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To: Urlman who wrote (4205)1/19/1998 5:36:00 PM
From: cksla  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8581
 
Urlman: *** OFF-TOPIC ***

Is this referring to the ptsc mascot?

Dancing Baby in TV
encore
By Beth Lipton
January 19, 1998, 12:20 p.m. PT

Warm up your "ooga-chakas," folks--the Dancing
Baby is coming back to television tonight.

The Net-famous Dancing Baby, originally known
as "Baby Cha Cha," made its television debut on
the hit Fox TV series Ally McBeal January
5--bringing the convergence of Internet culture and
mainstream entertainment to another level. The
computer animation is scheduled to reappear in
tonight's episode of McBeal.

The melding of the two media has not received this
much attention since the September Webcast of the
live season premiere of NBC's hit show ER. In this
case, the convergence is taken a step further, with
the actual content being influenced by an Internet
phenomenon. The rise of online TV listings is
another example of the synergy taking shape
between television and the Net.

The Dancing Baby appeared on the Fox show as a
hallucination of title character Ally McBeal, serving
as a reminder that her biological clock is ticking.
Facing her "demon," McBeal shares a late-night jig
with the cartoon kid.

When the show was awarded a Golden Globe last
night for Best Comedy/Musical Series, the clip
shown was McBeal's dance with the baby.

The gyrating infant began its life in 1997 as a
demonstration of Kinetix's animation software
Character Studio. It became a Net legend,
traversing cyberspace via email and popping up on
home pages, dancing to 1970s tune "Hooked on a
Feeling" by Blue Swede. New versions of Baby
Cha Cha soon began cropping up, including
Kickboxing Baby, Rasta Baby, Retro Baby, and
Psycho Baby.

Recently, however, with its popularity soaring,
there has been some backlash, as veteran Netizens
tend to hate the cooption of their inside jokes. A
new email circulating the Net has the Dancing Baby
struck by a speeding car.

Kinetix, which creates modeling and animation
software, is the multimedia business unit of design
software firm Autodesk.