I figured this must be Canada even before I saw who posted it. (via Everlasting Blort)New immigrants and Indigenous peoples meeting for the first time and discovering they share many of the same traditional dance moves is one of our favourites moments of this doc.
— CBC Gem (@cbcgem) June 3, 2021
(📺 : Behind the Bhangra Boys | @cbcdocs) pic.twitter.com/89GkQzdILL
4 comments:
... or could it be that unintended synchronicity is the only logical answer, since there are just so many ways to do something?
It's like music. There's eight notes (plus five sharps/flats) in a musical octave... it's only a matter of time before they have been put together in every possible combination and things will start repeating themselves.
-"BB"-
The number of possible notes within what we call an octave is actually infinite. The familiar 8 notes with sharps & flats is simply a device created long ago that has been adopted "universally".
I do agree with your core point, though.
You guys are so deep, while here I am wondering why me, an average white man, has no traditional dance moves apart from The Robot and the Macarena.
Beer. Teaching white men to dance since 1842.
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