ONTD

3:57 pm - 08/07/2012

Serena Williams' Crip Walk Dance Criticized As Inappropriate



By Cavan Sieczkowski

Serena Williams was so overjoyed after defeating Maria Sharapova in the Olympic singles and winning the gold that she broke into a Crip Walk dance.

"It was just me. I love to dance," Williams told reporters who inquired about her Crip Walk. "I didn't know what else to do. I was so happy, and next thing I know I started dancing and moving. I didn't plan it. It just happened."

When one naive reporter asked what the name of the dance could be -- "The Wimbledon?" or "The Serena?" -- Williams said, "Actually, there is a name. But I don't know if I -- it's inappropriate. It's just a dance we do in California."



"For the uninitiated, the Crip Walk is a funky little hip-hop dance move made famous by Crip gang members in Compton in the 1970s," wrote Fox Sports' Reid Forgrave, who went on to criticize Williams:

And there was Serena — the tennis legend, the winner of 14 individual Grand Slams, the best player of her generation, the American girl being crowned at the All-England Club as the queen of tennis — Crip-Walking all over the most lily-white place in the world.

She didn’t do it on purpose. It was a moment of unbridled joy. She pumped her fist, jumped up and down, looked into the crowd, then did her ill-timed dance.

You couldn’t help but shake your head. It was as if Serena just couldn’t seem to avoid dipping into waters of controversy even as she’d ascended to the top of her sport.

Another Fox Sports reporter, Jason Whitlock, downplayed the so-called controversy, saying: "What Serena did was akin to cracking a tasteless, X-rated joke inside a church... Serena deserved to be called out. What she did was immature and classless. She made a mistake, something we all do."


Others took to defending the tennis champ.

Washington Post reporter Clinton Yates asked "Where was all the outrage when “You Got Served” — a movie that prominently featured a C-Walking dance battle — came out? Is the C-Walk suddenly more taboo as a dance because it happened on the Olympic stage rather than in a second-rate movie?"

Chris Chase of Yahoo! Sports wants everyone to relax. "This makes it seem like Serena crip-walked away from the Queen after stealing the crown jewels," he wrote. "She broke out the dance for three seconds, while looking at her sister sitting in the player's box! It's a dance move, not a political statement."

Even California rapper Snoop Dogg (aka Snoop Lion), who helped popularize the move, gave the 30-year-old a shout-out, tweeting:

Snoop Dogg

Shot out to Serena williams. C walking at the Olympics Cpt style hahahahah! Go girl.


The Crip Walk might just be a dance but its affiliation with the California gang has forced some schools to ban it.

In 2002, Crenshaw High School in Los Angeles prohibited the dance, with administrators saying that it "glamorizes gang life," according to the Los Angeles Times.

"Teenagers know the gang started the Crip walk a decade ago, but say it will cause a fight only if performed in the wrong neighborhood and while flashing gang hand signs," wrote Los Angeles Times reporter Erika Hayasaki. "They dance it for fun and consider it a badge of honor to master its complicated moves like the rap stars who popularized it."

Still, Williams remains unfazed by any controversy her dance might have caused.

"I dont' care. That's the least of my worries . . . I'm so excited I was able to do the dance. I'm glad I did it!" she told Us Weekly on Monday.

Celebratory dances are commonplace in sports, especially after pivotal Olympic wins. Mo Farah did his signature "Mobot" move after winning gold in the 10,000-meter race Saturday night. The U.S. women's soccer team also broke it down after beating North Korea, with Hope Solo and Christie Rampone doing the worm.





Source



*I fixed the title and I posted to ONTD because Venus and Serena have tags here*
rhea_zombi 9th-Aug-2012 05:12 am (UTC)
yeah okay that makes more sense. Also I guess at the very least he's adding to the oppressive environment that a POC might feel just walking down the street minding their own business. Like a feeling that you can't relax, or if you're just talking to a random white person you feel like they're secretly judging you, etc.

I guess if we're berating someone for saying "all white ppl do this" we should instead have a conversation about how many horrible white ppl this person may have encountered over the years that they would make such a blanket statement. Like maybe that's more of a problem we should be discussing than hurting a non-racist white person's feelings.

I'm kind of at the point where I'm thinking if a person is white and they're inadvertently called a racist but they're NOT actually racist deep down then they should just ignore it and not care. (maybe its the people who are secretly racist that get the most offended?) Like a white person's temporary indignation over being called something they're not can't possibly trump a POC's lifelong experience of crap from awful people and thus understandable outrage.

It's just sad tho that all of these misunderstandings just lead to people being afraid of going outside their comfort zone (I think it goes both ways). This can only lead to 'otherness', fear of the unknown, ignorance, and at the very least awkwardness surely? (this is directed at the whole thread I guess)

lol, Kumbaya, etc.

Edited at 2012-08-09 05:13 am (UTC)
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