.
      That had a similar arc. We really need to be aware of the tremendous potential that dance remixes of songs originally written in traditional folk styles had in the '90s. If we forget, we open ourselves to allowing it to happen again.

    • @sweetprimrose
      @sweetprimrose 2 года назад +52

      @@Belgand You know what he did produce and win a fucking Grammy for - Old Town Road. Trent Reznor has a fucking COUNTRY MUSIC AWARD. The Fangoria things makes me really think about how much popular music cribs from Dark Wave both old and new, a Metal and Industrial DJ friend of mine used to play Love Love by Take That to total snobs and ask them what Industrial band they think it is before showing them that it's from a british boy band.

    • @Alex-fv2qs
      @Alex-fv2qs 2 года назад +15

      @@CharizardMaster69 , Her real name is María Olvido (Mary of the Oblivion/Forgetfulness) Gara

    • @diegoferreiro9478
      @diegoferreiro9478 2 года назад

      This Robert Smith?
      ruclips.net/video/4rpcTB7YMs8/видео.html

  • @MrRight-xd4vt
    @MrRight-xd4vt 2 года назад +2358

    Loved the presentation of tracking how much time was left until “Peak Macarena”. Felt less like a one hit wonderland episode and more like Todd tracking a viral outbreak or national tragedy.

    • @thrownstair
      @thrownstair 2 года назад +77

      If those two radio stations hadn’t added it to their rotation, the world may have been largely spared. Butterfly effect…

    • @spencerwood2247
      @spencerwood2247 2 года назад +124

      I was hoping he'd go whole hog on the Majora's Mask motif and put Los Del Rios' faces on the moon.

    • @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley
      @BewareTheLilyOfTheValley 2 года назад +2

      @@spencerwood2247 Lol!

    • @Volvandese
      @Volvandese 2 года назад +23

      A tonally correct choice, I think

    • @endymallorn
      @endymallorn 2 года назад +16

      It just reminded me of Majora's Mask, honestly. Tracking the time until the end of the world.

  • @pajamapantsjack5874
    @pajamapantsjack5874 2 года назад +324

    Funny story about this song for me, in elementary school we had like a Jewish history week where we were read books about Hanukkah and stuff like that, and then we had like a cake party and they played and taught us the Macarena, and for a bit of time in my life I thought it was a traditional Jewish dance

    • @carolineboon5647
      @carolineboon5647 2 года назад +41

      This is my favorite macarana story

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia 2 года назад +19

      …ok, now I’m imaging “If I were a rich man” but the Macarena

    • @Annodamydal
      @Annodamydal 2 года назад +9

      It’s been played at enough bar and bat mitzvahs that it practically is. I was born in 1993, so I was going to a bunch between 2004 and 2009. Already several years after Macarena fever already, but I don’t think I attended a single party where the Macarena didn’t get played.

    • @user-rz3nu3lm5r
      @user-rz3nu3lm5r 3 месяца назад +3

      Sorry to reply a whole year later lmao but this is one of the funniest things I’ve ever read, thank you

    • @SuperJNG18
      @SuperJNG18 Месяц назад

      I mean, we'll claim it!

  • @korisnik18
    @korisnik18 2 года назад +1295

    In 1996 I was 6 years old, living in a remote village in the most rural part of a country that was in the middle of a WAR and I knew how to do the Macarena. We didn't even own a TV till about a year later, that's how massive this was. Out of all hit singles ever to be released, this is the only one that is truly admirable imho.

    • @SuperJNG18
      @SuperJNG18 Год назад +63

      Judging by your username (forgive me if I'm wrong), would you be from somewhere in the Balkans?

    • @witchflowers6942
      @witchflowers6942 Год назад +1

      @@SuperJNG18where else could they possibly be from?

    • @SuperJNG18
      @SuperJNG18 Год назад +136

      @@witchflowers6942 I dunno. There was more than one land war going on in the ‘90s!

    • @witchflowers6942
      @witchflowers6942 Год назад +2

      @@SuperJNG18 fair enough lol..

    • @myguitardidyermom212
      @myguitardidyermom212 Год назад +65

      ​@@witchflowers6942 Africa was the home of several wars during the reign of the macarena.

  • @iIliterati
    @iIliterati 2 года назад +795

    The Macarena was so huge 1996, I spent the entire year in hospital for children, a hospital basically cut off from all outside influences, and multiple times the nursing staff would wrangle all of the children together and we would do the Macarena.
    Two dozen or so kids who were freshly burned and in a tremendous amount of pain, and we'd all succumb to the Macarena.

    • @redholm
      @redholm 2 года назад +43

      It was so huge that I remember my kindergarten teachers Teaching me the dance in 96

    • @joshgallie1543
      @joshgallie1543 2 года назад +59

      "Two dozen or so kids who were freshly burned and in a tremendous amount of pain, and we'd all succumb to the Macarena"
      Jeez isn't being "freshly burned" enough of a torture 🙄🙄

    • @PassTheMarmalade1957
      @PassTheMarmalade1957 2 года назад +76

      I was a 4 year old girl, living on a private diplomatic compound in the United Arab Emirates, with exactly one other family. You best believe I still knew the Macarena.

    • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
      @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 2 года назад +13

      That’s so awful & mindmeltingly cruel. Hope you’re thriving.

    • @kawaiilotus
      @kawaiilotus 2 года назад +21

      @@joshgallie1543 also considering the macarena is a very move your joints and limbs around in a jerky yet fluid motion, probably the worst song out there to dance to if you're a new burn victim!

  • @FTWKGaming
    @FTWKGaming 2 года назад +162

    “Any event with three or more people was at risk of breaking out into the macarena”
    This is such a good line lmao

  • @joearnold6881
    @joearnold6881 2 года назад +1181

    I love, _love_ that the two old Macarena singers… kinda can’t manage to successfully do the Macarena, the world’s simplest dance.
    They’re adorable.

    • @AdolfStalin
      @AdolfStalin Год назад +27

      Never expected to find an anarcho communist in the comment section

    • @witchflowers6942
      @witchflowers6942 Год назад +6

      i cant either lol. I can do all the moves of course but im always out of sync somehow

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Год назад +3

      I think The Twist is simpler.

    • @daemonspudguy
      @daemonspudguy 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​​@@AdolfStalingreetings. I'm another ancom, although I don't have the flag.

  • @moonboogien8908
    @moonboogien8908 2 года назад +873

    As a wedding DJ from 1999-2013, I've heard this song thousands of times.
    Everyone wanted it played, even though deep down they didn't want to hear it.

    • @GlennDavey
      @GlennDavey Год назад +132

      And even deeper down, they really did.

    • @Demiglitch
      @Demiglitch Год назад +1

      It's like those parasites that control ants or glow in snail eyes. They are possessed to do it, but the true self is inside screaming.

    • @ErieRosewood
      @ErieRosewood 8 месяцев назад +16

      my dad had the band banned from playing it at my parents wedding. told them, in all seriousness, if you play it once, im not paying you.

    • @serenitymoon825
      @serenitymoon825 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ErieRosewoodI don't blame him

  • @V-grandraccoon
    @V-grandraccoon 2 года назад +700

    As someone born after, I am SHOCKED that this song is from the 90s. The Macarena feels eternal. I always assumed there was some version from the 1940s without the beat.

    • @thewrongmusic5017
      @thewrongmusic5017 2 года назад +28

      Imo, it sounds a bit like "'Tain't What You Do", which is from 1939. It's not exactly the same, though, just a similar tune.

    • @xenos_n.
      @xenos_n. 2 года назад +8

      Oh man if you existed back then, you know when it happened 😑 lol

    • @schris3
      @schris3 2 года назад +15

      I think exactly the same, but what you are saying it only happened with Mambo no. 5.

    • @xenos_n.
      @xenos_n. 2 года назад +21

      @@schris3 the late 90's were wild. The amount of huge hits was just going nuts.

    • @benjaminpeckman2308
      @benjaminpeckman2308 2 года назад +28

      I think another thing that set it apart is that its "kitsch phase" lasted longer than other similar songs. Like when I was in kindergarten (~'02), we were taught the months of the year via the macarena dance. And I remember it being fairly present throughout all of my elementary school years.
      The song I find most similar to it is Gangnam Style. Both are foreign hits that got big internationally partially due to the dance associated with it. And both lead to explosions of international crossover hits (the latin pop explosion and the rise of Kpop respectively). The difference is that after 2012, Gangnam Style didn't really stay with the culture. Once it reached 1B views in Dec, I never really saw it again. Once 2013 rolled around, people were now obsessed with the next viral hit ("What does the Fox Say?"). I doubt there were kindergarteners being taught with the song 6 years later in 2018.

  • @destroyedforcomfort
    @destroyedforcomfort 2 года назад +905

    So fun fact, The Macarena and La Vida Loca are two of the loudest (mastered with the least amount of audio headroom) songs released at the time. It's like they were designed specifically to fit on shitty digital music players before they even existed.

    • @danielmukhlis5709
      @danielmukhlis5709 Год назад +63

      Ah, the loudness war.

    • @GlennDavey
      @GlennDavey Год назад +35

      The Loudness Wars began on late 90's FM radio

    • @HikariTheGardevoir
      @HikariTheGardevoir Год назад +6

      what does audio headroom mean?

    • @drpibisback7680
      @drpibisback7680 Год назад +80

      @@HikariTheGardevoir All recorded sound essentially lives within a limited volume range as the base before amplification. Think of it as the percentage of the loudest possible volume from your speaker, with 0 being silence and 100 being maximum volume. Headroom is the difference between the level of your recording and that 100. The greater the difference between the volume of the recording and the 100, the more headroom there is. When you hit that 100 and start to go above it, the audio becomes distorted - similar to hitting one's head on a low ceiling, hence the term "headroom."

    • @pigfish99
      @pigfish99 Год назад +42

      @@HikariTheGardevoir in addition to what they said, the smaller the audio footprint, the more they can crank it up to max volume without blowing out some parts. So a song that has very dynamic volume that is soft in some parts, and louds in others has a much bigger one than one that stays relatively the same, like the macarena.
      I'm over simplifying it, but that's the relative gist.

