A very talented grandmother is proving that the phrase “age is just a number” is accurate. She confidently stepped onto the platform and began an incredible salsa dancing performance.
She shook her shoulders elegantly at first, but that was only a warm-up. She moved into a full-body salsa performance in a few short moments.
She recognized she still had it as soon as she started moving her hips and legs, and she maintained the momentum.
She took the band by surprise with a couple new maneuvers once she was at ease, holding their attention as they kept up with her intensity.
The Latin Dancing Center defines salsa as follows:
Stepped on three consecutive musical beats, paused for one beat, and then repeated the motion. Cuban motion, which involves alternating between bent and straightened knees to create the distinctive hip movement, is a crucial component of salsa.
Salsa is usually danced by two people, but this woman showed she could be just as good dancing alone.
Although there are solo salsa variations such as “suelta” or “Rueda de Casino,” which entail partner switching in a circle, her distinct solo approach stole the show. Salsa can be performed impromptu or in accordance with a prearranged pattern, according to Dance Shoe Stores.
The band members’ smiles demonstrated how much everyone was enjoying her performance as the audience’s cheers became louder.
She began to shake her hips, and the audience went wild. Her salsa dances lit up the room, even at her advanced age.
It is quite touching to watch this animated dancer enjoy herself so much on stage.
Let this salsa-dancing grandmother serve as a reminder to us all that life is too short to stop enjoying the things we love, like dancing!
Three of the biggest producers of EVs are reportedly set to slow down production
Three of the biggest producers of electric vehicles are reportedly set to pump the brakes on production, citing a bad economy and higher interest rates thanks to Joe Biden’s bad economic poIicies.
Tesla, General Motors, and Ford all have said they plan to slow production essentially until the economy shows some signs of settIing down.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk joined General Motors and Ford in voicing concerns that high-interest rates on car purchases would prevent borrowers from securing financing for expensive electric vehicles. Musk said, People hesitate to buy a new car if there’s uncertainty in the economy. I don’t want to be going into top speed into uncertainty.
Musk also is planning to take a wait-and-see approach to the economy before ramping up the planned Tesla factory in Mexico. Musk’s comments came after poor quarterIy results across the board.
Not only were Tesla’s sales down, but so were earnings per share and vehicle production.
General Motors, for their part, has plans to delay production of the eIectric Silverado and GMC Sierra pickup trucks by a year, citing flattening demand for the electrified vehicles.
Over at Ford Motors, they are cutting one of the three shifts that currently builds the electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck. The automaker made this decision following a summer where they took some of the focus off of electric, instead looking toward commercial fIeet vehicles and hybrids.
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