Dancing Pallbearers

Dancing Pallbearers, also known as by variety of names, including Dancing Coffin, Coffin Dancers, and the Coffin Dance Meme are a Ghanaian group of pallbearers who are based in the coastal town of Prampram in the Greater Accra Region of southern Ghana, although they perform across the country as well as internationally.[1] They are locally referred to as Nana Otafrija Pallbearing and Waiting Service or Dada awu.[2]

Dancing Pallbearers
Screenshot of the video clip showing pallbearers dancing with the coffin, which is commonly used for the meme.
Background information
OriginPrampram, Ghana
Members
  • Benjamin Aidoo

The group initially gained worldwide attention through a BBC feature story in 2017.[3] The footage became part of an Internet meme in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020.

Origin

The Dancing Pallbearers are led by Benjamin Aidoo, who started the group as a regular pallbearer service.[4] He later had the idea of adding choreography to their pallbearing work. Extra fees are charged for dancing with the coffin during a funeral.[5] The Dancing Pallbearers first rose to prominence in 2017 when they were featured in a BBC News report.[6]

  • In late March 2020, a YouTuber with the channel name "Syon" uploaded the video onto YouTube which started a trend on the Internet. In April, the group became the subject of a darkly comedic internet meme when videos of people suffering various mishaps, followed by clips of the pallbearers dancing with coffins (implicitly the victims of the preceding clips), were widely uploaded to Reddit, YouTube and TikTok.[7] The clips are generally paired up with the song "Astronomia" by Russian musical artist Tony Igy and remixed by Dutch duo Vicetone, although others use either "You Know I'll Go Get" by DJ Haning and Rizky Ayuba (a remixed version of Enrique Iglesias's song "Finally Found You") or Lenka's "Trouble Is a Friend".[8] Many uses of this meme are commonly associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, which was ongoing when the meme became popular.[9]
  • In Brazil, the social media meme was brought to the streets, as a billboard image featuring the coffin dancers was displayed with the caption 'stay home or dance with us'.[10] In May, the group released a video where they capitalized on the phrase, encouraging viewers to 'stay home or dance with us'.[11]
  • Leaders of the Libertarian party in Georgia "Girchi" dressed up in traditional Georgian clothesChokha – and made their own version of the video.[12]
  • In May 2020, US President Donald Trump shared an edited video of the dancing pallbearers carrying a coffin on his social media in response to a controversial remark by Joe Biden. In the edited video, Biden's campaign logo was superimposed on the coffin.[13] Biden was Vice President under Barack Obama and is presently the presumptive Democratic candidate for President in the 2020 election.
  • In Brazil, a billboard of the group has been mounted to warn individuals to stay home to curb Coronavirus transmission.
  • In Colombia, policemen imitate the group's dance carrying a coffin on their shoulders through Quibdó, encouraging the community to stay home to stem the spread of the Coronavirus.
  • In Hong Kong, a company has started cashing in by moulding them into plastic figurines for sale.
  • They have become a symbol warning people to stay home during the pandemic as their videos are edited into memes to prevent people from behaviors exposing them to COVID-19 and urging them to stay indoors.
  • Their videos have been shared globally and garnered a strong following in countries such as Brazil, United States and China. Dancing pallbearers has been mentioned on Twitter 60,000 times in April.

See also

References

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