In the beginning I was thinking that it was cool, I think most of the people had the same reaction as Adele, for example? The problem is later looking for info... and she seems to represent a lot of things that we all generally speaking hate... for example, really believing that she did a good job, then, saying that all the criticism was because of misoginy instead of laughing with people and admitting that it was funny (in a good sense). And then, the fact that we already in this fine line of... why is breakdancing, a cultural movement in the Olympics and with not the diversity it should... and in this fine line, we discover that she has a PhD on the topic, which it's like a joke, honestly. Sorry but... That being a phd doctor, you might think that she would be able to see the situation clearly and understand that she is not good, but somehow, she can't. She's a PhD, we expected a doctor to be aware? And then you watch the qualifiers and the people who danced agaisnt her there and in the Redbulls competition and it doesnt matter what the judges say, so many others are better than her! Then you watch things like the competition agaisnt the Japanese bgirl who is levels better but the judged make Raygun win... and then it's clear that something's up. Then you read people that were in this world and they say that they didnt even know that there qualifiers for the Olímpics... And all those things are a lot of hateful things. I mean, that it's not just the dance, the situation is a representation of things that are very hateful.
@lon90562 ай бұрын
Every organisation has its flags, but you only understand that when you travel around the world. That's the bias that Australia has, being remote in small towns on a huge continent.
@kouleeofficial2 ай бұрын
The question is, are they doing the same judging systems from the qualifier that they were doing at the Olympics? Also, some moves translate better in a smaller settings than in the big stage like the Olympics.
@noah-vc5gw2 ай бұрын
What do you mean America put in lots of money into there dancer's really I don't think any country spent more than Australia it ended up costing Australian tax payer's $25 million to send one boy and one girl
@sof2294Ай бұрын
That’s the cost for the entire team, all the athletes, not only 2
@lilsongokustyle2 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@coutoalberton31232 ай бұрын
Nope, no , no …
@Justaguynobodyimportant2 ай бұрын
Do your research. Her husband was a judge at the qualifiers.
@DJKhanFu2 ай бұрын
Pretty ironic considering you didn’t do your own research and just stated a lie 😂
@thedukeldn2 ай бұрын
@@DJKhanFu😂 the confidence of KZbin commenters is undefeated
@kurtcur2 ай бұрын
I just did, and her husband was not one of the judges....
@poerava2 ай бұрын
The poor organisation of the event was the issue. It’s the fact that Raygun and her husband, having played a big role in organising study, research, workshops and events for the australian breaking scene, suggests they would have had an acute awareness of the hindering factors involved in the one and ONLY qualifying event. I’ve seen Polynesian and Asian b girls doing the flare. The full on flare with their hands, not a windmill. A flare. With flips and stalls. Down here in Melbourne. I smell a rat. I think an enquiry is appropriate here, as any poor performance by a sports team in Australia would demand.