First Lady Michelle Obama Hits the Dougie

The Los Angeles Times

Michelle Obama is so serious about her Let’s Move campaign to fight childhood obesity that she led by example Tuesday by dancing with a field full of students in the nation’s capital.

While Beyoncé’s “Move Your Body” blasted over a sound system at Alice Deal Middle School, the first lady went through a series of dance moves, from the old-school Running Man to the newest craze, the Dougie, to the delight of the youngsters who sashayed along with her.

“Beyoncé is one of my favorite performers on the planet.  And when she agreed to remake her video and do this Let’s Move flash workout, I was so excited, because this is what we’ve been talking about — that exercise and moving can be fun,” Obama told ABC News.

About SouthernGirl2

A Native Texan who adores baby kittens, loves horses, rodeos, pomegranates, & collect Eagles. Enjoys politics, games shows, & dancing to all types of music. Loves discussing and learning about different cultures. A Phi Theta Kappa lifetime member with a passion for Social & Civil Justice.
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11 Responses to First Lady Michelle Obama Hits the Dougie

  1. Beyonce Visits Harlem School For ‘Let’s Move’ Workout

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/05/04/beyonce-lets-move-school-visit_n_857439.html

    NEW YORK (AP) — Students at a New York City public school working out to a Beyonce song got a big surprise when the superstar walked in and joined them.

    About 85 students at P.S. 161 in Harlem were in the middle of a choreographed routine Tuesday to a song adapted from Beyonce’s hit “Get Me Bodied” when the singer arrived.

    The children were participating in a national simulcast of “Let’s Move Flash Workout.” It’s part of first lady Michelle Obama’s fitness campaign.

    The singer joined in wearing stiletto heels and a T-shirt emblazoned with “Let’s Move.”

    Thirteen-year-old Aisha Collier gushed “she’s so beautiful.” She told the New York Post she messed up a little when Beyonce first arrived but then got back into it and continued to dance and have fun.

    • Ametia says:

      This was sooooo much fun to watch the girls move and enjoy themselves. Beyonce did good , joining the class and supporting FLOTUS Let’s Move program. Good fun!

      • Yes, good fun indeed. I love seeing the kids having fun! It’s a good thing Beyonce’s doing. She has great moves and doing it in 3 inch heels too!

      • Ametia says:

        LOL and you know those girls were really giving it their all to hang with Beyonce….. They got a great workout with their efforts to impress! Clever move by FLOTUS & Beyonce.

  2. Ametia says:

    h/t rikyrah This article needs to be posted here too. Thank you Ta-Nehisi!

    The Longest War
    By Ta-Nehisi Coates
    May 4 2011, 11:00 AM ET

    Last week we saw quite a few African-American bloggers and writers offering critiques of birtherism and race. The salient point is that the tradition of attacking the citizenship rights of African-Americans extends from slave codes to state-wide bans on black residence to black codes to debt peonage to literacy tests, to felon disenfranchisement. You literally can trace attacks on black citizenship from the very origins of American citizenship itself, up into the present day.

    Birtherism is an alloy of that unfortunate American thread and the anti-elitist, white populism of Andrew Jackson. Calling it an alloy is imperfect, as it implies that American anti-elitism has no relation to racism, which is false. (See Howe’s What God Hath Wrought, or more appropriately, read the book. Sorry for lecturing, but it’s your history. And it’s listed on Amazon for roughly the same price as a good burger.)

    But there are also deeper reasons for why African-Americans find requests for Obama’s birth certificate, college transcript, SAT scores, high school grades etc. deeply unsettling. A reader captured this in the following note. He’d just finished watching the video above of Michelle Obama dancing with a group of kids:

    I planned on sending you an email today that offered my thoughts on why people my age ran into the streets to celebrate on Sunday night. I was going to write about how the prevalence of social networking normalized and made it easier for people in their early 20’s to congregate during important moments. Then, I ran across this clip of Michelle Obama dancing with a group of middle school students in Washington today.