  • @bricemckeel255
    @bricemckeel255 2 года назад +746

    As someone roughly Todd’s age, I felt it so severely when he says “it’s just this thing that was happening”. I don’t remember anyone teaching me the dance it just… happened

    • @fugithegreat
      @fugithegreat 2 года назад +42

      Same! It's like suddenly everybody knew how to do it. EVERYBODY...

    • @fourcatsandagarden
      @fourcatsandagarden 2 года назад +32

      I remember learning it in kindergarten. But I also don't remember actually being taught the moves. Just...doing them. Several times a month. Almost as often as we did head shoulders knees and toes.

    • @Avrysatos
      @Avrysatos 2 года назад +12

      yeah none of us learned. I was in highschool.

    • @RykerJones28
      @RykerJones28 2 года назад +14

      I don't remember ever learning or being taught it. I just knew it.

    • @elaiej
      @elaiej 2 года назад +3

      I would have been in kindergarten in 96, and I remember it was the other class' song at the end of the year concert.

  • @ronenson1023
    @ronenson1023 2 года назад +524

    The Macarena (and Seven Nation Army) has done this cool thing where it's transcended and became, in a literal sense, modern folk music.

    • @ellipszilonq
      @ellipszilonq 8 месяцев назад +7

      I absolutely love this

    • @agnessofiacastrocarvalho774
      @agnessofiacastrocarvalho774 5 месяцев назад

      I've never heard Seven nation army

    • @sirpsychosussy
      @sirpsychosussy 5 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@agnessofiacastrocarvalho774 Really? You may not have recognised it, but are you sure you've never heard it?

    • @Disassociated24
      @Disassociated24 4 месяца назад +3

      @@agnessofiacastrocarvalho774yeah but ya heard the riff

    • @Just.Kidding
      @Just.Kidding Месяц назад

      @@agnessofiacastrocarvalho774 Yes, you have. You may not have known what it was, especially if you've never intentionally listened to it, but - assuming you live in America, and are not deaf and/or a child (even then, you'd have to be a pretty young child) - you _have_ heard it, whether you know it or not.

  • @underworlddreams9511
    @underworlddreams9511 2 года назад +282

    I remember seeing the Macarena happen at a frickin' metal show. That's when you know it's hit critical mass.

    • @timmy841212
      @timmy841212 2 года назад +1

      Wow!!!!

    • @Johncornwell103
      @Johncornwell103 2 года назад +4

      that would be awesome to see

    • @juanpabloperezgomez4349
      @juanpabloperezgomez4349 2 года назад +10

      I mean, Brujería covered the song (as "Marijuana"). For the curious ones...
      ruclips.net/video/7twl-ZAFKUw/видео.html

    • @picahudsoniaunflocked5426
      @picahudsoniaunflocked5426 2 года назад +15

      Metalheads are pretty open minded so I’d be delighted to see that but maybe not surprised. Then again, many wrestlers are open minded too, & I thought true critical mass would be WWF doing the Macarena in the ring. & I am almost sure that must have happened & I half-expected to see the 90s wrestlers & the immortal Undertaker doing it in the ring when Todd did clip mélange.

    • @Hellboy-ge6po
      @Hellboy-ge6po 2 года назад +11

      @@picahudsoniaunflocked5426 Some metalheads are, although these days the metal scene is full of a lot of close-minded elitists who argue over subgenres and what is and isn't "real metal". Obviously that's not all metalheads but those types are very prevalent and vocal on the internet.

  • @DigiRangerScott
    @DigiRangerScott 2 года назад +1495

    Ten years of One Hit Wonderland, and it has FINALLY come

    • @PMcGJellyP
      @PMcGJellyP 2 года назад +34

      Has it been that long? Omg we ams old!!

    • @DigiRangerScott
      @DigiRangerScott 2 года назад +38

      @@PMcGJellyP April 7, 2012 was the first episode release, yeah, it was very early in my Todd viewing

    • @ritacirocavalcante
      @ritacirocavalcante 2 года назад +11

      The time has come, and so am I

    • @whatamisupposedtoputhere
      @whatamisupposedtoputhere 2 года назад +2

      @@DigiRangerScott weren’t his early episodes on MySpace Video?

    • @DigiRangerScott
      @DigiRangerScott 2 года назад +11

      @@whatamisupposedtoputhere One Hit Wonderland didn’t start until the date I stated, when he was already on Blip. He seemed exclusively Pop Song Reviews before then

  • @Tomgaar
    @Tomgaar 2 года назад +2506

    It's surreal hearing from the Macarena at this point in life. As a Sevillian who lived through it, I can shed some light about Los del Ríos and their popularity. Basically, their main thing is that they've remained highly beloved in their hometown by virtue of being annual staples of the Sevilla's Fair, which is a regional/national celebration in which everyone dances Sevillanas, drinks rebujito (which is a cocktail made up of lime soda and white wine), eats a lot and goes to a small carnival for a week in April. During that time, the local councils erect small, private booths (we call them casetas) and dance and drink all day with family members and friends. Los del Río have mostly survived in that environment, and appropriately enough their earlier hit "Sevilla tiene un color especial" is much more popular than the Macarena at this point. Other than that, I wouldn't say they remain that popular, but it's true that Sevillanas changed a big deal after their big successes of the 80's, so they remain influential despite not being that active.
    As someone who was very much sick and tired of them by the late 90's, I've been avoiding the Fair like the plague since then.

    • @glorsvids
      @glorsvids 2 года назад +66

      I remember “Sevilla tiene un color especial” from the movie Ocho apellidos vascos. I went to Sevilla for a weekend trip while I studied abroad in Granada so you reminded of the ferias that are common in Andalucía.

    • @schris3
      @schris3 2 года назад +44

      Now that you described the rebujito, I'm now interested on flying to Spain to drink it, me being raised in Northern Mexico, there's mostly hard drinks due to German influence, I only taste them but I never liked them and never really drink them, I always had an affinity on light cocktails.

    • @yltraviole
      @yltraviole 2 года назад +35

      Not from Sevilla, but we have a similar local festival that's frequented by local musicians that are ppopular during that time of the year, and only that time of the year, and I'm just trying to imagine one of their songs becoming as popular as the macarena. It must've been absolutely surreal.

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 2 года назад +13

      Thank you 🙏 for your perspective

    • @USALeonHeart
      @USALeonHeart 2 года назад +16

      Rebujitos sounds tasty, I'm gonna try that later.

  • @slyasleep
    @slyasleep 2 года назад +665

    You know what? I think the harmonizing by the titular gentlemen is underappreciated. It has a hauntingly guttural, ageless, even primal quality. And the chorus has a nursery rhyme meter that simply makes it fun to sing along to. It‘s really quite an original package in and of itself.

    • @Chelaxim
      @Chelaxim 2 года назад +5

      You're right.

    • @artistwithouttalent
      @artistwithouttalent 5 месяцев назад +5

      This song reminds me of Funkytown, as described by Todd: it is the most perfect, fully actualized version of itself. Every element is in harmony despite the inherent underlying contradictions of its existence, and none of them are overdone or outstay their welcome.

  • @VinchVolt
    @VinchVolt 2 года назад +495

    It says something about this song's success that, to someone like myself, born after its heyday, "Macarena" feels like one of those things that has always been around. You could've told me that people in Mesopotamia danced the Macarena and I would've believed you.

    • @Jessamine29
      @Jessamine29 2 года назад +38

      I bet you could do a decent version of that hook on a lyre

    • @blarg2429
      @blarg2429 2 года назад +42

      @BDWriter Queen Elizabeth was there _doing_ the Macarena when God created the universe.

    • @Aforementioned
      @Aforementioned 2 года назад +31

      @@Jessamine29 "Heeeyyy Mes'potamia!"

    • @SWalkerTTU
      @SWalkerTTU 2 года назад +11

      I think there are paintings of the Macarena in Ancient Egyptian tombs.

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 6 месяцев назад +1

      I read this comment to my 2006 child and asked if it seems true, and she said yes 😂

  • @nondescriptcat5620
    @nondescriptcat5620 2 года назад +563

    the original version of the Macarena is actually kinda fire. fun, thumpy rhythm, and a couple pretty fierce sax riffs.
    Christmas Macarena, on the other hand, is uniquely cursed.

    • @TheStoenk
      @TheStoenk 2 года назад +8

      With original do you mean the unremixed one?

    • @nondescriptcat5620
      @nondescriptcat5620 2 года назад +10

      @@TheStoenk yea the 93 version.

    • @optiquemusic6204
      @optiquemusic6204 2 года назад +10

      Re: "Christmas Macarena," it sounds like an incredibly cheap cash grab, but you could always do worse for Electronic Dance Christmas songs.
      Growing up with "Australia's Funniest Home Video's" I've always associated the Remix with a roast chicken doing the dance. Really.

    • @simplypodly
      @simplypodly 2 года назад +4

      @@optiquemusic6204 wow this unlocked a 2000s aussie memory

  • @klavakkhazga3996
    @klavakkhazga3996 2 года назад +331

    As a spanish person, it's incredibly funny to hear you talk of Los del Rio like they're two mysterious old men

    • @DrMcFly28
      @DrMcFly28 2 года назад +73

      In Spain everyone knows they're actually an extremely popular crime-fighting duo

    • @decepticonmecha
      @decepticonmecha 2 года назад +1

      How was his pronunciation of Spanish words?

    • @peterelpanda2
      @peterelpanda2 2 года назад +29

      @@decepticonmecha Good enough to understand for a man who clearly doesn't talk Spanish regularly.

    • @schris3
      @schris3 2 года назад +36

      @@decepticonmecha I'll say as a Mexican that Todd's spanish pronunciation is strangely charming despite being definitely an American speaking it.

    • @decepticonmecha
      @decepticonmecha 2 года назад +1

      Cool. As someone who's only language is English: sounded good to me. LOL

  • @NickFrustration
    @NickFrustration 7 месяцев назад +35

    "no one did the macarena, the macarena did you"
    speaking as a guy who lived thru this craze, accurate

  • @zedkuchalo
    @zedkuchalo 2 года назад +604

    I'm a Zambian who was 7 years old and living in Botswana when the Macarena craze happened and yes, Todd is absolutely correct. It was insane and nothing since is even remotely comparable 😂

    • @credenzamostro
      @credenzamostro 2 года назад +50

      Anytime someone says "Oh EVERYONE knew this one fad/who this person was" I always go "I don't think kids in Africa did", but the thing about the Macarena is that even THEY knew about it!

