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00:36:25
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00:36:25
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Transcription: [00:36:30]
You notice that they're keeping a regular beat right here and when you see one-once we jump from out of that and maintain a beat like Terry's doing right here (right) that's called freaking. But he keeps the beat at all times. See Glenn's doing another one, Glenn's slapping his legs now. That's another form of freaking. Staying on the same beat going back into the original step. Carleton's going to get up and do something else for you. See? As you see all the beats and rhythms come back into the same- into the same rhythm so the-uh-so the freaks that-that-that Carleton's doing in the middle are in beat with Terry and Glenn at the same time. That's what we just-that's what's-uh-talked about when we-when we-say freaking. There is vari-there are-uh-various forms of freaking. We can freak off the different steps, we can hear a rhyth-uh-a song on a radio, hear a different beat. You can hum a beat. We can-you know-you're doing it in the shower, on the bus, do it anywhere basically. Part of stepping is being able to-uh-keep these beats in your head. It's-it's-it's sort of like an instinct after a while. You start off by learning to count the beat, but after a while, you don't count the beats it's just instinct you learn how to move into the beats. Takes a while to develop. Now-now-now-there-now-there may be-thank you. Uh, there-there may be other brothers from around the country who may come from different campuses and do different steps, but they just as we-you know-as we're stepping right here, they may be able to join in with their particular steps because it fits the type of, uh, rhythm that we have. So, uh, in a sense, you can say that-that everything is uniform but-but-but-not-but-but it's totally unique in a sense.