    After getting over my initial shock that the First Lady was at least vaguely familiar with a dance that I might sloppily attempt in a nightclub, I thought about how familiar the image was to me. She reminded me of my aunts at our family cook outs, where they get up and try to do the new dance, but then school all of us with the Electric Slide (or in this case, the Running Man).

    That thought brought me back to your comments about why Donald Trump’s comments feel so offensive, how his comments undercut all of the things that Black parents say to children about how they will be respected if they study and work hard.

    Maybe it’s unfair, but I now realize why I am more offended by comments about the President and First Lady than I was about comments about President and Mrs. Clinton. It’s not just that they are Black and I am too. I think it has more to do with the fact that they are so familiar, they remind me of people I know, which causes a more personal reaction.

    One of things that always amazed me about the reaction to the Poundcake Speech, was the assumption among pundits, that Cosby was somehow bravely stating truths which the black community didn’t want to address. This is the sort of thing that happens when you have a pundit-class more interested in abstract thought experiments, than actually going into black neighborhoods, or really, any neighborhood that might be unfamiliar.

    In point of fact, every black parent I know is at war with their children in a way that white parents are not. I grew up in house where the history of race and racism was the air. But concurrent to that history was the deeply-held belief that American racism was never an excuse for cynicism, anti-intellectualism, thuggism or nihilism. My parents were conscious. But when I was failing my way through school, I don’t recall them ever raising their clenched fists and exclaiming “Damn the white man.”

    To the contrary, there was a deep-seated belief that educating yourself was essential, and that hard work ultimately prevails. Whatever their broader critiques, it was that essential faith that united them with the rest of the country. Preaching that faith is a lot easier when you have actual examples to point to. In terms of external examples (outside of the family) there are not better models, right now, than Barack and Michelle Obama.

    What many white people fail to realize is that though Barack Obama and his family are unique to them, they are deeply familiar to black people. Put differently, they are from our particular neighborhood. I think back to Michelle Obama’s own words:

    “People have never met a Michelle Obama,” the soon-to-be first lady said toward the end of our interview. “But what they’ll come to learn is that there are thousands and thousands of Michelle and Barack Obamas across America. You just don’t live next door to them, or there isn’t a TV show about them.”

    But we do live next door to them, and the TV show is our lives. We went to church and played in summer leagues with people like them. I went to college with people like them. This is not to slight Barack Obama’s truly remarkable story, nor the indispensable labor of the people who raised him. But there were biracial black people with wild stories all across my college campus. The first girl I ever really loved was raised by her Jewish mother, in all-white small town in Pennsylvania. She was unique, but not because of her background. The strictures of segregation gifted black people with the particular beauty of being a deeply interwoven diaspora on to ourselves, rendering “Black” into a broad country.

    To see that country manifested in the White House is the sort of boon that you can’t really attach to statistics. But for those of us who are waging the fight against a crippling cynicism, who are urging our children on, who visit schools and begin our addresses with, “I remember when I just like you,” the First Family is perhaps the greatest weapon in our arsenal.

    From the perspective of race, we don’t object to people trying to defeat him. We don’t object to Hillary claiming he’s soft. We don’t object to McCain claiming he’s a celebrity. We don’t object to the GOP calling him a tax and spend liberal. We don’t even object to Mitt Romney aspiring to hang him. (We know what you meant, Mitt.)

    But when broad sections of this country foolishly follow a carnival barker in the ugly tradition of attacking black citizenship rights, when pundits shriek that Obama’s successes are simply the result of the misguided largess of white people, they undermine our most intimate war. They undermine the notion that someone familiar to that kid on the corner could legitimately reach the highest levels of the country, that someone like that kid’s Aunt could be the First Lady. They undermine this country’s social contract, and the “hard work pays” message of my parents. And to that we object.

    For if they will not take as legitimate a magna cum laude from their highest institutions, if they will not accept a man who tells black kids to cut off the video games and study, who accedes to their absurd requests one week, and slays their demons the next, who will they accept? Who among us would they ever believe?

    http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/05/the-longest-war/238334/

  3. Pingback: PHOTOS: Flash dance | cool girls

  4. This is so awesome! I love Flotus! She totally rocks!

    Work it, Michelle!

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