economie

The Australian Olympian ‘Raygun’ went viral for her breaking moves. Now she’s defending them.

Gunn.

“My bag always has two main things: It’s like, my knee pads and my laptop,” Gunn said on the podcast “The Female Athlete Project.” “Because I need my knee-pads to break. And then, yeah, just do some emails quickly. Or like, do some revisions on a chapter I submitted, or copyedit this article I did, or moderate those grades.”

The athlete also told the Herald that she preferred to wear “baggy jeans and a baggy T-shirt” while breaking.

“I like the heaviness they bring,” Gunn said. “Maybe it’s my background in hip-hop, but having weight closer to the ground works for me, gets me in the right headspace.”

Raygun’s performances at the Olympics sparked memes and criticism

Raygun took the stage at the Olympics wearing a tracksuit in Australia’s green and gold, breaking out moves that included hopping like a kangaroo. Her performances attracted attention online and memes that compared her moves to, among other things, dancing children.

But some critics argued that Raygun’s performance didn’t represent breaking — a sport that will not return to the 2028 Games in Los Angeles.

Breaking came from Black and brown communities in the Bronx in the 1970s. Malik Dixon, an African American man who lives in Australia, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that Gunn came off as “somebody who was toying with the culture” during a significant moment for the sport.

(Raygun’s full performances — and the rest of the 2024 Olympic events — are available on Peacock.)

Gunn qualified for the Olympics through the Oceania Breaking Championships

There were three ways to qualify for breaking at the Olympics, which the World Dance Sport Federation (WDSF) outlined in April 2022: at the WDSF championship in Belgium in September 2023, in a continental qualifier, or in an Olympic qualifier series held in 2024. Gunn qualified regionally by winning the WDSF Oceania Breaking Championships, which were held in Sydney in October 2023.

Claims have circulated online that Gunn unfairly obtained her spot in the games, with one petition claiming that she established the governing body that ran the selection process. Other posts online, as reported by the Australian Associated Press, claimed that her husband, Free, was one of the judges.

Ausbreaking organized the Oceania Breaking Championships, according to the WDSF. Gunn did not establish that organization: According to the Sydney Morning Herald, decorated breaker and current Ausbreaking president Lowe Napalan did in 2019, when it was originally called the Australian Breaking Association.

Neither Gunn nor Free are executive or committee members, according to the organization’s website.

Gunn.

During a press conference on Sunday, Martin Gilian, the Olympic breaking head judge, defended Gunn’s performance, saying breaking was “all about originality” and representing your roots, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported.

“This is exactly what Raygun was doing,” Gilian said. “She got inspired by her surroundings, which in this case, for example, was a kangaroo.”

Gunn said during the Saturday press conference that “all of my moves are original,” ESPN reported. She told The Guardian that her biggest strength was “creativity.”

“I was never going to beat these girls on what they do best, the dynamic and the power moves, so I wanted to move differently, be artistic and creative,” Gunn told The Guardian, “because how many chances do you get that in a lifetime to do that on an international stage. I was always the underdog and wanted to make my mark in a different way.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/raygun-breakdancing-video-olympics-memes-controversy-explained-2024-8