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Flash mob continues to entertain students

Taylor Dolven

Issue date: 11/20/09 Section: Campus
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Members of the Miami University Flash Mob perform a silent rave Nov. 10 in the lobby of King library. (Scott Allison / The Miami Student)
Members of the Miami University Flash Mob perform a silent rave Nov. 10 in the lobby of King library. (Scott Allison / The Miami Student)


If you have observed pillow fights at the hub, dance parties in King Library, giant milkshakes running from Shriver or people in business attire worshiping the Farmer School of Business (FSB), you are not alone.

The Miami University Flash Mob has been in full swing fall semester performing random spontaneous actions anytime, anywhere on Miami's campus.

"A group of people who appear from out of nowhere, to perform predetermined actions, designed to amuse and confuse surrounding people," is the definition of a flash mob according to Urban Dictionary.com.

Since the start of the Miami flash mob in 2007, there have been five spontaneous events on campus. During the first event in winter 2007 the mob froze in place at the hub for four minutes during a busy period between classes. In spring 2007, a member of the mob dressed up as a milkshake and the rest of the mob chased him from the Shriver Center to Bell Tower with straws in hand.

Earlier this year, the mob dressed in business attire and kneeled on the ground outside FSB and worshiped the building for four minutes before separating. The second flash mob occurred on the hub when the mob suddenly broke into a pillow fight for five minutes.

The most recent event was Nov. 10, when the mob gathered in the King Library lobby for a silent flash dance rave. Participants started silently dancing in the lobby while library-goers crowded around to watch.

Colleen Payne, a library staff member, witnessed the event from the circulation desk. She said at exactly 4 p.m., a large group of students gathered in the lobby and broke out into spontaneous dance moves. She said at first bystanders were confused, but a lot of them took out cell phones and recorded the event while laughing.

"The whole event was silent, so it was fun to see people dancing differently; some were quirky, others kind of flailed around, and some were a little more self-contained," Payne said.

Payne said the flash mob did a great job of executing its event in an unsuspecting venue.
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