Translate

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Some Online Examples Of The Vernacular Phrase "Clock It" & Similar Words/Phrases Such As "Clocking" And "Clock That Tea"

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a two part pancocojams series on the American vernacular (slang) phrase "clock It" and similar phrases.

This post presents some online examples in 2025-2026.of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and similar "clock" slang words/phrases.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/2025-article-excerpt-clock-it-how.html
 for Part I of this pancocojams series. That pancocojams post presents an excerpt from a 2025 online article written by Quispe L贸pez about the history and meanings of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and similar phrases such as 'clock that tea" and "clocking".  
Please read that entire article.

The content of this post is presented for linguistic, historical, and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post and thanks to the publishers of these embedded videos.

****
SOME ONLINE SOURCES FOR EXAMPLES OF THE VERNACULAR PHRASE "CLOCK IT" AND SIMILAR WO
RDS/PHRASES

These online sources examples are given in no particular order and are numbered for referencing purposes only.

SOURCE #1
AI Overview [This complete write-up is the result of my query on May 21, 2026: What is the history of the vernacular phrase "clock it"?]

"The viral "clock it" trend and its accompanying hand gesture (tapping the thumb and middle finger together) originate from Black and Latinx ballroom culture in 1960s and 1970s New York City.

The history of the trend and its evolution:

Original Ballroom Meaning:

In the ballroom scene, "to clock someone" meant to notice or spot something they were trying to hide. It was heavily tied to "reading" and "shading" someone by making a sharp, sometimes playful observation about their look or behavior.

Evolution of the Slang: Over the decades, the term filtered into mainstream pop culture through drag. Today, it has evolved to mean recognizing the truth, agreeing with a sharp observation, or pointing out that someone "nailed" a point.

The Hand Gesture: The accompanying pinched-finger tap functions as a "silent applause" of approval. It was brought to mainstream social platforms (like TikTok and Instagram) by Gen Z and Gen Alpha creators."

****
SOURCE #2: MS NOW PRESENTS: "Clock It,: "Clock It," a new podcast posted at the intersection of culture and politics from Symone Sanders Townsend and Eugene Daniels.



@msnow Feb 5, 2026

Their new show is an invitation to their groupchat, the liveliest—and most informative—out there. Whether it’s ICE getting dispatched to the Super Bowl, or Nicol谩s Maduro’s Nike Tech fit, or Michael B. Jordan’s sole Oscar nomination despite playing three roles in Sinners, there is no collision between culture and politics that this show won’t document and decipher.

Symone and Eugene see exactly what’s going on—and they want you to clock it, too."
-snip-
Here are a few comments from that YouTube video short's discussion thread (with numbers added for referencing purposes only:
1.@SharenCarter, March 2026
"Keep clocking it real talk❤"

**
2. @chrismurray-ez4bt, March 2026
"Great Team!  Speaking Truth to POWER!  Love it! 馃グ"

**
3. @TimMcConnell-k3r, April 2026
"Love to see you both clocking it! Hey guys check Maxwell Chickumbutso front africa. His car that uses no fuel or need to plug in. I'll wait to see you talk about it."

**
4. @euclidespardo9987, May 2026
"Y'all be telling it"

****
SOURCE #3- AI OVERVIEW WRITE UP
(This write-up is the result of my May 21, 2026 query "Why is MS NOW podcast called "Clock It"? and is that podcast successful?"]

"AI Overview

The podcast by MS NOW (formerly MSNBC) is called "Clock It with Symone & Eugene," which was highly anticipated as an extension of the network's broader rebrand.

Why they chose the name:

The title refers to the slang phrase "clock it," meaning to take notice, observe closely, or call out what is happening. Hosts Symone Sanders Townsend and Eugene Daniels chose the name because the show focuses on the intersection of politics and pop culture, inviting listeners into an insider group chat to decode how culture shapes political figures and movements.

Its success:

Debuting with strong backing from the newly independent MS NOW, the show has quickly built a dedicated following across platforms like Apple Podcasts and Spotify. It is widely viewed as a successful, engaging strategy for decoding the "war of ideas and memes," capturing a younger, culturally tuned-in demographic that follows the hosts' signature off-the-cuff style. You can check out all episodes on the official MS NOW Podcasts page."