    • @keyscored3710
      @keyscored3710 2 года назад +15

      @@credenzamostro cringe

    • @credenzamostro
      @credenzamostro 2 года назад +7

      @@keyscored3710 ok?

    • @Krul6
      @Krul6 2 года назад +21

      Was 10 years old on the Dutch country side and this song was everywhere, people forget that we listened to the radio a lot more in the 90s and unless it was a hardrock station every station was playing it multiple times a day for months and people loved it. Then the parodies came in, so this song was in the public eye for well over 2 years before it died down. Except Gangnam Style I've never seen anything like it.

    • @zedkuchalo
      @zedkuchalo 2 года назад +20

      @@credenzamostro may I ask why - in a world that has been globalized for over 500 years - you'd think African kids miss out on viral fads?? Especially trends that happened during the age of radio and internet??

  • @zersch.
    @zersch. 2 года назад +214

    My entire family danced to this in 96 around a bonfire. It was like some Pagan ritual I was too young to understand, but I was curious and willing to summon the specter of Los del Rio right there on a farm in Tennessee.

    • @oremukihss
      @oremukihss 2 года назад +18

      lmao if the macarena were a summoning ritual it could have summoned ANYTHING. Can you imagine that much power in the 90s?

    • @Jordan-zk2wd
      @Jordan-zk2wd 2 года назад +20

      I'm imagining the ending of The Wicker Man, but instead of singing "Summer is Icumen In" you got Christopher Lee leading everyone in the Macarena.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia 2 года назад +4

      @@Jordan-zk2wd
      That is some cursed imagery you implanted in my mind
      Thank you

  • @ViloniousTV
    @ViloniousTV 2 года назад +654

    I'm not even kidding, if aliens ever show up, this is the song we have to show them first. It will tell them everything they need to know about our culture, and they would probably also do the dance.

    • @SavageGreywolf
      @SavageGreywolf 2 года назад +52

      Don't worry, if there's one radio broadcast that aliens are most likely to pick up, it's every radio station on the planet playing the Macarena simultaneously on repeat for four years straight in the mid 90s.

    • @Bluecho4
      @Bluecho4 2 года назад +32

      @@SavageGreywolf Imagine being alien conspiracy theorists, trying desperately to decode the human transmission that, for a brief time, seemed to dominate Earth's output. Other aliens correctly guess that it was just a particularly popular bit of music. But you know they're fools.

    • @funobot7344
      @funobot7344 2 года назад +5

      @@Bluecho4 saving this for later

    • @Zer0Spinn
      @Zer0Spinn 2 года назад +9

      I bet they would be the ones blasting it as they come down thinking it is some kind of world anthem for us.

    • @methodtomymaddness9081
      @methodtomymaddness9081 2 года назад +6

      next up on the alien arrival playlist: "Gangnam Style"

  • @DiamondBrickZ
    @DiamondBrickZ 2 года назад +348

    god, that compilation at the end is fucking hypnotic. i feel like if you left someone in a room with a screen playing nothing but videos and covers of the macarena, they’d ascend to a higher plane of existence/descend into macareninsanity

  • @Arthus850
    @Arthus850 2 года назад +530

    I still remember my high school prom night in 2010. At first hardly anyone was dancing, just staying at their tables, eating, and chatting. Then Macarena came on, and suddenly everyone jumped onto the dance floor and started doing the dance. After that the dance floor was full for every following song. That’s how powerful this one song and dance is.

    • @dildonius
      @dildonius 2 года назад +69

      The sheer overwhelming kitschy lameness of the dance obliterated not only everyone's egos, but also the proverbial "ice."
      Beautiful.

    • @RoryKatherin03
      @RoryKatherin03 2 года назад +17

      Similar situation happened at a party I was at a couple weeks ago. It was an afterparty for an *Irish dance competition*, and pretty much everyone on the floor (myself included) were too young to have been there when it came out. If you weren’t on the floor before the Macarena came on, then you certainly were after (or you were like me at least doing it at your seat)

    • @pablodelsegundo9502
      @pablodelsegundo9502 2 года назад +14

      Only the Souljah Boy dance came anywhere close since then.

    • @dildonius
      @dildonius 2 года назад +10

      @@pablodelsegundo9502 Hahaha
      Not even close.

    • @bespectacledheroine7292
      @bespectacledheroine7292 2 года назад +17

      This tracks more than Todd's proclamation that it's "just" a novelty song post the 90s and only garners a handful of dancers at each event. I went to school in the early 2010s and it's a nostalgic favorite, I can guarantee doubters that.

  • @ncjuppiter9595
    @ncjuppiter9595 2 года назад +371

    I lived thru it and I cannot explain it. It was one of the strangest episodes in American history. If you look at Wikipedia there were various “dancing plagues” throughout history and I’m dead serious when I say that I think that’s what Macarena was. It was a mass hysteria event, and only a few months after it ended, ppl were already saying, “what the heck was that?”

    • @ChildrenOfRadiation
      @ChildrenOfRadiation 2 года назад +36

      > strangest episodes in American history
      Oh, come on, it's 100% an American culture thing to take a fun thing, overuse it to death while simultaneously sucking all the fun out of it and then hate it with passion. That was the case with disco, post-grunge, hair metal, you name it. The only "strange" thing is that it's a foreign tune.

    • @ncjuppiter9595
      @ncjuppiter9595 2 года назад +9

      @@ChildrenOfRadiation well when you put it that way, it makes a lot more sense. I stand corrected.

    • @TetsuDeinonychus
      @TetsuDeinonychus 2 года назад

      @@ChildrenOfRadiation You speak the truth!

    • @jimmym3352
      @jimmym3352 2 года назад +32

      American thing? This was world wide. They would not stop playing it at night when I was stuck in Sicily while waiting to get back to my ship (I was in the Navy at the time). I don't normally listen to that type of music, but I had to learn to like it. You were going to hear it whether you wanted to or not.

    • @ajpoopfucker
      @ajpoopfucker 2 года назад +2

      It's just a fun catchy song with an easy dance it's not that crazy

  • @rayreineu
    @rayreineu 2 года назад +385

    To this day it is the ONLY dance I've found every single person knows when the dance floor lights up. Doesn't matter the person's age, the country, the occasion - if the macarena plays, everyone knows the moves. Like it's some kind of primal muscle memory that became part of the human DNA in 1996. Just incredible.

    • @PopeSalty1
      @PopeSalty1 2 года назад +19

      I was a club DJ in the 90s, and yet, even with a gun to my head, I still could not give you anything near a full rendition of the Macarena dance. It is one of the few points of pride I have left.

    • @lilianatintin1943
      @lilianatintin1943 2 года назад +1

      That and el meneaito hehehe

    • @felixhenson9926
      @felixhenson9926 2 года назад +13

      I think the closest competitor is the Cha Cha Slide

    • @MsMvsc
      @MsMvsc 2 года назад +2

      Cha cha slide is the shy kid dance anthem

    • @Geostelar4920
      @Geostelar4920 2 года назад

      @@felixhenson9926 I would argue the Cupid Shuffle is another competetor

  • @zaphodbond
    @zaphodbond Год назад +206

    I was traveling in Spain in 93 and can confirm it was a summer hit while I was there and the dance was already a thing. I was surprised when that "obscure" song and dance from my travel suddenly became a hit years latter.

  • @kriosuranous3440
    @kriosuranous3440 2 года назад +417

    As someone born in 2003, I didn’t realize Macarena was released in the 90s, and the fact that it was blows my mind. In kindergarten, we learned the months of the year to the dance. To me it’s one of those songs that feels like it’s existed since the dawn of time, with the dance having been made even earlier. You described it as akin to Pogs or Tomodachi, but I’ve thought of it as the same as rock, paper, scissors.

    • @erinledwith3057
      @erinledwith3057 2 года назад +14

      I’m a 2003 kid too! We did it at prom recently and at least every year in some type of school-wide event it has come on. It’s genuinely been with me for as long as I can remember haha

    • @Belgand
      @Belgand 2 года назад +11

      Tamagatchi. Apparently as a combination of "tamago" (egg) and "uotchi" (watch). Although I can't imagine that, given how common (and easy) puns and wordplay are in Japanese, they didn't recognize the similarity to tomodachi (friend). I'd long thought it was the intent with it being an "egg friend".

    • @fbrown9861
      @fbrown9861 2 года назад +25

      2004 here. this video violently forced me to consider that there was a time when the macarena DIDNT exist

    • @lowpolyzoe
      @lowpolyzoe 2 года назад +7

      2001 in NZ, we had a dance workout thing at my primary school with the macarena

    • @SiraSpirit
      @SiraSpirit 2 года назад +9

      I'm startled to realize this song came out within my lifetime. Only a couple years before I was in kindergarten. How?

  • @badassitudepostergirl4229
    @badassitudepostergirl4229 2 года назад +262

    Some of your younger audience here! I wasn’t a twinkle in my parent’s eyes when this song was a hit, yet my entire generation knows it. For me at least it was cultural osmosis, I probably learned the dance in 2011 when in gym class when the teacher played the song and people started doing the dance. Where they learned it from I have no clue. But the Macarena played at a wedding I went to last week and everybody did the dance. This thing has serious staying power and a terrifying generational reach.

    • @thatpersonmariah3997
      @thatpersonmariah3997 2 года назад +7

      Same, I actually discovered it because my Kindergarten teacher used the dance and melody to teach us the months of the year.

    • @kitchensinkchronicles3272
      @kitchensinkchronicles3272 2 года назад +8

      same! i learned this thing at school and it was STILL an inside joke between me and the cast of the last musical i was in just a few months ago where during the serious scenes we’d always dance this just offstage while staring at the actors performing, and everyone backstage would join in. we were all born at the turn of the millennium. yet every single person knew it.

