An Australian mining services company has fired up to 15
workers who performed an underground version of the Harlem
Shake and posted it online, in a second incident of the
Internet dance craze sparking safety concerns.
The workers were part of an overnight crew working at the
Agnew Mine in Western Australia owned by South African miner
Gold Fields Ltd. The workers were employed by Barminco, an
Australia-based underground services company.
The 30-second video posted on YouTube shows a group of
miners, some wielding tools and shirtless, performing the
Harlem Shake, which typically begins with a one solo dancer
who is quickly joined by others, often in costumes or with
props.
Barminco, based in Perth, could not be reached for comment
after a dismissal letter sent to the workers was obtained by
the local newspaper, the West Australian, saying the stunt
breached the company's "core values of safety, integrity and
excellence".
But a spokesman for Gold Fields said the decision to fire the
workers was taken by Barminco after the video was posted on
YouTube last week.
"Underground mining has strict safety standards as there are
accidents and fatalities. The Barminco management saw this as
a breach of standards," said spokesman Sven Lunsche on
Monday.
The report came after the U.S.'s Federal Aviation
Administration said it was looking into a mid-air, aisle
performance of the convulsive dance by a group of college
students on a packed flight due to safety concerns.
Frontier Airlines has defended its decision to allow the
dance on the flight from Colorado Springs to San Diego,
saying safety measures were followed and the seatbelt sign
was off.
The sackings in Australia sparked an online debate with a
Facebook page set up to call for the reinstatement of the
"sacked WA Harlem Shake Miners".
The workers told The West Australian that they were not
endangering safety, pointing out that helmets were worn
throughout.
The Harlem Shake is an electronic dance track by U.S. DJ
Baauer - aka Harry Rodrigues - which was released last year
with record label Mad Decent.
But it took off as a YouTube craze after a group of teenagers
from Australia posted a video of their version of the dance
which was replicated rapidly on the web, with up to 4,000
Harlem Shake video variations uploaded daily.
A YouTube spokeswoman said over 250,000 Harlem Shake videos
were uploaded in February and watched more than 700 million
times, with a version by the Norwegian army notching up more
than 47 million views and an underwater version 30 million.
The craze has driven the song to top of the iTunes U.S. chart
and third on the iTunes Australia list.
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