****
SOURCE #4 - "Clock it" - The New Gen Z Gesture Taking Over! What Does It Really Mean?



@clautienews, Feb 25, 2026

Gen Z is shaking things up with a mysterious new gesture called "clock it" that's meant to show support. But here's the twist - even the people using it can't agree on its exact meaning! Some say it's a vibe you just have to feel. The gesture involves snapping your fingers using either your index + thumb or middle + thumb. No official standard yet! Would you "clock it" to show support? Let us know in the comments! #GenZ #NewTrends #SocialMedia #YouthCulture #Gestures #Support #Vibes #TrendingNow
-snip-
Here are the only two comments from that video's discussion thread as of May 21, 2026 at 9:21 AM EDT (Numbers added for referencing purposes only.)
1. @datguy7360, April 2026
"Clock it comes from Queer ballroom culture, Gen Z didn't invent NOTHING! ...."

**
Reply
2. @Pl8kcx, April 2026
"And they copied from black women like usually 馃檮"

****
SOURCE #5- Redditt.com Discussion Thread
[Pancocojams Editor's Note: These selected comments are presented in chronological order with numbers added for referencing purposes only.]

From https://www.reddit.com/r/LostRedditor/comments/1h7oizm/what_does_clock_it_mean_in_slang/ Lost Redditor: "What does clock it mean?"

[Pancocojams Editor's Note: These selected comments are presented in chronological order with numbers added for referencing purposes only. The numbers for these comments don't necessarily correspond to their numbers in that discussion thread.]

1. Vanillabean322, 2025
"what does clock it! mean in slang

i've been seeing it but idk what it means and all the pages i've gone to sound like they were written by gen x."

**
Reply
2. Nuclearmullets420, 2025
"It’s a response to someone saying something that is very true. Per google search of gen z slang clock it."

**
Reply
3. Enne105_7, 2005
"Its actually AAVE not gen z slang."

**
Reply
4. Mindless_Sea_1485, 2025
"It’s not AAVE, it’s ballroom culture"

**
Reply
5. EngineeringNo5714, 2025
"It’s black ballroom culture. So still within AAVE."

**
Reply
6. Mindless_Sea_1485, 2025
"Ballroom culture wasn’t only black queens tho, other words like slay and period are AAVE but clock it was started in ballroom culture not AAVE"

**
Reply
7. ananatawa, 2026
"Stop it. We all know black queens invented this slang. Do not deny them their history"

**
8. Mission-Gas9996, 2025
"Crazy to find that it’s actually black gay slang from the 90s,"

**
9. Budget_Raspberry_856, 2025
"Most white girl slang comes from black and gay culture"

****
SOURCE #6 - Pre-University Stomp & Shake Cheerleading Comment Thread
From https://youtube.com/shorts/pJJ84sqMjAg?si=wRrcUXkSGT-pTs3W
Comments from the Discussion Thread For A 2026 YouTube Video Of The Stomp & Shake Cheerleader Cheer "All Y' All Cheers Are Boring"

[Pancocojams Editor's Note: These selected comments are presented in chronological order with numbers added for referencing purposes only.]

1. @Synquis
"Clock that T. Period.❤️❤️馃槀"

**
2. @RickMoynes
"Clock it girl  馃拝"

**
3.@arisleydis100
"You clocked that tea sis!馃榿"

**
4. @smg6_editz
"
Clocking"

**
5. @WaltonBrown-z7p
"Clock it i wish I was one of them 
❤️馃帀"

-snip-
These comments are among others that are quoted in this pancocojams post 
https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/comments-about-copying-stealing-stomp.html " "All Y' All Cheers Are Boring" Stomp & Shake Cheerleading Cheer (Discussion Thread Comments: Compliments & Criticisms)"

The word "Ate" and phrases from that African American Vernacular English originated family of highly complimentary words/phrase  ("Ate", Ate it!", "Ate and left no crumbs, "Ate it up", and "Ate it down") are even more viral than "clock it" on contemporary pre-university stomp & shake discussion threads.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2022/05/a-new-african-american-vernacular.html for the 2022 pancocojams post entitled "What "Ate" And "Ate That" REALLY Mean In African American Vernacular English (AAVE)"

****
This concludes Part II of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

2025 Article Excerpt: "Clock It! How Ballroom Coined the Internet’s “New” Catchphrase" By Quispe L贸pez

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part I of a two part pancocojams series on the American vernacular (slang) phrase "clock It" and similar phrases.

This pancocojams post presents an excerpt from a 2025 online article written by Quispe L贸pez about the history and meanings of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and similar phrases such as 'clock that tea" and "clocking". Please read that entire article.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/some-online-examples-of-vernacular.html  for Part II of this pancocojams series. That post presents some online examples in 2025-2026 of the vernacular (slang) phrase "clock it" and similar "clock" slang words/phrases.