    • @leonardo.diCATio
      @leonardo.diCATio 2 года назад +9

      My highschool band played this song just a couple years ago, and had a whole stadium of people dancing it. Including the kids marching. Absolutely terrifying.

    • @SuperJNG18
      @SuperJNG18 2 года назад +8

      I first heard it as a Sesame Street version on a CD I had as a kid. It's a lot like "Don't Worry, Be Happy" in the sense that it's so omnipresent you almost can't imagine a world pre-"Macarena."

    • @FilthyCasualty
      @FilthyCasualty 2 года назад

      I never did the dance to the song. I HAVE done the dance without knowing it was from the Macarena. My Kindergarten teacher made us do the dance to a little song for the months of the year. Each month would be one of the motions.

  • @sadiemcc9363
    @sadiemcc9363 2 года назад +293

    As a zoomer, I never knew the origin of the song, nor when I learned it. It’s endemic now, everyone my age knows how to do it (it’s a staple at proms). I don’t think of it as outdated or anything it’s just…there. Like Cotton Eye Joe and the Cupid Shuffle. It’s just what you do at dances. It’s a little cringe but it’s still very fun.

    • @bbyghostie1044
      @bbyghostie1044 2 года назад +27

      I was a little kid when it got big. Even back then, I assumed the song had always existed lol. It really feels eternal and atemporal.

    • @stryke-jn3kv
      @stryke-jn3kv 2 года назад +19

      ...zoomers know Cotton Eye Joe? Well TIL, I thought that artefact of the 90s was now only remembered by olds and those that watch youtubers covering artefacts of the 90s.

    • @fuziontonygaming
      @fuziontonygaming 2 года назад +1

      I don’t think it’s really that cringe if anything modern whiny pop is cringe

    • @schris3
      @schris3 2 года назад +35

      "It's a little cringe, but is still very fun"
      As a 90s kid, I'm glad zoomers think that, that's what I also feel.

    • @ninaavins4887
      @ninaavins4887 2 года назад +13

      @@stryke-jn3kv Yeah, when my Gym teachers hadn't thought of an actual lesson plan, they would just throw Cotton Eye Joe on over the speakers and yell at us if we stopped moving.
      (And my Kindergarten teacher used a parody of the Macarena to teach us the months of the year)

  • @dunnowy123
    @dunnowy123 2 года назад +117

    This song JUST PLAYED at my sister's wedding. It's crazy how ubiquitous it is and literally everyone knows how to dance it, decades later

  • @SynGirl32
    @SynGirl32 2 года назад +221

    The 70 year-old singers of Macarena showing up at an André Rieu concert might be the most single-handedly boomer thing I've ever had the chance to experience.

    • @blubistheword
      @blubistheword 2 года назад +3

      Too true 😂

    • @christopherb501
      @christopherb501 2 года назад +16

      At least it's a good Boomer moment, and not...you know...what we usually think of with such...

    • @sweetprimrose
      @sweetprimrose 2 года назад +11

      Maybe add a Jimmy Buffet into the mix and everyone's heads might explode from Peak Boomer.

    • @SynGirl32
      @SynGirl32 2 года назад +3

      @@sweetprimrose Yes! Don't forget Dolly Parton and Englebert Humperdinck.

    • @yourineeven8457
      @yourineeven8457 2 года назад +2

      Seeing that was wild to me.

  • @DerekSquirreltail
    @DerekSquirreltail 2 года назад +121

    I only played Final Fantasy X for the first time pretty recently, and I don't think I've gotten more cultural whiplash in my entire life than the moment where Tidus references the Macarena. This song was literally everywhere lmao.

    • @Firetrigger2110
      @Firetrigger2110 2 года назад +16

      Still one of my favorite gags in that game.
      The "AYY?" is what sells it for me.

    • @Lightspeeds
      @Lightspeeds 2 года назад +1

      I confirm that this was my first wooleyism.

    • @ariwl1
      @ariwl1 2 года назад +11

      There's breaking the fourth wall, and then there's jumping out of the TV and smacking the audience in the face. XD

    • @devlinburgess2463
      @devlinburgess2463 2 года назад +4

      That line is always what I think of when it comes to this song. It's just so out of nowhere.

    • @ddjsoyenby
      @ddjsoyenby 2 года назад

      "HEY SINARENA! *city gets destroyed*"

  • @Ashamaxa
    @Ashamaxa 2 года назад +290

    That footage of Los del Rio playing the Macarena with Andre Rieu and the Johann Strauss Orchestra is... insane. They were on top of the world in the late 90's!

    • @SuperJNG18
      @SuperJNG18 2 года назад +22

      And the wildest part was that THAT clip was over twenty years later!

  • @Daniel-ev1gx
    @Daniel-ev1gx 2 года назад +106

    I grew up just after the Macarena hit, and it had permeated the cultural consciousness to such an extent I honestly thought it was a nursery rhyme like The Wheels On The Bus, something everyone was taught from their youth for centuries...

  • @theretrobro3826
    @theretrobro3826 2 года назад +387

    We've reached the Magnum Opus of One Hit Wonderland. And yeah, the Macarena was THE viral sensation before the term was even known. Animaniacs did a parody of it over a year after it came out and the song was STILL insanely popular that everyone got it.

    • @MichaelBurmy
      @MichaelBurmy 2 года назад +16

      What's more, since Warner Bros. bought the publishing, that parody was able to use the original tune and not a sound-alike.

    • @zygbeee8563
      @zygbeee8563 2 года назад +1

      I 'm pretty sure Macarena wasn't popular in 1994.

    • @Pocket_Sora
      @Pocket_Sora 2 года назад +11

      @@zygbeee8563 the episode came out in 1997, the Macarena was still huge then
      He was saying a year after the Macarena got huge not a year after the show was released

    • @clockwerk35
      @clockwerk35 2 года назад +1

      @@zygbeee8563 It was popular in Hispanic America and then Brazil by 1994, the second version, the one I'd say is the superior version, was widely known in those regions

    • @kirbynat493
      @kirbynat493 2 года назад +1

      oh god, i've been bingewatching the orginal animaniacs for a week, it's gonna be wild seeing that after this video lmao

  • @marieltr
    @marieltr 2 года назад +157

    I love how Todd speak about macarena like it's a pandemic, that's exactly my memory of the phenomena

    • @lehnrik
      @lehnrik 2 года назад +4

      Heeeey, phenomena!

    • @Chelaxim
      @Chelaxim 2 года назад +10

      It's not a pandemic... it's endemic. It truly never left. Especially among school children and the elderly...just like real viruses 🥁

  • @B3Band
    @B3Band 2 года назад +82

    Imagine if the New York Yankees advertised an "Uptown Funk" night, where they tell everyone that they're gonna play Uptown Funk during the 7th inning of the game. Imagine that it actually helps to INCREASE ticket sales that night. All because people want to dance to Uptown Funk as a bigger group than that shitty Boston Red Sox group that did it last week.
    Now stop imagining, because that's literally what happened in the summer of 1996 at multiple baseball stadiums with the Macarena. Shit was fucking huge. It took over the entire world.

    • @Redsoxking
      @Redsoxking 2 года назад +1

      2004 is all I need to say 😂

    • @Wired4Life2
      @Wired4Life2 2 года назад

      Meanwhile, _Sonic the Hedgehog 2_ features a dance battle scene in Siberia with "Uptown Funk", and nearly everyone recognized that as a dated choice.

  • @Klootchan23
    @Klootchan23 2 года назад +104

    That whole part where Todd starts talking about line dancing had me warping back to 1996 when I was about 12 years old and my whole gym class had to dance to this song, the Electric Slide, and the Chicken Dance. I remember feeling embarrassed but thinking, "Hey at least we aren't running the mile again."

    • @jenniferhanses7064
      @jenniferhanses7064 Год назад +1

      You only had to run a mile? Michigan had a 2 mile standard. I'm jealous.

  • @knutthompson7879
    @knutthompson7879 2 года назад +339

    To be fair, that riff is just killer. With a dance beat behind it, it was irresistible. Yes after 15 minutes as a cute novelty it became unbelievably irritating, but on some level it was somehow perfect for what it was.

    • @anttiv4292
      @anttiv4292 2 года назад +12

      I think I remember being like 12 and that riff coming on the first time and me being amazed.

    • @YukaTakeuchiFan
      @YukaTakeuchiFan 2 года назад +16

      Yeah, I personally like it a lot more now that I'm not guaranteed to be hearing it every 15 minutes no matter what I do. Could say that about a LOT of the songs that annoyed me in the late 90s, really...

  • @la_arana_discoteca
    @la_arana_discoteca 2 года назад +270

    I distinctly remember an early moment of self-awareness when, in 1996, I attended a school fair and noticed literally everyone around me doing the Macarena, and felt completely overwhelmed and baffled by the uniform dancing. If I'd had any concept of zombies at the age of six I probably would've been terrified.

    • @SmaMan
      @SmaMan 2 года назад +13

      I think that's my earliest memory of it too.
      Somehow it only took me a few listens and I was doing it too, even though I never really grasped *why* I was doing it.

    • @PopeSalty1
      @PopeSalty1 2 года назад +3

      Finally. A comment I can relate to. I'm baffled by all the positivity in this comment section. Are we the only ones left who managed to resist the line dance cult?

  • @captramune4978
    @captramune4978 2 года назад +276

    I get the impression that these guys are kinda like the Spanish Scatman John: respected niche genre veterans that somehow stumbled into a dancefloor hit that briefly made them pop stars. I'm happy for them, even if the song is an insidious earworm that threatens to destroy the fabric of reality every time you hear it.

    • @DinobotTM2
      @DinobotTM2 2 года назад +7

      I never thought of that parallel between them both, but it makes a lot of sense...

    • @Chelaxim
      @Chelaxim 2 года назад +22

      Los Del Rio,Scatman John,Chumbawumba,Loreena McKinnet and Everything But The Girl the 5 horsemen of the respected niche artists who had a random dance hit apocalypse.

    • @IcaroMendonca
      @IcaroMendonca 2 года назад +5

      @@Chelaxim That you forgot Bob McFerrin is inforgivable.

