The 2024 Summer Olympics are the first ones to feature an official breakdancing competition alongside the traditional events like gymnastics, track and field, and volleyball. A star was not born, but a household name was. The 36-year old cultural studies professor Rachael āRaygunā Gunn shocked and delighted viewers with one of the most unexpected performances at this yearās games.
Bringing breakdancing to the Olympics was part of an effort to broaden its appeal and pull in younger, more diverse audiences. In reality, one of the things that has made this yearās event so successful thus far appears to be the ease with which audiences can stream the various competitions, and the ability to share viral takes, commentary, and memes instantly with platforms like TikTok. The result is that there is one version of the Summer Olympics as presented on live TV, and another as shared online every day, with various main characters and entertaining moments bouncing off various corners of the internet.
https://twitter.com/embed/status/1821959503556018671
Gunn has now become one of them. After practicing for 16 years and competing in various breakdancing world championships, she managed to qualify for the Paris Olympics to represent Australia. āMy specialty is style and creativity, not dynamics or power moves like many other dancers,ā she told NBC before the event. āIāve ticked most of these boxes because itās my specialty. I donāt know if itās going to be valued as much as some of the other criteria, but I hope people are still wowed by what I bring since itās something different.ā
People were certainly wowed, though probably not in the way she had intended. Here are some of the reactions:
https://twitter.com/embed/status/1821946243431506077
In fifteen years there will be a movie about how this was the real breakdancers mom and how she had to step in to take her daughter's place after the bullies of a rival breakdancing gym injured her kid in a vicious, unsanctioned dance off. It will be called Heart Breaker.
— Jeremy Crawford (@crawfather) August 9, 2024
https://twitter.com/embed/status/1821943235721220312
Breakdancing at the Olympics.
I always like to give the new sports a chance, so can confirm itās an ABOMINATION. The lowest bar ever to be cleared for an Olympic medal.
This is like something youād see outside Irish pubs at closing time. #Paris2024 #BreakingForGold pic.twitter.com/6CfvXR9b9s
— Barry Kenny šŗš¦šŖšŗš¬šŖš²š©š®šŖ Ń (@barrykenny) August 9, 2024
this is worse than gallipoli
— Sophie Kleeman (@sophiekleeman) August 9, 2024
I could live all my life and never come up with anything as funny as Raygun, the 36-year-old Australian Olympic breakdancer pic.twitter.com/1uPYBxIlh8
— mariah (@mariahkreutter) August 9, 2024
Give Raygun the gold right now #breakdancing pic.twitter.com/bMtAWEh3xo
— nā (@nichstarr) August 9, 2024
This would be me trying to breakdance at the Olympics pic.twitter.com/vgO3K7YeJN
— Alexandra (@thealfoster) August 9, 2024
Raygun, I'm sure you're a sweet lady, but man… šš #BreakingForGold pic.twitter.com/t95L8z2DyA
— A Tax Collector (@a_txcllctr87033) August 9, 2024
This would be me trying to breakdance at the Olympics pic.twitter.com/vgO3K7YeJN
— Alexandra (@thealfoster) August 9, 2024
Mixed feelings about Olympic breaking thus far but I'm fascinated by Raygun, the 36-year-old Australian college professor who does research on ādance, gender politics, and the dynamics between theoretical and practical methodologies.ā pic.twitter.com/0wgHLxfcc9
— Dan Gartland (@Dan_Gartland) August 9, 2024
There is no way I laugh harder for the rest of 2024 than after watching a 36 year old Australian college professor named Raygun "breakdance" against teenagers pic.twitter.com/OkN5OgqTNY
— Your Best Friend's Black Friend (@IAmStatMatt) August 9, 2024
I'd like to personally thank Raygun for making millions of people worldwide think "huh, maybe I can make the Olympics too" pic.twitter.com/p5QlUbkL2w
— Bradford Pearson (@BradfordPearson) August 9, 2024
As many people have pointed out, Gunn seems like a perfectly nice person and she is clearly trying to bring her best energy to one of the worldās largest stages. And indeed, she has accomplished more than most performers have at the games, whether she wins a medal or not. There are some very grim things going on in the world these days, and āabominationā or not, Gunnās dancing has brought smiles to millions of people today. It brought the So You Think You Can Dance reality TV vibesāmessy, authentic, and unvarnishedāthat the Summer Olympics have been missing.
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