The content of this post is presented for linguistic, historical, and socio-cultural purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to Quispe L贸pez and Leiomy Maldonado and thanks to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post. 

****
ARTICLE EXCERPT
From https://www.them.us/story/clock-it-how-ballroom-coined-the-internets-new-catchphrase "Clock It! How Ballroom Coined the Internet’s “New” Catchphrase : Ballroom icon Leiomy Maldonado breaks down the history of the phrase." By Quispe L贸pez, November 17, 2025

If you’ve been on the internet this year, around teens, or tuned in to the disastrous latest season of Love Island USA, you’ve likely heard the phrase, “clock it.” Perhaps it was even accompanied by a gesture: a small clap made with someone’s thumb and middle finger.

“Clock it” basically means calling something out, noticing something, or figuring something out. Unfortunately, the online game of telephone by which it spread, so to speak, has divorced the phrase from its roots, leading many people to misunderstand what it means. That’s why, before we dive further into the nuances of what exactly “clock it” means, it’s important to have a basic understanding of where it comes from.

As with many phrases rocketed into the mainstream zeitgeist by the internet, writers and cultural commentators have been quick to misattribute “clock it” to Gen Z/Gen Alpha slang or even RuPaul’s Drag Race. In actuality, “clock it” isn’t a new expression; it’s one that’s existed for decades in the ballroom scene, a culture born in 1960s New York City out of a need for Black and Latinx queer and trans people to have a space for creative freedom, performance, and self-expression.

But the trajectory “clock it” has taken also isn’t new; it’s a pipeline queer people — particularly Black and brown queer people in the ballroom community — have come to expect over decades of mainstream media taking and misusing phrases. From voguing to “tea” and “it’s giving” to fashion aesthetics created in the scene, popular culture has long borrowed from ballroom without honoring the figures who coined them, like Crystal LaBeija, Dorian Corey, and Angie Xtravaganza.

[…]

We spoke to Maldonado about what the phrase actually means, how the finger clap came to be, and where the two originate from.

What does “clock it” mean?

At its simplest definition, “clock it” means figuring something out, noticing, or coming to an understanding about something. For example, if someone is suggesting places to hang out close to where their ex lives and a friend points that out, someone might say “clock it” in response. While in popular slang it’s used to refer to any situation where someone is noticing or realizing something, in ballroom, “clock” was often used in specific contexts, like noticing someone’s gender or sexuality.

“In the ballroom scene, when you ‘clock’ something — or more so, you're clocking someone — that means [knowing] their business,” Maldonado says. “If it refers to someone who's trans, being clocked means that someone knows your tea, like your gender, or they can clock your sexuality.”

There’s commonplace usage for it as well: A policeman might have “clocked” your speed on radar. The general meaning is the same.

[...] 

What does the finger clap mean?

While “clock it” often comes accompanied by a finger clap of the middle finger and thumb, the two are not inherently connected and don’t mean the same thing. Maldonado says that the finger clap also comes from ballroom, which she helped popularize as a judge on the HBO Max competition show Legendary. The finger clap does not mean clock it; instead, it’s a silent nod of approval. It is, in effect, miniature applause. You might finger clap after someone puts on a good performance or says something you agree with.

Aside from incorrectly conflating it with “clock it,” people unaware of the finger claps origins are also often doing the gesture incorrectly. In order to do it correctly, you have to use your middle finger with your thumb. Using your index finger with your thumb doesn’t mean anything.

What is the origin of "clock it" and the finger clap?

Maldonado entered the ballroom scene in the early 2000s, where she was introduced to the phrase “clock it.” She suspects, as with many popular phrases, such as “tea,” that it existed long before her time.

Where wires became crossed between “clock it” and the finger clap is murky. Maldonado used the finger clap on Legendary as early as 2020. That series ran for three seasons. In 2022, TikTok influencer and musician Queen Opp went viral for repeatedly saying, “clock that tea,” a phrase she often used during TikTok lives. In the background of one video, Opp’s friend at the time, Michelle, was also seen saying, “clock it” while doing the finger clap — though it’s with the wrong fingers. Since then, things have snowballed.

Maldonado’s usage was turned into GIFs, while various iterations of Opp’s interpretation spread as TikTok audio sound bites and other social media memes. The final push that really drove “clock it” as well as the finger clap into the mainstream hit this summer was Love Island USA star Ace Greene’s viral diss track about his experience on the show, which included both in the chorus. Since then, the two have been inextricably linked in the popular lexicon.