    • @MaybeitsmeJulia
      @MaybeitsmeJulia 2 года назад +6

      @@Chelaxim OK but I have been laughing at 'random dance hit apocalypse' for 15 minutes straight now

    • @RaasAlHayya
      @RaasAlHayya 2 года назад

      @@MaybeitsmeJulia Same! ...and now Random Dance Hit Apocalypse needs to be either the name of @This Ain't A Scene It's A Gah Dah Arh Rah! 's new band name, debut album, or hit song. 😃

  • @antoniop2971
    @antoniop2971 2 года назад +352

    As someone born and raised in Seville I am quite impressed!!!!!! This was very very good. You got the "Sevilla tiene un color especial" and I cheered when you mentioned Fangoria which is a hugeeee act still today. They are even bigger today and lgtbiq icons. Great

    • @jal051
      @jal051 Год назад +8

      Yup. Specially the Fangoria bit.

    • @phastinemoon
      @phastinemoon Год назад +2

      Did not know that - gonna have to check them out.

    • @fixedfunshow
      @fixedfunshow Год назад +2

      Alaska from Meixco to Spain to US with La Macarena

    • @YuaXIII
      @YuaXIII Год назад

      LGBTIQ icons, being symphatizers with the right? lmaoooo Alaska and Mario stopped being "lgtbiq icons" when they started opening their mouths and showed what the La Movida really was: rich kids with enough money to form a band and feeling "transgressors".

    • @shaveee
      @shaveee Год назад +18

      as a spaniard I remember not understanding why americans were dancing to a 3 year old song. and hated the american remix to be honest, after hearing the original for so long, the american felt cheaply produced.
      and Todd is bang on, the chorus can be translated overall to ¨shake it, macarena¨.

  • @XanderVJ
    @XanderVJ 2 года назад +564

    Another Spaniard here. I was 10 in 1993, when the original version came out, and I remember the song being very popular in the summer of that year... But I can't say I remember if people did the dance already or not.
    The song became a staple of summer festivals the next couple of years, but of course, nothing compared to it what became in 96.
    As for Los del Río, they were already well known nation-wide, specially thanks to "Sevilla tiene un color especial", which became a pretty big hit. So... Yeah, while the label "one hit wonder" definitely applies to them when it comes to international audiences, when it comes to Spain at least, it's definitely a misnomer.
    In any case, they've had a solid career inside the genre of Sevillanas, and people still love them to bits. Not only because of their music, but also because they are two of the most funny, down to earth and wholesome artists you can come across in Spanish media. Whenever they appear on screen, you know everyone will have a great time.
    Just one warning if you learned Spanish as a second language and want to see more of them: they speak with a kind of thick Sevillian accent which, although it's endearing for native speakers, it may be a bit difficult to understand for non-natives.

    • @patximartel
      @patximartel 2 года назад +43

      Their sevillian accent is so thicc that I thought they were latinamericans when i was a kid

    • @jvmt8719
      @jvmt8719 2 года назад +9

      I'm an American who learned Spanish as a second language, having developed my language skills mainly in Mexico, where I've lived for several years. I'll have to watch an interview with the guys when I'm not busy working.
      As for Sevillian accents being difficult, I visited in early 2020 just before the pandemic, and I did not find the locals hard to understand, save for the taxi driver who took us from the train station to the place where we were staying in the old town.

    • @ANT96-x8d
      @ANT96-x8d 2 года назад

      Do a review on Shattered Dreams by Johnny Hates Jazz

    • @WithScienceAsMySheperd
      @WithScienceAsMySheperd Год назад +1

      then came Las Ketchup :)

    • @carnacthemagnificent2498
      @carnacthemagnificent2498 Год назад +3

      I moved to Cadiz for a year in 1997 without knowing any Spanish. It's about an hour south of Sevilla. English was growing in popularity there at the time but most places only could handle Spanish. So I was highly motived to learn to speak and I did, just the basics at least. And because I learned from natives I have a fine accent from that region. I can attest that it is a distinctive one for sure and it throws people off when I do speak Spanish now. When I speak to a spaniard they tend to assume I must know a lot more than I do because the unusual accent suggests I didn't learn if from a book or tapes. They soon learn that my spanish is like frankenstein level, but very authentically accented!

  • @Schizophrenia222
    @Schizophrenia222 2 года назад +572

    Congratulations, not only did you conquer your fear of covering the Macarena, you made mostly likely the best episode of One Hit Wonderland I've ever seen. Today was a good day 🙏🏼

    • @miserirken
      @miserirken 2 года назад +36

      Nah, the Scatman episode is his best, 'cause how much heart is on it, you can just feel Todd's (rare) genuine admiration for Scatman John's legacy.

    • @DirtiestDMusic
      @DirtiestDMusic 2 года назад +10

      I appreciate that this episode had a noticeably different presentation with the Majora's Mask countdown breaking it up. It befits an episode of this magnitude.

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 2 года назад +12

      I don't know if I should be impressed or disappointed he made it a launching point for "millennial dance crazes done by your grandparents" without even hinting at Gangnam.

    • @austintrousdale2397
      @austintrousdale2397 2 года назад +3

      Ken Burns couldn’t have done a better job of documenting that strange, terrible time in pop culture. (takes hat off and holds it close to chest)

  • @carolinestrong6341
    @carolinestrong6341 2 года назад +601

    I once did a 'Dances Through the Ages' session with my Brownies/Girl Scouts - basically we did all the cheesy dances for parties (Walk like a Egyptian, Oops Upside Your Head, 5678, Cotton Eye Joe, Cha Cha Slide, Gangnam Style along with a bit of Waltz and Tango). My girls were born around 2009-2010 so didn't know a lot of these dances, never even heard of Gangnam Style, BUT THEY ALL KNEW THE MACARENA. The first three notes on the speaker and they started jumping around, squealing, got into their lines and just went with it. It was insane. It became a troop dance and they demanded we danced it at my leaving party. What a song.

    • @bookofdaveandsteve
      @bookofdaveandsteve 2 года назад +17

      That is so bloody wholesome - I love it!

    • @klisterklister2367
      @klisterklister2367 2 года назад +15

      the kids are holding the torch!!

    • @HeavyDave997
      @HeavyDave997 2 года назад +25

      that is such a sweet story so let me ruin it with my twisted mind, I completely misunderstood what you meant with "brownies/girl scouts". it took me way to long to realize that this wasn't a crazy story about a racist girl scout leader, segregating her girls into colored and white. While teaching them all the corny dances from the 90's and 2000's, only for y'all to bond over flamenco pop dance mix from Sevilla. Which genuinely sounds like a plot to a crazy Disney original movie, just thought I would share how my mind works

    • @carolinestrong6341
      @carolinestrong6341 2 года назад +16

      @@HeavyDave997 That's actually hilarious, I can 100% see the reasoning! I didn't want to use just Brownies for almost that exact reason 😂

    • @flynnexe
      @flynnexe 2 года назад +1

      So surreal

  • @stevenwilliams2221
    @stevenwilliams2221 Год назад +94

    Was a DJ in Myrtle Beach in 1997-98.
    It was batshit crazy. At 22 years old I hid behind the DJ booth when I was told by the owner to mix it in.
    And no, it was also 20-somethings doing it after way to many beers and Mai tais .
    At the time, thank god for Return of the Mack.

  • @onijester56
    @onijester56 2 года назад +132

    True story: a couple weeks ago, a bunch of college kids came to the karaoke bar I frequent...and they tried to sing this song. They were so drunk that they completely messed it up if we're talking from a technical standpoint, but it was an amazingly fun few minutes throughout the whole bar.

    • @Avrysatos
      @Avrysatos 2 года назад +7

      We call that a successful karaoke event.

    • @EinDose
      @EinDose 2 года назад +1

      The Macarena actually is kinda deceptively hard to sing! Sure, the verses are pretty manageable, but the chorus? You know the shape of it, but if you actually try to sing it and haven't actively learned the words, you're gonna bomb out.

  • @mssnadie
    @mssnadie 2 года назад +225

    In case you're wondering, after 1996 they were already a hugely beloved duo in Spain and they settled to just run on their success. Recorded about an album a year and kept playing their biggest hits around Spain and also latin America
    Both Sevilla tiene un color especial and la macarena (the original version) are regarded as a quirky slightly cringey national pride here.
    This 1996 version is hated with passion.

  • @MyoticTesseract
    @MyoticTesseract 2 года назад +69

    instead of asking "did they deserve better" you should've asked "could they _possibly_ have done _any_ better"
    i can't believe this only came out in the mid-90s, i was born only a few years afterward and it felt like this song and dance were like a hundred years old
    but then i come back here and listen to those first few notes and it sounds like the epitome of a random 90s hit song

  • @FoxxNavarro
    @FoxxNavarro 2 года назад +177

    I was born and raised in the rio grande valley (that “tiny border town” paper is my home paper) and that song never went away. Any family gathering with more than a few elderly people will absolutely play the Macarena. The song is unironically on my workout playlist. Shits fire. Pure and simple

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife 2 года назад +243

    I remember the first time I heard Yaz(oo)'s "Situation", I said "hey, that's the Macarena laugh!" That's where the Bayside Boys got the sample from -- it was singer Alison Moyet laughing in an outtake during a recording session with her bandmate Vince Clarke in 1982.

    • @randybutcher5713
      @randybutcher5713 2 года назад +14

      I think that laugh made it to madonnas angel. And Samantha foxes i wanna have some fun also

    • @rattyeely
      @rattyeely 2 года назад +2

      Wow, I had no idea Yazoo had a connection to this song as well

    • @truckerdave8465
      @truckerdave8465 2 года назад +3

      Lol I’m so old I thought of the reverse.

    • @fatalfallacy
      @fatalfallacy 2 года назад +4

      you are really a walking library full of trivia! I am always stunned how you dig up such infos from your memories and being able to add another cherry of information on top like this, nice find!

    • @mariaquiet6211
      @mariaquiet6211 2 года назад +5

      Her eerie laugh has reverberated over decades on its own volition. She better have gotten residuals.

