Hello I was wondering if a lot of these line dances are the same on the west coast. it's so hard to learn new dances becos so many bars differ depending on county's
+Kathryn Hernandez Hi! It's so hard to say, unfortunately, because like you said, so many bars differ. A lot of the bars in Los Angeles, Orange, and San Bernardino county do mainly the same versions of dances...but not always. And then you have dances that end up with certain variations at certain bars within the same county.
+Kathryn Hernandez I'm from Vegas and I've seen some odd mixes in different cities. I've run into situations where a linedance that we call one thing, example Reggae Cowboy has the steps of the Sleazy Slide matched to it in Colorado...and boy were our faces red when we started dancing the steps to the Reggae Cowboy and they started dancing the steps to the Sleazy Slide. But ones like the Tush Push, Watermelon Crawl, Slapping Leather, Boot Scootin Boogie, Swamp Thang - those I've found to be pretty much the same from bar to bar...but not always.
Hi, Cindy, we've been doing Mmmbop here in Vegas or was doing it when I was doing the country club scene. I have just one comment regarding your heel forward and toe back execution when you dancing. When you instruct you do teach to make contact with the heel and toe of your foot - but when you dance you are doing a hop that looks really awkward and detracts from the flowing movement of the dance. When you do the tap forward, tap back hold, tap forward hold then into a sailor step if you don't actually make contact with the ground the steps don't flow smoothly. You look like you are bunny hopping into sailor steps. Please do not take this is harsh criticism, I just wanted to point out that you aren't executing the steps while dancing in the same way you are teaching. Thank you so much for your efforts and time.
You should take those moves into the dance clubs in Miami 😄
Or a house party in Compton
Lol :P
This dance was commonly paired with the song "Chinese Checkers - White Horse" at the Cotton Eyed Joe in Knoxville in the 90s.
Can you do a demo for cowboy cha cha, country girl shake and wild Wild West?
Ok, Anthony Tong , I finally got Mmmbop done. :) Sorry for the delay, I had a cold last week. I hope the video helps!
Thanks for the teach!
Hello I was wondering if a lot of these line dances are the same on the west coast. it's so hard to learn new dances becos so many bars differ depending on county's
+Kathryn Hernandez Hi! It's so hard to say, unfortunately, because like you said, so many bars differ. A lot of the bars in Los Angeles, Orange, and San Bernardino county do mainly the same versions of dances...but not always. And then you have dances that end up with certain variations at certain bars within the same county.
+Kathryn Hernandez I'm from Vegas and I've seen some odd mixes in different cities. I've run into situations where a linedance that we call one thing, example Reggae Cowboy has the steps of the Sleazy Slide matched to it in Colorado...and boy were our faces red when we started dancing the steps to the Reggae Cowboy and they started dancing the steps to the Sleazy Slide. But ones like the Tush Push, Watermelon Crawl, Slapping Leather, Boot Scootin Boogie, Swamp Thang - those I've found to be pretty much the same from bar to bar...but not always.
Hi, Cindy, we've been doing Mmmbop here in Vegas or was doing it when I was doing the country club scene. I have just one comment regarding your heel forward and toe back execution when you dancing. When you instruct you do teach to make contact with the heel and toe of your foot - but when you dance you are doing a hop that looks really awkward and detracts from the flowing movement of the dance.
When you do the tap forward, tap back hold, tap forward hold then into a sailor step if you don't actually make contact with the ground the steps don't flow smoothly. You look like you are bunny hopping into sailor steps. Please do not take this is harsh criticism, I just wanted to point out that you aren't executing the steps while dancing in the same way you are teaching. Thank you so much for your efforts and time.