“[The figure clap] just paired with ‘clock it’ because people saw it, and then they basically appropriated it,” Maldonado says. “People do that. It has happened with ballroom terms and even with voguing on RuPaul's Drag Race. People have adapted to something but renamed it or used it as a different thing that they think it is.”

For Maldonado, who can and should use “clock it,” isn’t a battle. Rather, people outside of ballroom who use the phrase should consider and honor where it comes from, rather than trying to change the meaning or erase its history."...

****
This concludes Part I of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Erykah Badu - 1997 Song "Next Lifetime" (video, information, & lyrics)

 

 Erykah Badu - Next Lifetime (Official Music Video)

 Erykah Badu, February 18, 2022

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07uSAIcXFmg

-snip-
Statistics as of May 20, 2026 at 7:44 AM EDT
Total # of views-24,243,797
Total # of Comments -3,214

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post showcases singer, composer, actress 
Erykah Badu's 1997 hit song "Next Lifetime".

Information about Erykah Badu is also included in this post. 

The content of this post is presented for historical, socio-cultural, entertainment, and aesthetic purposes. 

This video is presented as a continuation of a previous pancocojams post that focuses on African American females' headwraps.*

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to Erykah Badu for her musical and cultural legacy. Thanks to all those who are associated with this embedded video and thanks to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post.
-snip-
* Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/six-videos-of-black-american-female.html for the related pancocojams post entitled "Six Videos Of Black American Female Singers Wearing A Headwrap"

****
INFORMATION ABOUT ERYKAH BADU
from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erykah_Badu
"Erica Abi Wright (born February 26, 1971),[2] known professionally as Erykah Badu, is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress. Influenced by R&B, soul, and hip-hop,[2] Badu rose to prominence in the late 1990s when her debut studio album Baduizm (1997), placed her at the forefront of the neo soul movement, earning her the nickname "Queen of Neo Soul" by music critics.

Badu's career began after opening a show for D'Angelo in 1994 in Fort Worth, which led to record label executive Kedar Massenburg signing her to Kedar Entertainment.[2] Badu's first album, Baduizm, was released in February 11, 1997.[3] It spawned four singles: "On & On", "Appletree", "Next Lifetime" and "Otherside of the Game". The album was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[4] Badu's first live album, Live, was released in November 1997, and contained her signature song "Tyrone" and was subsequently certified double platinum by the RIAA.[4]

Badu's second studio album, Mama's Gun, was released in 2000.[5] It spawned three singles: "Bag Lady", which became her first top 10 single on the Billboard Hot 100 peaking at number 6, "Didn't Cha Know?" and "Cleva". The album was certified platinum by the RIAA.[4] Badu's third album, Worldwide Underground, was released in 2003.[6] It generated three singles: "Love of My Life (An Ode to Hip-Hop)", "Danger" and "Back in the Day (Puff)", with the first becoming her second song to reach the top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 9. The album was certified gold by the RIAA.[4] Badu's fourth album, New Amerykah Part One, was released in 2008.[7] It spawned two singles: "Honey" and "Soldier". New Amerykah Part Two was released in 2010 and fared well both critically and commercially. It contained the album's lead single "Window Seat", whose music video sparked controversy.

Badu's voice has been compared to jazz singer Billie Holiday.[8][9][10] Early in her career, Badu was recognizable for her style, which often included wearing very large and colorful headwraps. She was a core member of the Soulquarians. As an actress, she has played a number of supporting roles in movies including Blues Brothers 2000, The Cider House Rules and House of D. She also has appeared in the documentaries Before the Music Dies and The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975."....

****
LYRICS - NEXT LIFETIME
(composed by Erykah Badu)
 
[Spoken Intro]
Erykah, we've been known each other for a while and
You know, I'm into you
Just wanna know what I gotta do, you know, to get closer to you

Wait a minute now, you know I'm in a situation, why you even—
Don't do this, why you trippin' like that?
Well, I understand that, but you, your whole vibe is, you know
I see myself being with you forever

Ah, that is, you know, that's really beautiful and
I kinda dig you too, you know that, we
But we're friends and I'm in a situation
I, I'm in a relationship and you know what that means
Well, whatever I gotta do, I'll do it for you
Hm, you sure put me in an awkward situation

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (Oh)

When I'm already someone's girl (Mm)

What am I supposed to do

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world; Baby)

But how can I want you for myself

When I'm already someone's girl

 

[Verse 1]

First time that I saw you, boy

It was a warm and sunny day

All I know is I wanted you

I really hoped you'd look my way

When you smiled at me so warm and sweet (You smiled)

I could not speak

You make me feel like a little bitty girl

What do you do to me?

