Watch their adorable family video here. I've learned a lot more about creating music since quarantine started, that’s been really important to me. Unlike other dance trends on TikTok, the "Gimme Some" challenge is unique in that it went through a string of variations and transformations during the height of its popularity in December 2019. ", I want it, I got it w/ @whoischarliedee ##foryoupage ##fyp ##viral ##dance. I don't want to do anything or get out of bed. I'm a Savage (Tik Tok Dance Compilation) Stardustleds https://stardustleds.com/?ref=fciqkycipfb . It's perhaps one of the first viral dances to break out of the confines of the app itself and prompt so many others to strive to "go viral.". When the dancer uses his tongue as a violin, it can actually be seen that, during the third repetition, his tongue comes out from the left side of his head and not from his mouth. Sharpe's own TikTok received 923,000 likes and thanks to her recent cameo, she has now amassed 53,000 Instagram followers and has 1.2 million TikTok followers. The first move of both dances is identical, and from there other similarities can be seen. The video now has 99,000 likes. It was scary, for sure.”. Gray’s own viral fame and musical chops got her signed to Virgin Records in 2018. "At first [we were] just doing it for fun, but then after we did "get up" we realized the power choreographers have," House said. MTV News: I feel like people are turning to music for an escape and a dose of positive energy during quarantine. Gray: Yes! Her daughter, Honor, is 11 years old. Set to the song, "Walked In" by Ultradiox, this dance was originally created by Hunter Lasater and later slightly altered by one of TikTok's most popular stars Addison Easterling (known to fans as Addison Rae). Because of D'Amelio's high profile, millions of people attempt to mimic her movements or looks in their own TikToks whenever she posts a new video — even if she records it in her bathroom mirror. My friends are lit! In one Musical.ly video, Gray seats dozens of her young schoolmates together for a group shot, while they jovially sing along to Justin Bieber’s 2012 hit “Boyfriend.” Gray shared these videos with her classmates, but when kids from neighboring schools began sharing them as well, her popularity exploded. "The Bachelor" contestant Madison Prewett even tried out the dance on her own account. Go! It has been a really good escape. It was released as the album's lead single in 1980. That human interaction. Even though the dancer is in color, the background is black and white (sepia in the remake). So it's really difficult to think ahead and make a TikTok-song, per se. “I noticed that a bunch of my videos had been featured and I had like 30,000 followers,” Gray told Interview. The video went so viral that Doja Cat obliged and invited Sharpe to perform it in the music video that dropped Feb. 27. "Funkytown" is a song by American disco act Lipps Inc. from their debut album Mouth to Mouth (1979). . All four moves are done consecutively during the chorus. This dance almost speaks for itself. It's another more recent trend, but already has more than one million people uploading videos to the song. Celebrities like Jessica Alba have attempted "Get Busy" along with 7.6 million other people. So, it was a good feeling to write a love song, and a more uplifting kind of song because, in some ways, it's a lot happier than some of my other songs. How does it feel getting recognized like this? The lyrics to the song are in Portuguese and more than one native Portuguese speaker on TikTok was quick to point out that the choreography did not match the actual words of the song, because many people think the artist is saying "no, I know" and refer to the dance as such. Like this girl, [her handle is] @ppcocaine, she’s super cool, and she just got signed to a big label. Gray began posting videos of herself on the then-named Musical.ly app while still in middle school. More than 3.8 million people listened to her request, completing a dance routine that sways to the lyrics, "aren't you the guy who/tried to," with many popular TikTok stars like D'Amelio and Easterling posting videos of themselves doing the dance multiple times. Gray: Well I didn't really know what to expect going into it. Teenager Haley Sharpe from Alabama created choreography to accompany the song and said in her caption to Doja Cat that she'd love to be in a future music video. The song is a remix of Beyoncé's 2013 "Partition," and finds the app's users completing a series of claps or "throwing it back" slowly. Won't you take me to Funkytown. © Viacom International Media Networks 2020 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1 on the Spotify Global Viral Chart, while the brooding “Queen” has amassed over 28 million streams on Spotify alone.