VIDEO: These Girls Became an Internet Sensation. When You See Their Dance You Will Understand!
Who doesn’t love cheerleaders? They are beautiful, talented and also really fit. When they do their cheer they help teams win and they boost up everyone’s morale. Even if the team is losing, every man will feel better by looking at beautiful women dance and jump around.
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The ones from the video are exceptionally beautiful and they seem to be able to try some of the hardest moves we have ever seen.
Imagine how it would be to go to a match and instead of these stunning women to have to look at huge men doing the same routines! In the past, women weren’t allowed to be cheerleaders and this job was reserved for the men. The cheering phenomenon would have probably never have gotten this huge if there would have been no women allowed in the mix.
According to wikipedia.org, cheerleading ranges from chanting, to intense physical activity for sports team motivation, audience entertainment, or competition based upon organized routines. Competitive routines typically range anywhere from one to three minutes, and contain components of tumbling, dance, jumps, cheers, and stunting.
Cheerleading originated in the United States, and remains predominantly in America, with an estimated 1.5 million participants in all-star cheerleading. The global presentation of cheerleading was led by the 1997 broadcast of ESPN’s International cheerleading competition, and the worldwide release of the 2000 film Bring It On.
Due in part to this recent exposure, there are now an estimated 100,000 participants scattered around the globe in Australia, Canada, China, Colombia, Finland, France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.
Cheerleading began during the late 18th century with the rebellion of male students.After the American Revolutionary War, students experienced harsh treatment from teachers. In response to faculty’s abuse, college students violently acted out.
The undergraduates began to riot, burn down buildings located on their college campuses, and assault faculty members. As a more subtle way to gain independence, however, students invented and organized their own extracurricular activities outside their professors’ control. This brought about American sports, beginning first with collegiate teams.
In 1923, at the University of Minnesota, women were permitted to participate in cheerleading. However, it took time for other schools to follow. In the late 1920s, many school manuals and newspapers that were published still referred to cheerleaders as “chap,” “fellow,” and “man”. Women cheerleaders were overlooked until the 1940s.
In the 1940s, collegiate men were drafted for World War II, creating the opportunity for more women to make their way onto sporting event sidelines. As noted by Kieran Scott in Ultimate Cheerleading: “Girls really took over for the first time.”
In the 1950s, the formation of professional cheerleading started. The first recorded cheer squad in National Football League (NFL) history was for the Baltimore Colts. Professional cheerleaders put a new perspective on American cheerleading.
Women were selected for two reasons: visual sex appeal, and the ability to dance. Women were exclusively chosen because men were the targeted marketing group.