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (What you want me to do?)

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world; Oh)

But how can I want you for myself (Oh)

When I'm already someone's girl

 

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

No hard feelings

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

I'm gon' be there (Mm)

 

[Verse 2]

Your energy

Feels so damn good to me

It picks me up, don't wanna come down

You got me spinning all around, yeah (No)

You need to know

I've got somebody

But you're beautiful, sure

But still, it ain't that type of party now

 

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (What you want me to do?)

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (I can't help my feelings)

When I'm already someone's girl (Oh no)

Now what am I supposed to do

When I want you in my world (I know, I know I'm selfish, but I; Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (Oh, oh)

When I'm already someone's girl (Wait a minute)

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

Maybe we'll be butterflies

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

That sounds so divine

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

I guess I will now

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

Wait, wait a little while

 

[Verse 3]

Listen (Mm)

See, it ain't nothing wrong with dreaming

But, boy, don't get me wrong

'Cause every time I see you (Every time, every single time)

It lets me know just how strong (Every single time)

That my love is for my baby

But emotions just don't lie

Well, I know I'm a lotta woman

But not enough to divide the pie, ooh

 

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (Well, well, well)

When I want you in my world (No; Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (Oh)

When I'm already someone's girl (Oh)

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

You know I wanna stay around

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

I'm so confused now (Mm)

 

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (What you want me to do, babe?)

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself

When I'm already someone's girl (No, no, no, no, no)

 

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

I'm already, I'm gon' be there

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

I'm gon' look for you (Mm)

 

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (Oh, babe)

When I want you in my world (I got somebody back there; Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (Ah, ah)

When I'm already someone's girl (Oh)

 

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

Oh, baby, oh, babe

I guess I'll see you next lifetime (Oh, baby, baby)

I'm here (Mm)

 

[Chorus]

Now what am I supposed to do (What you want me to do?)

When I want you in my world (Want you in my world)

But how can I want you for myself (I can't hide my feelings)

When I'm already someone's girl (Don't worry, baby)

 

[Post-Chorus]

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

'Cause what we got is so defying

I guess I'll see you next lifetime

Next time, I'll make you mine (Mm)

Ooh"
-snip-
About this song:
" “Next Lifetime” is the second single from Baduizm and talks about a woman that is in a relationship but has feelings for another man. The music video features cameos from her boyfriend at the time, Andre 3000, as well as rapper Method Man and rapper/producer Pete Rock. The single topped the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart and reached the Top 40 in New Zealand and the UK."

online source- https://genius.com/Erykah-badu-next-lifetime-lyrics

****
Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Videos Of Stomp & Shake Cheerleaders Performing Upstomps (High Steps) from 2007 to 2011

 

SASSY (Take It Away)

woowooworkit, Aug 31, 2007

Sassy does a cheer at the first football game

Prince Edward County High Varsity Cheer [Virginia].

****
Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a three part pancocojams series about stomp & shake cheerleader teams' upstomps (high steps) motions. 

This post focuses on videos of pre 2013 performances of stomp & shake cheerleaders Performing upstomps (high steps).

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/stomp-shake-cheerleaders-upstomps-high.html for Part I of this pancocojams series. That post
 presents definitions and YouTube video examples of stomp & shake cheerleaders' signature motions called "upstomp" (also known as "high steps". . 

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/05/pre-2013-videos-of-stomp-shake.html for Part III of this pancocojams series. That post showcases five videos of pre-2013 stomp & shake cheerleaders. These videos document cheer routines that I believe document early examples of "high steps" (upstomps) or don't include any "high steps" ("upstomp") motions in those cheer routines. 

The content of this post is presented for historical, cultural, and recreational purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are featured in these embedded YouTube videos. Thanks also to the publishers of these videos on YouTube.
-snip-
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2022/05/descriptions-video-examples-of-upstomps.html for the 2022 pancocojams post entitled "Descriptions & Video Examples Of "Upstomps" and "Jiggle Pops" (Stomp & Shake Cheerleading Motions)"

Also, click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2023/06/stomp-and-shake-cheerleading-double.html for a 2023 pancocojams post entitled "Stomp And Shake Cheerleading Motions: "Upstomps/High Steps")

****
PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR'S NOTE
"Upstomps' ("high steps") are an integral, signature motion in (standing up*) contemporary stomp & shake cheerleaders. 