  • @thomdabomb5067
    @thomdabomb5067 2 года назад +73

    One of these day's I'd like to see Todd in the Shadows do a "No Hit Wonder" series where he covers artists who were super influential but never had a hit.

    • @TetsuDeinonychus
      @TetsuDeinonychus 2 года назад +11

      Yeah, I'd watch the hell out of that.

    • @alexdavis665
      @alexdavis665 2 года назад +6

      He's already covered Alien Ant Farm

    • @cmsmith1961
      @cmsmith1961 2 года назад +1

      Did John Prine ever have a hit song?

    • @Alfredo-oh8xb
      @Alfredo-oh8xb 2 года назад +3

      Well the problem is most of these bands that would fit into this would make for a boring video. Like my bloody valentine or bjork, they have no hits but are very well known

    • @thomdabomb5067
      @thomdabomb5067 2 года назад

      @123ev456 I'm think of people like Delia Derbyshire.

  • @daniellachoynowski
    @daniellachoynowski 2 года назад +216

    I was obsessed with the American Girls at the time, being 8 years old. I was really into Felicity and begged my parents to stop at Colonial Williamsburg on the way to our vacation in Hilton Head, SC. I have a vivid memory of this song playing in the streets of colonial Williamsburg and tourists dropping everything and dancing

  • @darkr.o.b.2179
    @darkr.o.b.2179 2 года назад +246

    I was born in 2002. The Macarena even slipped deep into my childhood. I distinctly remember doing the "month Macarena" in Kindergarten. The lyrics in my head are always superimposed by "January, February, Maaaarch, April, Mayyyy, June..."
    Oh and of course it was at many a school dance and such, along with the Electric Slide, Cotton Eye Joe, right alongside the Harlem Shake and Gangam Style. I feel like a lot of 90s n 00s kids have much more connected childhoods than they realize.

    • @hithedragon7842
      @hithedragon7842 Год назад +17

      You're definitely right about that. Also, that list of songs gave me flashbacks

    • @tswizzle2020
      @tswizzle2020 Год назад +4

      i was also born in 2002, and this is 100% accurate

    • @anarchomando7707
      @anarchomando7707 Год назад +4

      04 and yah

    • @HunterXWorld95
      @HunterXWorld95 Год назад +3

      Now that you mention it, I remember doing the same thing when I was in kindergarten, and I was born in 95 so one year before Macarena madness took over. And even as a kid in the late 90s to early 2000s, I knew exactly how crazy people would get over the Macarena.

    • @brendanb2982
      @brendanb2982 Год назад +6

      In gym class in elementary school, we had a version where we listened different bones on the human body.
      Starting from your feet (Tarsals, fibia, fibula, patela...), and working the way up to " Ohhhh, my cranium! "

  • @91Vault
    @91Vault 2 года назад +79

    Part of me feels privileged to have actually unironically danced the Macarena when it was a thing

    • @jasonblalock4429
      @jasonblalock4429 2 года назад +12

      Funny, I feel privileged to have made it through 1996 without ever dancing it. I was well into my teenage emo phase at that point, where I'd just glare at you if you even suggested I dance.

    • @disliked1390
      @disliked1390 2 года назад +2

      @@jasonblalock4429 oh you def. danced it. Your brain is blocking the memory. Everyone danced it at least once no escaping

    • @Mayadel100
      @Mayadel100 2 года назад +3

      @@jasonblalock4429 same until my mom held my SNES hostage for it

  • @KaiserBeamz
    @KaiserBeamz 2 года назад +93

    This was probably the first inescapable pop culture moment I ever experienced. I was in first-grade and there was an assembly where the entire student body was encouraged to get up and do the Macarena. I remember six-year old me half-heartedly doing the motions and thinking that it was the dumbest thing and wondering when school was going be over so I can go home and watch Rocko's Modern Life.

    • @sethralavode9012
      @sethralavode9012 2 года назад +3

      How edgy

    • @the-NightStar
      @the-NightStar 2 года назад

      @@sethralavode9012 Get the hell over yourself, kid. That "hurr hurr edgy" comment bullshit got old 2 decades ago.

    • @krusher181
      @krusher181 2 года назад +2

      @@sethralavode9012 it really was dumb and felt so forced

    • @br3akstuff
      @br3akstuff 2 года назад +2

      @@sethralavode9012 When you’re a 6 year old you would frankly rather watch cartoons than do a dance

  • @AM-bo2ns
    @AM-bo2ns 2 года назад +299

    the thing about macarena, and something i haven't seen with ANY song or cultural phenomenon since, is that it was universal. it doesn't happen often, and i can't think of it happening since the macarena, certainly not within the lifetimes of anyone who's a teen or 20-something right now. it's like if every TV show, every event you went to was playing old town road, and everyone was singing along - not just you and your friends, but your parents, your grandparents, random old people, all belting out the words. absolutely nothing like it.

    • @MGustave
      @MGustave 2 года назад +34

      I'm 24, and the macarena was definitely omnipresent when I was a little kid. I recall it distinctly as being everywhere, even then.
      That said, we had brief moment where the horse riding gangnam style dance was everywhere. Thag was pretty close.

    • @WobblesandBean
      @WobblesandBean 2 года назад +13

      Not even Gangnam Style?

    • @user-qp5xh9ky4t
      @user-qp5xh9ky4t 2 года назад +15

      @@WobblesandBean not even close

    • @paishocajun
      @paishocajun 2 года назад +12

      @@b0gster hahahahahaha no.
      Gen1 Poke-mania is legitimately the only thing I can think of that's on the same scale.

    • @nachgeben
      @nachgeben 2 года назад +19

      @@b0gster Not the same thing, kiddo. Gangnam was great, but this was one of those songs that would stalemate an entire area into the same dance moves. If you didn't know them, you learned them quickly, and you were absorbed into these flash dance type situations. Unplanned yet everyone knew what to do. It was nuts.

  • @KEBJD
    @KEBJD 2 года назад +66

    macarena christmas is the chaotic evil of christmas songs

    • @damnson666
      @damnson666 2 месяца назад +1

      You should hear the mambo no5 xmas remix. its the same song but with jingle bells loop added to the background.

  • @mowlowl
    @mowlowl 2 года назад +468

    If Todd ended this series after this episode, I'd still be pretty sad, but my God, would it be the perfect one to go out on. From the excellent coverage of this song and these groups' full and wild histories to that genuinely incredible Christmas remix reveal circling all the way back to the It's Raining Men episode, every aspect of this was nothing short of golden.
    Congratulations man, you have beaten the final boss of OHW's with flying colors.

    • @mierardi88
      @mierardi88 2 года назад +8

      He's still got to do "In the Year 2525" by Zagers and Evans. I can't think of a number one pop hit quite that ominous and bleak, even Eve of Destruction only ever got to #3.

    • @usuallyangry
      @usuallyangry 2 года назад +4

      Indeed, Macerena is basically the final boss of One Hit Wonder

    • @MrR1ma
      @MrR1ma 2 года назад

      @@NecessaryTruths In the Year 2525 can't be terrible! It inspired a great Futurama episode - The Late Philip J Fry. And was #1 when Apollo 11 landed on the moon

    • @UnfortunatelyTheHunger
      @UnfortunatelyTheHunger 2 года назад

      @@usuallyangry So what you're saying is that, every subsequent episode is going to be an optional sidequest to reach 100% completion?

  • @krissiecruz3902
    @krissiecruz3902 2 года назад +149

    as someone who was born in the early 2000s, it feels like i still had to deal with the macarena era because it'd be playing in every. single. birthday. I've attended. i can only imagine how crazy it must've been in the late 90s lmao

    • @schris3
      @schris3 2 года назад +3

      @Perverted Alchemist You're not joking.

    • @VulpesHilarianus
      @VulpesHilarianus 2 года назад +6

      @Perverted Alchemist Can confirm. My local mall sandwiched this between every other song. I'm pretty sure just so they could watch the security cameras and see if anybody reacted. That's how compulsive this was.

    • @Clay3613
      @Clay3613 2 года назад +6

      I attended a lot of school and corporate parties during the 90s, they would play this multiple times...thankfully I can turn y hearing aids off.

    • @mizb819
      @mizb819 2 года назад +1

      Same

    • @TheGuindo
      @TheGuindo 2 года назад +8

      it was _so_ ubiquitous in the 90s that i remember my fucking _greek orthodox church_ doing it as a big dance number during a food festival performance

  • @laiapuynavarro2490
    @laiapuynavarro2490 2 года назад +460

    As a Spanish woman, I've gotta say the song follows us all.
    I went on an students exchange in Greece and the welcoming act were 120 Greek students dancing it on line.
    It is still played on holidays and family reunions to get people to the dance floor.
    It is still affecting people and the dance is almost endemic to our people.

    • @Prengle
      @Prengle 2 года назад +58

      Give it 100 years and the macarena will probably be called a traditional Spanish folk dance lol

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад +18

      I actually consider that kind of sweet. I wonder if YMCA will have the same legacy in the USA? Seeing all these grandmas dancing to it at weddings, completely clueless that it’s a song about gay hook ups at a supposedly straight organization!

    • @AlexMartinez-nn2cm
      @AlexMartinez-nn2cm 2 года назад +6

      I'm Spanish too and was in Greece recently, and when they played the Macarena in the tour boat we were in all of the Spaniards there got up and started dancing. it's our national pride

    • @daturave
      @daturave 2 года назад +1

      I new there was a reason why I have not visited Spain :D

    • @97Corvi
      @97Corvi 2 года назад

      Even in Italy i can still here i arownd sometimes XD

  • @OG_McLovin
    @OG_McLovin Год назад +58

    3:54 I freaking love how well their album covers from various decades reflect so much about the decade in question. That hair, man... the 70's was a wild decade.

  • @matthansen1561
    @matthansen1561 2 года назад +276

    Todd's not kidding. I was in second grade in 1996. This song WAS 1996. And I mean that in every sense of the word. You could not escape it. For PE/Aerobics in elementary school that year, we'd put this thing on and dance to it.
    The fact that it's approaching 30 years old just makes me feel ancient. But Todd's right. You didn't NOT know the Macarena (the song OR the dance) if you were breathing in 1996.

