Dancing baby

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The Dancing Baby
The Dancing Baby

The Dancing Baby, also known as "Baby Cha-Cha", refers to a 3D character and 3D-rendered animation of a baby dancing for several seconds. The video, one of the earliest examples of an Internet phenomenon, became popular in 19961997 after being distributed widely over the Internet. The dancing baby originated as a collection of experimental testing data and files, ultimately released in Fall/1996 as a product sample source file with the ground-breaking 3D character animation software product "Character Studio" that is used with 3D Studio Max (both products from Autodesk). The original sample source file was produced and prepared by the original Character Studio development team (Michael Girard, Susan Amkraut, John Chadwick, Paul Bloemink, John Hutchinson, Adam Felt) of Unreal Pictures and Kinetix (Autodesk). Part of the original Dancing Baby data consists of animation keyframes that were manually and automatically generated in the "Biped" portion of the Character Studio toolset. Contrary to popular misconceptions, the original Dancing Baby animation data (keyframes) were not created using motion capture at all.

Subsequent to its release, animators in the commercial sector have used or modified the Dancing Baby source file using the Character Studio product to produce different versions of rendered visualizations for use in media. This helped develop the Dancing Baby animation into a meme or media and internet phenomenon. The dancing baby video and its variations have appeared in a broad array of mainstream media, including television dramas (e.g. "Ally McBeal"), commercial advertisements, and music videos such as Blue Swede's cover of the song "Hooked on a Feeling (Ooga Chaka)." More stylized versions and parodies were created shortly thereafter, including a 'drunken baby', a 'rasta baby', 'samurai baby', and others.

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[edit] Appearance in mainstream media

The dancing baby character and animations quickly made the rounds on the Internet through email. It was then featured as a recurring hallucination on the television program Ally McBeal. On the series, the baby was meant to signify the ticking of Ally's biological clock.

The dancing baby was also featured in a Blockbuster Video commercial immediately after gaining mainstream media attention. In the commercial, the baby dances to the Rick James hit, Give It To Me Baby.

In line with the Ally McBeal appearance, in a Celebrity Deathmatch match between Lucy Lawless and Calista Flockhart, the dancing baby suddenly appears in the ring with his back turned to the camera. After a moment of dancing, he turns around and is shown to be Dennis Franz in nothing but a diaper; referee Mills Lane shouts at him, "I told you I didn't want you in my ring, Dennis Franz!"

At the height of the Ally McBeal series, a dance group called Trubble released a song called Dancing Baby (Ooga-Chaka) which charted well in Australia in late 1998/early 1999 and hit #21 on the UK charts.

In the television series Millennium, the episode "Somehow, Satan Got Behind Me" features a demon who manifests himself in the form of a baby, dancing to the Black Flag song "My War". Writer/director Darin Morgan based the baby on its use in Ally McBeal, as he commented "It's a terrifying thing, that baby. She dances with it, and you go, 'There's something really wrong with this person.'"[1]

The Dancing Baby is a recurring feature on VH1's I Love the 90s series, and it also appeared on Best Week Ever.

Iowa State University basketball games frequently feature the dancing baby on the scoreboard during timeouts.

The Dancing Baby appeared on an episode of Unhappily Ever After, with Dennis Franz as the baby. It appeared on an episode of 3rd Rock from the Sun, with Harry Solomon (French Stewart) as the baby.

The Dancing Baby also makes an appearance in the Xbox and PS2 title, Silent Hill 4.

An easter egg exists in Quest for Glory V: Dragon Fire where the hero dances in the Dead Parrot Inn. When he does so, he imitates the exact moves of the Dancing Baby.

The Dancing Baby is also spoofed in a Simpsons episode. Homer creates his first website, which features a dancing Jesus busting the same moves as the baby.

The Cincinnati Ohio classic rock station WEBN featured the dancing baby grooving to the song "You Shook Me All Night Long" by AC/DC on a television commercial for the station.

On the Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip episode "4 A.M. Miracle", when Danny asks Cal to repair a baby doll that is computerized and reacts like a real baby, Cal asks "Want me to make it dance, too?"

In the EA Sports football game FIFA 99, the editor includes an animation of a player doing a version of the Dancing Baby.

The Dancing Baby was used in an animation featured at the end of a level in the game RollerTyping.

In the Journeyman episode "The Year of the Rabbit", a scene from Ally McBeal with the Dancing Baby appeared anachronistically in a 1997 scene. In actuality, the Dancing Baby first appeared on Ally McBeal in a 1998 episode.

In the computer game Zoo Tycoon, the gorillas will sometime do the same dance as the dancing baby.

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