• 11 months ago
Comment Internet a complètement changé la donne pour une carrière artistique.
OG & Rookie c’est quand un ancien, ici Bruce Ykanji, parle de la place d’internet dans une carrière artistique avec une rookie, ici Anissa Ghettostyle.

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Category

🤖
Tech
Transcript
00:00 Soch and Konbini are here.
00:01 This is Bruce Ikanji, the OG of hip-hop and pop dance.
00:05 Dancer and dance lover.
00:06 This is Anissa Ghetto Style, the rookie of hip-hop and freestyle dance.
00:10 We brought them together to talk about dance, how it was before the internet, and how it is now.
00:14 It's OG and Rookie.
00:15 So, Bruce, tell me how you started dancing.
00:21 I'm Franco-Cameroonian, I started in Cameroon, so the dance was omnipresent there.
00:26 My dad brought me a VHS tape, which I put in a magnetoscope.
00:30 I saw dance moves in it, I was 8 years old, and I never stopped since then.
00:34 It's embarrassing, but I know the moves very well.
00:36 Really? You know them?
00:37 Yes.
00:38 Anissa, how did you start?
00:40 I'm Moroccan-Senegalese, so I was in the dance scene when I was younger.
00:45 A very famous dance movie came out, and it was a heart attack.
00:50 I thought, "This is exactly what I want to do, this is what I want to do."
00:54 And here we are, dancers next to a very, very famous dancer.
00:58 So, there you go.
00:59 Anissa, do you think that without the internet, you could have gone as far as you are today?
01:05 It's without pretense, but when I came into the scene, I didn't need the internet to do my thing.
01:11 So, yes, without the internet, I could have created my place.
01:14 In any case, for me, without the internet, it was possible.
01:17 But today, thanks to the internet, it's more about new doors, new things coming to me.
01:21 So, it's just as good.
01:22 On the other hand, I'd like you to give me some advice on social media.
01:25 Because I took a lot of time to get started.
01:28 Because my students from my school, from Booth School, told me, "You have to get started, Bruce."
01:32 I said, "No, I don't care, I'm Bruce."
01:33 You know, always a little arrogant.
01:35 "But you don't exist, man."
01:36 "Oh yeah? But how?"
01:37 "Well, look at him."
01:38 "But he's bad."
01:39 "Yeah, but he has more followers than you."
01:40 And you're there, you're like, "Oh yeah?"
01:41 If you don't stay in your old school position and say, "Yeah, no, I'm like this, like that."
01:45 You have to open up, and at some point, you get started.
01:47 And I got started, but not without pain.
01:48 Today, no one can live without social media, because it's your CV.
01:52 It's the first image we see of you.
01:54 Today, even my own entourage, who were very reluctant to start,
01:58 today, they're like, "Anissa, can you give me some advice?"
02:00 "Of course, with pleasure."
02:01 "You see, there's no problem."
02:03 Congratulations to all these technologies.
02:05 Yeah, because it's going to help our generation, yours, the new generation.
02:08 It's like we're always next to each other.
02:10 Whatever happens, you can find yourself in Japan, and I'm in Paris.
02:13 We're there.
02:14 And it's true that I can understand that on stage, it wasn't really...
02:16 It wasn't like that. It didn't exist.
02:18 It was...
02:19 Maybe we should send a letter, no?
02:21 Thank you, Soch.
02:24 Thank you, Konbini.
02:25 And thank you, Anissa.
02:26 It's been an honour to be here with you.
02:27 Thank you.
02:28 Honestly, thank you.
02:29 It's nice. Thank you very much.
02:30 (crowd cheering)

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