Subject 3, this name has long been popular all over the world, however, many people do not know that it originated in China. I didn't know anything about it until a group of young people known as "Taiwanese hip-hop" came to us and danced subject 3 dance, and I began to know a little bit about it. Interestingly, there was a recent report that Taiwan actually banned the skipping of subject three, which aroused my curiosity, so I looked it up on the Internet and learned the origin of subject three.
First of all, let's ** why this dance is called "subject three". It is said that the name comes from a Guangxi beauty who danced this dance when she was happy after passing the subject 3 exam. The audience was very curious about this and asked, "What kind of dance is this?" The beauty replied casually, "This is subject three." Therefore, the dance was named subject three. Unexpectedly, this casual remark of the beautiful woman caused trouble for many people who were preparing for their driver's license. Because subject 3 dance has become popular, those who are preparing to take the driver's license test want to find relevant practice questions but have no way to start, and every time they search for "subject 3" on the Internet, they can only find dance-related content.
Subject 3 attracted everyone's attention for the first time, mainly because of two well-received **: one was a scene performed at a wedding in Guangxi, where the best men and bridesmaids appeared one after another, accompanied by a strong **, their uniform dancing shook the audience. The other took place in a symphonic performance at the Dalian Academy of Arts, where five students ran to the stage and began to dance subject three, while the helpless orchestra conductor hurried them away with his baton. After the three subjects quickly became popular all over the country, they gradually went abroad, allowing dancers around the world to follow suit, so that the three subjects naturally became a global craze.
The founder of subject 3 is Guangxi dancer Zhu Kaihong. Compared with the current popular version, the original version of Zhu Kaihong is more colorful, and the dance steps are more complex and longer. Perhaps in order to make it easier to learn and master, later people simplified it and removed difficult movements such as mechanical dancing and space walking. The modern popular version of subject 3 combines elements such as break dancing, ghost step dancing, and modern dancing. It is precisely because of the simplification of more complex movements that the threshold of subject three is greatly reduced, and both young and old can easily get started and sway with the rhythm when the ** sounds, which is also one of the reasons why subject three is rapidly popular.
When subject 3 was popular in the world, it even appeared on the stage of the Spring Festival Gala. However, what is puzzling is that some Internet trolls have come out against it, claiming that subject 3 cannot be called a dance, that it is not elegant enough, and so on. I can't understand what these people think, they don't seem to be able to tolerate China's own stuff being loved by the whole world.
Take the Gangnam style horse riding dance, which is more simple and monotonous, but it has also swept the world, so why don't these people pour out about it? And look at the dancers who have skipped Subject 3, such as the Ballets Russes, the Royal Ballet, and the Latin World Champion Joanna, whose presence proves that Subject 3 is also very popular in foreign countries.