Posted on 10/01/2003 12:13:22 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
Sept. 29 issue At first, the cheerleaders getting ready for practice in a Los Angeles park seem like average teens as they sip Coke and pepper their sentences with like. But then 17-year-old Larry Wood peels off his sweat pants to reveal a short black and red pleated skirt.
A STARTLED ONLOOKER yells out, Faggot! Wood, who has a girlfriend, shrugs and tries an arabesque. I just dont pay attention to it, he says. It shows how much they know. It doesnt matter if youre gay or bi. We should all be treated equally. Moments later, Wood and the 11 other members of Radical Teen Cheer, who come from two inner-city high schools and several colleges, launch into their first routine: Were teens, were cute, were radical to boot! Were angry, were tough and we have had enough!
Radical cheerleaders might seem like an oxymoron, but in the last few years, teenage and twentysomething activists around the world have turned an American tradition into potent political theater. There are Radical Cheerleading squads from Burlington, Vt., and San Diego, as well as France, Poland and even Japan. Some squads carefully choreograph routines and wear matching outfits, complete with pompoms and megaphones. Others go for a more eccentric look.
AMERICAN INGENUITY AT ITS BEST
Its a grass-roots movement, usually spread when someone sees a squad in actionat WTO protests, for example, or antiwar demonstrations. (Meredith Ryley, a history teacher, started Radical Teen Cheer after reading about a Minneapolis group.) What unites them are causes, from protesting the Iraq war to fighting racism, sexism, homophobia and capitalist exploitation. Cheerleading is the ironic medium for their message. University of Alabama professor Natalie Adams, coauthor of Cheerleader: An American Icon, includes Radicals in a class she teaches called The Cheerleader in American Culture. She compares them to Twinkies, which, she says, were created when someone took conventional ingredients, sponge cake and icing, and made something new, just as activists have created something new out of traditional cheerleading. I think its brilliant, she says. Its American ingenuity at its best.
Most squads credit two activist sisters from FloridaAimee and Cara Jenningswith coming up with the idea in the mid-1990s. They taught cheers to other women at workshops, and the concept spread quickly. By 2001, there were enough radical squads for a convention in Ottawa. Since then, Aimee Jennings, now 33, says in an e-mail, this combustible merger of traditional cheerleading and social justice has focused on everyone from the streetside sexual harasser to G.W. Bush.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...
Get a Life
--erik
The Cheerleader in American Culture? A class at Bama? No doubt a requirement for the jocks. Roll Tide!
Probably the only college course in the country whose main textbook is published by Playboy.
The text for Modern American Presidency: 1993-2000 was too raunchy for Playboy. Hustler ended up publishing it.
LOL!
Yeah, that's pretty much what I think about guys who wear skirts too.
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