Requiem for Raygun
For those of you on the edges of your seat waiting for an apology from much derided breakdancer Raygun for her 2024 Olympics omnishambles, your day has come.
From the BBC:
Australian Olympian Rachael Gunn has apologised to the nation’s breakdancing community for the “backlash” they have experienced following her controversial routine in Paris, which made headlines globally.
Gunn, who competes as Raygun, was eliminated from the B-Girls competition with a score of zero, prompting ridicule and praise for her unorthodox style by users across social media.
In her first sit-down interview since taking part in the Games – and amid questions over her qualification and performance – Gunn was asked if she genuinely thought she was Australia’s best female breakdancer.
“I think my record speaks to that,” she told Network 10’s The Project.
“It is really sad to hear those criticisms and I am very sorry for the backlash that the community has experienced, but I can’t control how people react,” she continued, addressing the flood of critiques her routine has garnered online. The 36-year-old university lecturer lost all three of her Olympic battles, with her green tracksuit and eccentric performance – which included the sprinkler move and kangaroo-inspired hopping – generating a sea of memes.
In the aftermath of her performance, Gunn faced accusations that she had manipulated the selection process, including allegations that she had set up her own governing body and that her husband had judged her qualification trial. These claims have since been denounced as false by several organisations, including the Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) and the World DanceSport Federation (WDSF).
“The conspiracy theories were just awful,” Gunn told Network 10. “I was the top-ranked Australian B-girl in 2020 and 2022 and 2023. I have been invited to represent at how many World Championships… So, the record is there. But anything can happen in a battle,” she added.
Gunn, who has a background as a jazz, tap and ballroom dancer, had publicly defended her routine as “artistic and creative”. “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,” she said last month. The top judge who oversaw the B-Girls competition has also thrown his weight behind Gunn, as have team officials and the broader Olympic breakdancing community. But the fallout has divided and disappointed those involved in the sport in Australia.
“It made a mockery of the Australian scene and I think that’s why a lot of us are hurting,” Australian hip-hop pioneer Spice previously told the BBC.
A hip-hop inspired dance born in the boroughs of New York in the 1970s, breaking was introduced into this year’s Olympic schedule to attract a younger audience to the Games.
But some critics say it should never have been included, due to the organic nature of the genre, which doesn’t necessarily suit organised competition. After her performance in Paris, Gunn appealed to the media directly in a video posted on her Instagram to stop “harassing” her family and friends.
From what I’ve seen online, which might be a skewed sample, most people seem to have fallen in love with Raygun like they did Eddie the Eagle back in the 1980s. I didn’t see this as derision per se.Report
Like, there’s usually a Funderdog story at the Olympics (see also: Jamaican Bobsledding Team). It’s part of what keeps people watching.Report
She seems nice. Just think she got in over her head. She’ll still be a meme long after most of us are gone, so she has that.Report
I thought that maybe we should have a youtube of her dancing her routine.
AND IT’S GONE, BABY. It has been knocked off of youtube.
So I found a synchronized swimmer doing the moves under water (and clips of the original that the swimmer can be compared to).
“I think my record speaks to that,” she told Network 10’s The Project.
The record seems to include “deleting the evidence”.Report
Is it only the videos of her in particular that are disappearing? I encountered that too when I was curious to see what everyone was talking about, but I assumed it was just part of a general takedown effort for any non-sanctioned posts of Olympics content.Report
Playback on other sites has been disabled but here’s the ping pong final.
I then wondered and checked for the pole vault gold and the shot put.Report
So I wondered if the guy who came in 27th in shot put has footage and, of course, he doesn’t.
But I don’t know whether the guy who came in 27th got shown at all in the first place. Why would you? It’s an Irish guy who looks exactly like the Croatian except he only throws it 20.8 meters instead of 23.3.
But I *DO* know that the lady who came in last place for breakdancing had footage.Report