*as opposed to stomp & shake cheers that are performed while the cheerleaders are seated in gym bleachers

Indeed, since at least 2012 (high steps) have become such an integral feature of stomp & shake cheerleading routines on all levels (middle school or younger, high school, and university) that it might be argued that contemporary standing up cheer routines that don't include upstomps (high steps) aren't really examples of stomp & shake cheerleading.

There doesn't appear to be any definitive documentation of which cheerleading team/s created this cheer motion and there isn't any documentation regarding when this cheer motion was first performed in cheer routines.

However, my informal examination of numerous YouTube stomp & shake videos from 2006* to 2011 indicates that almost all of the stomp & shake cheerleaders performing "upstomps" (now referred to as "high steps") were from North Carolina.

This fits the historical record that documents that styles of stomp & shake cheerleading originated in North Carolina (particularly at Winston-Salem State University since 1976). It's also documented that another style of stomp & shake cheerleading originated at Virginia State University (which is about 30 minutes from Richmond, Virginia) two years earlier in 1974.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2015/06/when-did-stomp-shake-cheerleading-begin.html for the 2015 pancocojams post entitled "When Did Stomp & Shake Cheerleading Begin? (Online Comments & Website Statements)".

*A 2006 YouTube video of Howard University's stomp & shake cheerleaders that is 
embedded at the top of Part III of this pancocojams series shows those Howard University cheerleaders performing their cheer "Sit Back Down". That performance includes those cheerleaders parodying other cheerleaders performing upstomps while they chant "You move like this".  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8ZIz-IkZSI "
Howard University Bison Cheerleaders 2"
published by CoachSpence, Oct 19, 2006 [Howard University is located in Washington, D.C.

The words to and the video of Howard University battle cheer "Sit Back Down" suggests that by at least 2006 the upstomp motion was closely associated with some-but not all -stomp & shake cheerleading teams. Judging from the YouTube videos that document & shake movement routines between 2006 -2011, upstomps were mostly associated withthose cheerleader teams who performed the North Carolina style/s of stomp & shake cheerleading.

-snip-
Howard University's "Sit Back Down" cheer documents the disparagement that occurred (and still occurs) between teams and fans of different styles of stomp & shake cheerleading. Since Howard University is located in Washington D.C., near Richmond, Virginia, it's likely that their cheerleaders may have favored Virginia State University's style of performing stomp & shake routines over the Winston-Salem State University and other North Carolina styles of performing stomp& shake routines that included motions such as the upstomp (highsteps).

Washington. D.C. is about a one hour and 50 minute drive to Richmond, Virginia. Richmond, Virginia is 30 minutes from the location of Virginia State University, the home of the stomp & shake cheerleader team the VSU Woo Woos. (Washington D.C., Maryland, and Virginia are part of the colloquial "DMV" referent for those areas.)

In contrast, Washington. D.C. is about a five hour drive to Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the location of Winston-Salem State University's cheerleaders who have had a number of team names including "the Rams", C
heer Pi", and "Powerhouse".

Click.https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2017/06/examples-of-stomp-shake-cheerleading.html for Part I of a three part pancocojams series for a list of titles and provides words for some stomp & shake cheers. The links to the other parts of that series are given in each post. 

****
ADDITIONAL STOMP & SHAKE VIDEOS OF CHEERLEADERS PERFORMING UPSTOMPS (HIGH STEPS) from 2007 to 2011

Notice that each of these cheerleading teams are from universities or high schools in North Carolina.

Showcase Video #2 - WSSU Cheerleaders/ 08-09

 

yorztrulie,Feb 12, 2009

The RED SQUAD cheering at the pep rally for our game against A&T
-snip-

WSSU= Winston-Salem State University (located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina)

****
Showcase #3- LC Cheerleaders Cheerin' Their Team On!!!

vcheer88, Mar 14, 2009

Livingstone College Cheerleaders [Salisbury, North Carolina)

****
Showcase #4- West Meck HS Varsity Cheerleaders-Fire it up.MOV


Sophia Ward, Feb 22, 2011

West Meck HS = West Mecklenburg High School

High school in Charlotte, North Carolina

****
Showcase #5 - West Charlotte Cheerleaders

All Things Angelica, Feb 11, 2011 (Charlotte, North Carolina)

****
This concludes Part II of this pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.