Nicole Castro leading the crowd during a line dance at Copper Blues in Doral. Photo by Angelica Wells Last November, Nicole Castro stepped onto the dance floor at Pub 52 in South Miami surrounded by a ...
When Tamia came across a video on YouTube of people line dancing to her 2006 song “Can’t Get Enough of You,” she and her husband, NBA legend Grant Hill, decided to join in the fun and learn the dance.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. If you've spent even a few minutes scrolling online lately, chances are you've seen groups of stylish Black folks, dressed in ...
This is it!,” she exclaimed, pulling her companion onto the dance floor. It was a Thursday at 10:30 p.m., and “Burn It Down” ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Black Southern line dance culture, and a co-sign from Beyoncé, has helped to popularize the song and its fan-snapping moves. By Kia Turner Wagener, ...
The dance steps come in on the lyric, “Did your boots stop workin’?”: Right heel, left heel, right heel, lift and tap the right foot forward then back, pivot turn, and swirl an arm overhead like a ...
IT IS A frigid mid-week evening in New York; snow has been pushed into large mounds on the pavement. But inside Desert 5 Spot, a Western-themed bar in Brooklyn, a group of 20-somethings is bringing ...
Grab your cowboy hat and pull on your best boots, because the girlies are line dancing. "My friends literally skip the gym to learn new dances," my Gen Z sister tells me back in Arizona. Line dancing ...
If you weren't line dancing at honkytonks in the 1990s to "Achy Breaky Heart," the name Diane Horner probably means nothing to you. But her face might ring a bell. She was the Midwestern fitness ...
Castro started showing the group the steps to a line dance she choreographed to the song. About 20 people slowly started to pick up her moves and were following her. When she posted this moment to ...