    • @yukpuddle
      @yukpuddle 2 года назад +3

      I think we're probably the same age, because I was also in either second or third grade in '96 and remember doing the Macarena in assemblies/gym class.

    • @katesolar
      @katesolar 2 года назад +9

      I was born in 2002 and every year in elementary school they made us learn the Macarena in gym class? That was our entire "dance unit"

    • @RiotEXE
      @RiotEXE 2 года назад +2

      Yeah, if you met someone that was old enough to be around and cognizant of the Macarena, and they don't know what you're talking about, they better be Amish, or had been in a coma, because that's how EVERYWHERE it was!

    • @psiamnotdrunk
      @psiamnotdrunk 2 года назад

      I WAS IN MIDDLE SCHOOL

    • @crescentfreshbret
      @crescentfreshbret 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, I was 14 in 1996, and the Macarena was absolutely fucking EVERYWHERE imaginable. If they weren’t dancing it, they were referencing it. It was THE pop culture touchstone of that year.

  • @jamesallen9325
    @jamesallen9325 2 года назад +84

    I got married in September of 1996, so yeah, I was at ground zero. (As you mentioned, The Electric Slide was still super popular too.) We had the predictable wedding where people decades older than me and my wife were nailing the Macarena as if their life depended on it. And we’ve done it at EVERY FREAKING WEDDING SINCE. It will never die. At least it’s better than the hokey pokey.

    • @KingRandor82
      @KingRandor82 2 года назад +2

      My Bar Mitzvah was in 1996, and my relatives got excited over a "Jewish" version of it called the "Macatena". I hate to say it....the whole thing is something I look back on, and facepalm over, while I shake my head. I mean....the song isn't bad, but....to be that entranced by a fucking dance craze. As an Autistic male, people make so little sense to me...

  • @Laerid
    @Laerid 2 года назад +172

    @10:54 the girl you see in the beginning of the song, is French-American choreographer Mya Frye - she was the one hired to come up with the infamous dance and is a pretty well known choreographer in France. Her wiki page cites a couple of sources backing this up, it looks legit

    • @redskullz1249
      @redskullz1249 2 года назад +10

      Holy crap! Good call. I Wiki'd her and discovered she also choreographed Wes' Alane...which should probably also be on One Hit Wonderland.

    • @everwhatever
      @everwhatever 2 года назад +10

      Unfortunately it gives no dates, sounds like she choreographed the music video, which took it to the stratosphere, but Todd shows newspapers from 1995 with people doing the dance. Someone on twitter shared a dance group from the Philippines doing it in 1995 and having the moves there. There's an article in French Vogue that she apparently even threatened to sue them for unauthorized use of the choreography in Bad Bunny's video, but how can she be the copyright holder?

    • @saf_saffy
      @saf_saffy 2 года назад +2

      fun fact she also has a role in the fifth element as the cat food lady

    • @RockinRobin411
      @RockinRobin411 2 года назад +2

      @@everwhatever it should also be noted that the dance in the music video is different from the dance everyone knows. The dance in the video is:
      Beat 1. Right arm forward
      Beat 2. Keep it there
      Beat 3. Left arm forward
      Beat 4. Keep it there
      Beat 5. Right hand beside the head
      Beat 6. Keep it there
      Beat 7. Left hand beside the head
      Beat 8. Keep it there
      Beat 9. Right hand on right hip
      Beat 10. Keep it there
      Beat 11. Left hand on the left hip
      Beat 12. Keep it there
      Beat 13. Hip shake
      Beat 14. More hip shake
      Beat 15. Even more hip shake
      Beat 16. Turn
      The one that has become common is:
      Beat 1. Right arm forward with hand down
      Beat 2. Left arm forward with hand down
      Beat 3. Flip right hand up
      Beat 4. Flip left hand up
      Beat 5. Right hand to left shoulder
      Beat 6. Left hand to right shoulder
      Beat 7. Right hand to right ear
      Beat 8. Left hand to left ear
      Beat 9. Right hand to left hip
      Beat 10. Left hand to right hip
      Beat 11. Right hand to right hip
      Beat 12. Left hand to left hip
      Beat 13. Hip shake
      Beat 14. More hip shake
      Beat 15. Even more hip shake
      Beat 16. Turn
      One of the things that I want to learn more about is how the dance in the video is different from the commonly done dance. Did the commonly done dance come first, with the music video modifying it for entertainment purposes? I'd think that the music video would be peoples' main source of knowing a dance, but what's in the video is similar, but definitely different.

    • @everwhatever
      @everwhatever 2 года назад +2

      @@RockinRobin411 you’re right, the Macarena is so powerful at making you do the right dance that I never noticed the difference. It’s even funnier now that in the Bad Bunny video all the hot models are doing the common macarena with modifications at the end. So she has no leg to stand on even as the author of the MV choreography. And she‘s definitely not the patient zero Todd was talking about

  • @liacchin2993
    @liacchin2993 2 года назад +55

    Venezuelan person here. I swear the Macarena fever lasted like three or four years here because the Fangoria remix arrived here around early 1995. The dance was there already, probably, and here the dancer that inspired the song, Diana Patricia, became a small media personality and took credit for the dance steps.
    The song still creeps from time on time in Horas Locas (that time at big parties like weddings and quinceañeras where the DJ play old catchy songs, most of them one hit wonders, to make people dance, do a conga line, and shake rattled and maracas). It's a small patriotic pride.

  • @MrTurntables
    @MrTurntables 2 года назад +48

    I was born in 97, so this was my first time hearing the Christmas mashup version of the Macarena. And I feel like I just witnessed the musical equivalent of someone puppeteering a corpse to dance. What in the actual hell was that?!

    • @highlander723
      @highlander723 2 года назад +1

      Just be thankful you missed it

  • @michaelcebulski4916
    @michaelcebulski4916 2 года назад +54

    Our wedding, August 10, 1996. I was informed by my best man that after we had fled for our honeymoon suite that the DJ started playing the Macarena. By his report my groomsmen, along with some additional friends, started jumping furiously in front of the stage area where the record spinning DJ was stationed in order to repeatedly skip the record until it was finally ended. That is the perfect example of what a wedding entourage should be.

  • @coryrain
    @coryrain 2 года назад +243

    So glad you tied this back into the massive country line dance scene at the time. I grew up in Detroit. Rap and Motown and electronica and even we were country line dancing in the 90s!

    • @kokuinomusume
      @kokuinomusume 2 года назад

      In fairness, Spain also has a deep tradition of line dancing. Which I am not going to explain. ruclips.net/video/nlulFy3al9M/видео.html

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 2 года назад +1

      Yeah we did line dancing in PE.

  • @jal051
    @jal051 Год назад +39

    I can confirm it's 100% true that in Spain the original sevillana version of La Macarena was the real hit. The dance version was played at the radios, but it had very small impact. It felt already old. That being said, Los del Rio are a couple of funny guys, and we are happy they had such a big success. Also, fun fact, I never danced la Macarena, and I was in my 20s when it was released.

  • @broadway331
    @broadway331 2 года назад +59

    I love when the one-hit wonders next song is a Christmas version.

  • @bngjessie666
    @bngjessie666 2 года назад +296

    I was a teen at this time and my god, when Todd says it was everywhere it was EVERYWHERE. I couldn't go anywhere in town or around the surrounding cities without hearing this song at least a dozen times a day. I was very sick of it being the edgy teen that I was and wanted nothing to do with it, even barely doing it at my cousin-in-law's wedding cuz I was forced to. But yeah, this song dominated and for good reason. The song was catchy the dance was easy to do. Even if you had no rhythm you could do it. Man, what time that was.

    • @Tim85-y2q
      @Tim85-y2q 2 года назад +3

      Even though Todd words it very well, I genuinely don't think people who weren't there can truly grasp just how ubiquitous this song was. I've never seen anything like it before or since.

    • @etanaedelman9011
      @etanaedelman9011 2 года назад +3

      I was literally 2 years old when it came out and one of my very earliest memories (maybe from when I was three or four) is walking past a studio or gym in New York City and seeing a group of people doing the Macarena. I had a Sesame Street cassette tape where Elmo and the other Muppets sang the Macarena. You couldn't escape it no matter how young you were.

  • @kabutoc4139
    @kabutoc4139 2 года назад +85

    I´m from spain and hearing todd talking about all those spanish things is fascinating. For me they all sound common but coming from him it sounds like the guy from the intro of conan the barbarian, its gonna tell you about the times of high adventure.

    • @JackieTheCatfox
      @JackieTheCatfox 2 года назад +2

      Same thing!
      Gosh, it's so weird to hear stuff from your own culture from an outsider's perspective.

  • @littleferrhis
    @littleferrhis Год назад +185

    Zoomers: “Man the 90s had real artistic music, way better than the thoughtless meaningless music of today.”
    Meanwhile in the 90s:

    • @sweetsnejinka9411
      @sweetsnejinka9411 Год назад

      Baaahaha

    • @amarevanhook7453
      @amarevanhook7453 Год назад +9

      This song was a banger tho

    • @seanmce8132
      @seanmce8132 Год назад +29

      Every generation seems to forget how much garbage was popular back in thier day.

    • @ebuzzmiller34
      @ebuzzmiller34 Год назад +14

      @@seanmce8132 Yup, seldom see The Archies Sugar Sugar being fondly remembered as the biggest hit of 1969.

    • @giantpinkcat
      @giantpinkcat 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@seanmce8132 *stares at Disco Duck*

  • @IsaacMayerCreativeWorks
    @IsaacMayerCreativeWorks 2 года назад +296

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: please do a OHW on “Walk the Dinosaur” by Was (Not Was). Don Was has a life story and oeuvre comparable only to Chumbawamba’s in its virtuosity, its radical activism, and its unjust overshadowing by one dangerously catchy novelty song

    • @someguy3752
      @someguy3752 2 года назад +13

      Not a one hit wonder. Spy in the House of Love also hit the top 20.

    • @jonothanthrace1530
      @jonothanthrace1530 2 года назад +3

      I bought my mother a live Bonnie Rait CD a year or two ago and was surprised to see his name in her band.

