u/fastasfnyc

Image 1 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 2 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 3 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 4 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 5 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 6 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 7 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 8 — April Dancefloor Report
Image 9 — April Dancefloor Report

April Dancefloor Report

Hi all, back with the Dancefloor Report for April.

Kept it more simple this round. I might switch this up to quarterly too so it doesn’t start to feel stale.

April highlights: 5.46 million total steps, 549 hours combined on the dancefloor, and an average session of 16.2K steps over 4h 17m.

One thing I found interesting this month was breaking the data down by age. Ravers in their early 30s danced the hardest per minute by a clear margin, outpacing both the 20-somethings and the 35+ crowd on intensity. Meanwhile, the under-25s actually stayed on the floor the longest, just at a gentler pace.

I think younger ravers aren’t dancing less, they’re learning. The more raves you go to, the more you start to find your groove. I remember when I first started raving, I only knew how to jump up and down. Then it slowly evolved into hands in the air, hand flicks, and so on. Eventually, if you rave enough, you find your groove.

u/fastasfnyc — 2 days ago

April Dancefloor Report

Hi all, back with the Dancefloor Report for April.

Kept it more simple this round. I might switch this up to quarterly too so it doesn’t start to feel stale.

April highlights: 5.46 million total steps, 549 hours combined on the dancefloor, and an average session of 16.2K steps over 4h 17m.

One thing I found interesting this month was breaking the data down by age. Ravers in their early 30s danced the hardest per minute by a clear margin, outpacing both the 20-somethings and the 35+ crowd on intensity. Meanwhile, the under-25s actually stayed on the floor the longest, just at a gentler pace.

I think younger ravers aren’t dancing less, they’re learning. The more raves you go to, the more you start to find your groove. I remember when I first started raving, I only knew how to jump up and down. Then it slowly evolved into hands in the air, hand flicks, and so on. Eventually, if you rave enough, you find your groove.

u/fastasfnyc — 2 days ago

April Dancefloor Report

Hi all, back with the Dancefloor Report for April.

Kept it more simple this round. I might switch this up to quarterly too so it doesn’t start to feel stale.

April highlights: 5.46 million total steps, 549 hours combined on the dancefloor, and an average session of 16.2K steps over 4h 17m.

One thing I found interesting this month was breaking the data down by age. Ravers in their early 30s danced the hardest per minute by a clear margin, outpacing both the 20-somethings and the 35+ crowd on intensity. Meanwhile, the under-25s actually stayed on the floor the longest, just at a gentler pace.

I think younger ravers aren’t dancing less, they’re learning. The more raves you go to, the more you start to find your groove. I remember when I first started raving, I only knew how to jump up and down. Then it slowly evolved into hands in the air, hand flicks, and so on. Eventually, if you rave enough, you find your groove.

u/fastasfnyc — 2 days ago