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About
Since 2005, Doug Fox's blog has covered the intersection of dance and the Internet. A primary focus is to help dancers and dance companies use the Internet and their dance videos for marketing, educational, creative and revenue-generation purposes.
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This post made me laugh, since Maria of "A Time to Dance" and I were discussing this exact same YouTube phenomenon a while back:
http://atimetodance.wordpress.com/2007/09/23/dance-crazes-and-youtube/
As for your questions... I don't think dance crazes are really all that big yet, certainly nothing like they were in the 50's. Every other song from the 50's had a "dance" to go with it. But I do think they may be on the upswing.
As for recent times, "Crank That" is the only fairly complex dance that goes to a specific song that I can think of. The only other recent song-specific dances I came up with were that obnoxious "cupid shuffle" song that turns up at wedding receptions and the Pepto Bismol dance that is aparently hotter than hot at middle school dances. And neither of those are particularly complex, nor widespread. (Though definately search YouTube for "Pepto dance" - it's disturbing just how many people will film themselves miming gastro-intestinal distress to music.)
I don't think there's a formula... Anything intended to be a party dance needs to be simple enough for drunk people do do, and the instructions probably need to be included in the words to the song. And the song itself needs to be catchy and easy to recognize as soon as the DJ puts it on.
"Crank That" is certainly catchy, but I don't think the dance is going to show up to much at wedding receptions. :) I think people like to film themselves doing it show off what they have done starting with the raw material of the choreography, then making it their own. The back-and forth of putting the instructions on YouTube, then inviting people to film themselves doing it gives people a sense of interaction with the artist and their creative process.