swingandhustle
2009-03-09 19:52:58 UTC
It was a pleasure seeing everyone in person at the IHDA meet and greet
at MadJam Saturday March 7, 2009!
During the meeting’s announcement period, IHDA president Billy Fajardo
got up and announced the formalization of the new IHDA Hustle syllabus
that the society has assembled. By all accounts, the syllabus is well
thought out, and codifies NY styled hustle very well. In some cases,
it will clarify competitive objectives and make judging more
consistent.
But there are some very serious potential problems:
Those of you in attendance at the meeting saw me ask Billy the
following question - "How will the enforcement of this new syllabus
affect our ongoing attempt to get young people into hustle?"
Billy responded with two points -
1.) he said - Because I have not traveled as extensively as he, I have
not seen all of the young people doing hustle in Sweden, and Mexico,
etc. [point one - there ARE plenty of young people doing hustle - but
they're in some other country].
2.) His second point was implicit - that since there ARE young people
doing hustle in foreign countries - we don't really have a problem.
Permit me to remind Billy what was written on his own election
platform, and what the job as president is supposed to mean to those
who elected him. Billy - your own election platform on the IHDA site
run by you (written last year in march ) already acknowledged the
problem of 'missing youth' and your commitment to resolve this well
understood problem. So it's a little late now to assert that there “is
no problem". Secondly - members of the IHDA may need to be reminded
about where this question was being asked, at MadJam in Virginia.
Dave Moldover got out and praised you in from of all Saturday night
for assisting in the LARGEST hustle registration of ANY event on the
east coast. Which means - we don't need to find young hustle dancers
in a pool hall in Angola – because if they aren't coming to any of our
events - even this biggest of them all - they're off the radar.
The IHDA may want a world view of hustle, but as of today, all of our
officers and all of our sanctioned events are in the US of A. If
every time we ask an IHDA officer "where are all the young people" or
"what are you all doing about the problem" - the answer can't always
be - they're somewhere else - and you'd need a big jet to fly there.
By midnight that same night, I was in the back hustle room at this
largest of all east coast hustle events dancing with the exact same 50
year old crowd I've seen for the last 15 years. Nothing has changed –
all the young people were out in the west coast room as always .
Remember folks - when you're at the very largest hustle event - you
don't need to fly around the world to find dancers elsewhere – because
THEY already COME to YOU - that's what made MadJam the biggest.
Here's the answer to the question I asked Billy - for anyone who is
interested: “What effect will enforcing a syllabus have on the
young?"
In short - it will be fatal for two reasons:
1.) First - the economy is rotten, so very few people will want to
prioritize $65/hour lessons to get with Billy’s mandated program.
2.) The syllabus eliminates all the fun stuff kids want to join a
dance for, as already proven in lindy and salsa. By eliminating all
the tricks and turns at low levels - the dance will become the domain
of the 50 plus generation - and kids will just retreat to salsa.
3.) Remember folks – kids haven’t rejected hustle. They have only
rejected NY styled hustle. Billy’s syllabus will create a situation
where no one can win w/o doing NY style. And no promoter will hire
anyone as a teacher who isn’t a champion somewhere. This syllabus
will create a monopoly around a style that has NO YOUTH COMPONOENT
what so ever. And any dance lacking young people – has no future.
Adding a syllabus to hustle (outside of the college programs) will
have the same effect on hustle that it has had on the ballroom world.
It will become a 50 plus world of older students, served by a very
small group of certified pros. Considering the economy, and Billy's
campaign promise to address the problems of missing youth - this is a
disastrous time to burden hustle with this kind of short sighted
agenda.
David Flynn
at MadJam Saturday March 7, 2009!
During the meeting’s announcement period, IHDA president Billy Fajardo
got up and announced the formalization of the new IHDA Hustle syllabus
that the society has assembled. By all accounts, the syllabus is well
thought out, and codifies NY styled hustle very well. In some cases,
it will clarify competitive objectives and make judging more
consistent.
But there are some very serious potential problems:
Those of you in attendance at the meeting saw me ask Billy the
following question - "How will the enforcement of this new syllabus
affect our ongoing attempt to get young people into hustle?"
Billy responded with two points -
1.) he said - Because I have not traveled as extensively as he, I have
not seen all of the young people doing hustle in Sweden, and Mexico,
etc. [point one - there ARE plenty of young people doing hustle - but
they're in some other country].
2.) His second point was implicit - that since there ARE young people
doing hustle in foreign countries - we don't really have a problem.
Permit me to remind Billy what was written on his own election
platform, and what the job as president is supposed to mean to those
who elected him. Billy - your own election platform on the IHDA site
run by you (written last year in march ) already acknowledged the
problem of 'missing youth' and your commitment to resolve this well
understood problem. So it's a little late now to assert that there “is
no problem". Secondly - members of the IHDA may need to be reminded
about where this question was being asked, at MadJam in Virginia.
Dave Moldover got out and praised you in from of all Saturday night
for assisting in the LARGEST hustle registration of ANY event on the
east coast. Which means - we don't need to find young hustle dancers
in a pool hall in Angola – because if they aren't coming to any of our
events - even this biggest of them all - they're off the radar.
The IHDA may want a world view of hustle, but as of today, all of our
officers and all of our sanctioned events are in the US of A. If
every time we ask an IHDA officer "where are all the young people" or
"what are you all doing about the problem" - the answer can't always
be - they're somewhere else - and you'd need a big jet to fly there.
By midnight that same night, I was in the back hustle room at this
largest of all east coast hustle events dancing with the exact same 50
year old crowd I've seen for the last 15 years. Nothing has changed –
all the young people were out in the west coast room as always .
Remember folks - when you're at the very largest hustle event - you
don't need to fly around the world to find dancers elsewhere – because
THEY already COME to YOU - that's what made MadJam the biggest.
Here's the answer to the question I asked Billy - for anyone who is
interested: “What effect will enforcing a syllabus have on the
young?"
In short - it will be fatal for two reasons:
1.) First - the economy is rotten, so very few people will want to
prioritize $65/hour lessons to get with Billy’s mandated program.
2.) The syllabus eliminates all the fun stuff kids want to join a
dance for, as already proven in lindy and salsa. By eliminating all
the tricks and turns at low levels - the dance will become the domain
of the 50 plus generation - and kids will just retreat to salsa.
3.) Remember folks – kids haven’t rejected hustle. They have only
rejected NY styled hustle. Billy’s syllabus will create a situation
where no one can win w/o doing NY style. And no promoter will hire
anyone as a teacher who isn’t a champion somewhere. This syllabus
will create a monopoly around a style that has NO YOUTH COMPONOENT
what so ever. And any dance lacking young people – has no future.
Adding a syllabus to hustle (outside of the college programs) will
have the same effect on hustle that it has had on the ballroom world.
It will become a 50 plus world of older students, served by a very
small group of certified pros. Considering the economy, and Billy's
campaign promise to address the problems of missing youth - this is a
disastrous time to burden hustle with this kind of short sighted
agenda.
David Flynn