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- <text id=93TT1192>
- <title>
- Mar. 15, 1993: Scoot Your Booty!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LIVING, Page 60
- Scoot Your Booty!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Fed up with discos and singles bars, urban cowboys are lining
- up for the newest dance craze
- </p>
- <p>By GUY GARCIA - With reporting by Dan Cray/Los Angeles and
- Deborah Fowler/Houston
- </p>
- <p> It's Saturday night at Denim & Diamonds, a country-western
- nightclub in Santa Monica, California, and the joint is jumping--literally. Under a spinning glitterball flanked by stuffed
- moose and deer heads, several hundred people in boots and
- ten-gallon hats are doing something called the Electric Slide.
- As a band pumps out a country hit, the dancers hook their
- thumbs in the front pockets of their jeans and line up shoulder
- to shoulder. Moving together to the beat, they cross one foot
- over the other and take three steps to the left, three steps to
- the right, rock back and forth on their heels and kick high.
- Egged on by hoots and hollers, a few throw in an extra turn or
- tip of the hat, but all do their darnedest to exude country
- cool.
- </p>
- <p> Watching from one of the club's three bars, Mike Levi, a
- horse rancher from the nearby San Fernando Valley, spits
- chewing tobacco into a Styrofoam cup and shakes his head. "To
- me this is fun, but it's not good," he gripes. "Most of the
- people here are really what country people would call city
- slickers."
- </p>
- <p> What has true cowboys like Levi perplexed is a craze moving
- like a prairie fire from country honky-tonks into yuppie
- nightspots across America: country-line dancing. A descendant of
- the conga line and the Harlem Hustle, line dancing lets any
- number join in on a series of dips, kicks and turns, under
- names like Walkin' Wazi, Boot Scootin' Boogie, Tush Push, Neon
- Moon and Honky-Tonk Stomp.
- </p>
- <p> With its emphasis on old-fashioned manners and clean fun,
- the country line is square dancing for the '90s, the perfect
- pastime for the chummy, cuddly, slightly corny Clinton years.
- The trend was already gathering steam when Billy Ray Cyrus'
- 1992 hit Achy Breaky Heart spawned a line dance called the Achy
- Breaky. Now new ones are being made up every day. Kirsten Bonn, a
- former ballerina who teaches line-dancing classes at Denim &
- Diamonds, estimates that there are more than a thousand
- variations.
- </p>
- <p> For those who would rather practice at home,
- Minneapolis-based Quality Video Inc. distributes a series of
- instructional line-dancing videos. The firm has shipped 650,000
- copies of the tapes since they were introduced last September,
- and is currently filling orders at the rate of about 100,000 a
- month.
- </p>
- <p> Line dancing is spreading to areas not traditionally
- considered country-western strongholds. In the boutiquey
- historic district of Charleston, South Carolina, Southerners
- are lining up to scoot their boots at the Blue Coyote. This
- week Denim & Diamonds will open a 16,000-sq.-ft. venue at a
- former Playboy Club site in midtown Manhattan. "It's not just
- a fad," maintains Dave Cervini of New York City's C. and W.
- station WYNY, who has helped promote line-dancing events on New
- York's Long Island. "You never see drugs, weapons, fights. It's
- definitely a change. It's a return to something peaceful."
- </p>
- <p> "I think the biggest group that's into line dancing is
- people looking for something to do with the opposite sex
- without drinking," says Steve Cross, a dance instructor at
- Tooles, in Phoenix, Arizona. "It's a safe way to meet someone
- without hearing, `Can I buy you a drink?' " The casual ambience
- is an attractive alternative to the pickup scene. "Dancing's a
- way to have fun without getting into emotional relationships,"
- says Mike Martinelli, a college student who works as a waiter
- at Nashville's Wrangler.
- </p>
- <p> None of which impresses all those wryly disgruntled types
- like rancher Levi. They're still skeptical about the onslaught
- of country converts, some of whom do their line dancing to cuts
- by M.C. Hammer and Madonna. "We call them yuppie cowboys," says
- Ken Peters, manager of Denver's Grizzly Rose. "They're the ones
- who have never been on a horse." Still, Peters admits, "country
- music will never die as long as it keeps changing." And as long
- as a fresh herd of tenderfeet are ready to jump on the
- country-line bandwagon.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-