This is a Australia news story, published by Ars Technica, that relates primarily to Tina Turner's news.
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music legend Tina TurnerArs Technica
•80% Informative
Tina Turner's " Nutbush " line dance has been popular in Australia since her death last year .
Researchers say the Nutbush originated in 1975 in New South Wales .
They say the dance originated in 1978 and spread to other regions from there.
The Nutbush shares some similarities with the Madison , another popular line dance.
“In primary school, when learning folk dancing, there was great awkwardness in having to dance with a partner of the opposite sex but with the Nutbush, you didn’t need to take a partner by the hand.’ You could enjoy the dance moves and be part of a communal experience without all the sweaty handholding.” Regardless of how the fad took hold, hearing the song's opening bars and the lines "A church house, gin house" will likely keep bringing Aussies enthusiastically to the dance floor for years to come..
VR Score
79
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77
Neutral language
30
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semi-formal
Language
English
Language complexity
46
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possibly offensive
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not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
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Time-value
long-living
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12
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7
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