    • @brendanb2982
      @brendanb2982 2 года назад +6

      I'd also recommend Electric Avenue on that same note.

    • @Thomasmemoryscentral
      @Thomasmemoryscentral 2 года назад +5

      @@someguy3752 Todd has made exceptions to one hit wonders before. Was Not Was can count as Walk The Dinosaur is the band's highest charting hit

    • @Thomasmemoryscentral
      @Thomasmemoryscentral 2 года назад +2

      @@brendanb2982 Me too Brenda. For other one hit wonders, what do you think of:
      Breakfast At Tiffany's
      You're Beautiful
      No Rain
      Save Tonight
      Tom's Diner (specifically DNA who remixed the song)
      Just The Girl
      Chasing Cars
      Its My Life
      Missing You
      Stars Are Blind (apparently Paris Hilton counts too music wise)
      Headstrong
      The Middle

  • @DiamondAxeStudiosMusic
    @DiamondAxeStudiosMusic 2 года назад +76

    Hearing that the Macarena is one of the 10 biggest hits of all time is like hearing that Happy Birthday is one of the 10 biggest hits of all time, it feels like it goes against the spirit of the rules...

  • @redluis369
    @redluis369 2 года назад +277

    I'm latinamerican and yeah, that version wasn't the one that caught up here, and I've always felt confused as to why the english version was the one that now everyone plays. And on a side note I had no idea Fangoria had anything to do with the Macarena, just so you know, Fangoria is one of the most out of the box pop groups I've ever heard, their songs are the most fascinating stuff I've ever heard alongside Mecano.

    • @jporrasedit
      @jporrasedit 2 года назад +7

      If you havent check out Alaska's other bands prior to Fangoria (Pegamoides and Dinarama) there are some bangers there

    • @pelgervampireduck
      @pelgervampireduck 2 года назад +16

      I was surprised too, "wait... people in the united states don't know the real version? they think Macarena is that weird remix??".
      it's like watching something from a paralell universe or alternate timeline hahaha.

    • @IlikepurpleXP
      @IlikepurpleXP 2 года назад +2

      I’m American but have Hispanic parents and I also remember my parents playing the real version haha! I was always confused as to why I never heard the “Macarena tiene in novio que se llama..”
      Part at non Hispanic parties.

    • @maggie6627
      @maggie6627 2 года назад +2

      Besides, that remix version is... not good at all lmao what are americans doing

    • @Clean.Eastwood
      @Clean.Eastwood 2 года назад

      @@maggie6627 I mean, it was a big hit in the States, so they knew they had to change it up for that market. But yeah, the American version is awful, ugly even, when compared to the original.

  • @meaninglesscommenter8457
    @meaninglesscommenter8457 Год назад +44

    as someone born in 2003, the macarena feels like something that’s been around forever, that everyone knows and everyone will forever know. one tiktok trend was to test if the macarena trend worked on other songs (it did!) which has caused my friends and i to dance the macarena on many songs at several parties. it is very much a forever trend.

  • @NinjaTylerBlack
    @NinjaTylerBlack 2 года назад +118

    I've never clicked a video faster

  • @ackee39
    @ackee39 2 года назад +160

    This series has existed for a decade now, and Todd finally covers the Macarena.
    Never change, Todd

    • @hucklebucklin
      @hucklebucklin 2 года назад +6

      He needed the extra perspective hahahha

  • @roenais
    @roenais 2 года назад +61

    as someone whos worked in summer camps with weekly discos i can confirm that, at least in europe, the macarena is going strong and even kids as young as 7 somehow still know it. at this point i think the macarena has entered human instinct.

  • @garopolisNE
    @garopolisNE 2 года назад +58

    I genuinely laughed at Macarena Christmas. I completely forgot that was a thing, and Todd's comic timing of introducing it was so spot-on.

  • @E2theBizzle
    @E2theBizzle 2 года назад +147

    The fact that there was a Christmas version and that it actually saw some success is beautifully poetic, considering how other one hit wonders attempted the same thing (e.g. Kung Fu Fighting). It really is the king of one hit wonders.

    • @mssnadie
      @mssnadie 2 года назад +5

      I bet that if you go through any OH wonder after 1996 you could find at least one way the Macarena influenced it

    • @MCSMeister
      @MCSMeister 2 года назад +3

      I think you're thinking of It's Raining Men, Kung Fu Fighting never had a Christmas version.

    • @rayelgatubelo
      @rayelgatubelo 2 года назад +2

      @@MCSMeister It would be awesome if it did have one, though!

    • @E2theBizzle
      @E2theBizzle 2 года назад +1

      @@MCSMeister Ah probably. I knew it was one of those ones.

    • @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep
      @BonJoviBeatlesLedZep 2 года назад +3

      @@E2theBizzle I think you may be mixing it up with the time Todd joked that there should have been a "Kung Fu Christmas". The actual followup was "Dance The Kung Fu".

  • @AnimatedC9000
    @AnimatedC9000 2 года назад +89

    One of the unsung metrics of the success of a one-hit wonder, to me, is if you can ask the question "Have the Muppets covered this song in some form or fashion?" If the answer is "yes", congratulations. It was only a matter of time.
    Also the Chipmunks version took me the heck out, thank you for that.

    • @dreamshade
      @dreamshade 2 года назад +7

      I actually laughed out loud when the Chipmunks showed up. I have no idea why that shook me so hard.

    • @EpicB
      @EpicB 2 года назад +6

      Well, he did play the Miss Piggy version over the end credits.

    • @AnimatedC9000
      @AnimatedC9000 2 года назад

      @@EpicB I was waiting all video for that version to show up, you have no idea

  • @maristiller4033
    @maristiller4033 2 года назад +128

    When I was in kindergarten my teacher taught us the Macarena as some kind of learning tool, and more than a decade later I can’t remember what we were supposed to learn but I still remember how to do the dance.

    • @eris6676
      @eris6676 2 года назад +9

      I used to volunteer at elementary schools and one of the first grade teachers did the same thing with her class. It was different since it was an all-Spanish class, and it was pretty bizarre seeing it sung by people who actually knew the words

    • @phoebeschwerin3759
      @phoebeschwerin3759 2 года назад +5

      In my school they used it to teach the months

    • @eris6676
      @eris6676 2 года назад +1

      @@phoebeschwerin3759 I think they did that when I was a kid, too!

    • @solarmoth4628
      @solarmoth4628 2 года назад +1

      My spanish teacher used the song to teach us body parts without the dance parts

  • @miche1df
    @miche1df 7 месяцев назад +9

    I'm fully convinced the dancing mania of 1518 was a previous outbreak of the macarena

  • @ryanwhittier7314
    @ryanwhittier7314 2 года назад +196

    I was born in '98 so i missed the hype of macarena. Despite that, i remember it being a strong presence throughout the 2000s to the point where my elementary school would constantly play that song alongside the "cha-cha slide" at school functions. Definitely a crowd pleaser even at that time for myself and my fellow classmates. Also we used to have house dance parties growing up and i bet you my parents played that for my brother and i a bunch.

    • @the_sky_is_blue_and_so_am_I
      @the_sky_is_blue_and_so_am_I 2 года назад +4

      Yes I have the same story from 2013.

    • @nohintshere
      @nohintshere 2 года назад +2

      they still play the cha cha slide at my school

    • @PineappleLiar
      @PineappleLiar 2 года назад +6

      Yeah being very young (born '97 here) in a post-Macarena craze world basically meant that the third thing you learned ever was how to do the Macarena. I honestly could not tell you my first exposure to the song and dance; it's just ingrained in me. Cha Cha Slide I can at least say was strongly correlated with car rides to school and my mom playing Radio Disney on the way. If I had to guess... maybe Sunday School? It seems like a very Sunday School thing to do.

    • @aydantheyoutubeking
      @aydantheyoutubeking Год назад +1

      Same

    • @hithedragon7842
      @hithedragon7842 Год назад

      It's definitely one of those 90's songs that got so big that even 2000's kids just know it instinctively

  • @stewarti7192
    @stewarti7192 2 года назад +182

    I was at a wedding recently and this came on during the reception. It still does it for people. Filled the dancefloor and many of them still knew the moves. Bride, groom and many of the guests (including me) were in our early 30s, so we've known the song since childhood.

    • @zig131
      @zig131 2 года назад +3

      Yeah typically peeps put it on in a row with Saturday Night, The Cha Cha Slide, and I think one more I am forgetting? YMCA Maybe?

    • @abcdefghij337
      @abcdefghij337 2 года назад +1

      I had it at my own wedding in 2019.

    • @lelandunruh7896
      @lelandunruh7896 2 года назад +2

      I'll be interested to see if this enters the wedding canon and gets played by couple who weren't born when it came out (like YMCA is). I'd bet money that it will be.

    • @hannahcraig6763
      @hannahcraig6763 2 года назад +2

      I was born in 1997 and I know this damn song and dance lol

    • @Kylora2112
      @Kylora2112 2 года назад +1

      I've slipped it into my band's (80s cover band) between-set playlist before and it'll pack the floor just as hard as when we actually play Journey, Madonna, or the Go-Go's.

  • @Gonzalo_Chalo_Luthier
    @Gonzalo_Chalo_Luthier 2 года назад +238

    I'm from Spain, and there is an article on Spain's Future Music magazine edition about the Macarena's remix. The crew that made the first remix were amazed when "Los del rio" gave a cassete tape to them! pretty lo-fi even for that moment. I remember first dancing it with my cousins in 1994 in Argentina, it was already a big hit on spanish talking countries by then. Never knew it survived for so long in anglo speaking countries... I guess Los del Rio are very proud with their royalties for this indeed! 🤣

    • @everwhatever
      @everwhatever 2 года назад +1

      Was it the same dance in 1994? The choreographer for the music video says she came up with it but it sounds like it was out there for years before that and her claim is complete bs

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 2 года назад +2

      it might also have helped that the remix version launched with in the middle of the Eurodance boom.
      if you take the drum beat it falls with in that slot perfectly. (that's what helped it in the Netherlands for sure)

  • @mmurph
    @mmurph 2 года назад +54

    Do they deserve better?
    They have a song that will live on for another millennium. They're aiight.