honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, October 30, 2006

Matt's 'stupid' dance lands him gum deal

By Andrea Sachs
Washington Post

With a backdrop of art and a canine audience, Matt Harding dances at the Berlin Wall. His videos are posted www.wherethehellismatt.com.

Courtesy Matt Harding

spacer spacer

So, where in the world is Matt Harding? We found him in Seattle, but before that, Harding, 30, was everywhere. In 2003, the video-game maker performed a silly free-form dance in more than a dozen countries, which he filmed and then posted on his Web site at www.wherethehellismatt.com.

Two years later, a gum company caught sight of his video and sent him off again to dance and travel on seven continents. Since Harding's return, about 5 million Web viewers have seen his international boogie.

Q. Describe your travel background.

A. Travel to me wasn't something on my radar as a thing you could do. Growing up, I'd been to Europe and around the country, but I'd never traveled outside of my comfort zone before. Then, when I was 23, I moved to Australia for a job. ... After a couple of years of living in Australia and saving money, I went back home to the States. I spent all of my savings on a six-month trip in 2003. I went to 17 countries.

Q. How much did you spend on that trip?

A. Enough to buy a decent car.

Q. When — and why — did you start dancing in each country?

A. A couple of months into the trip, I started making the dancing video ... it just happened. A friend ... I was traveling with in Vietnam suggested that, "Hey, you should go do that stupid dance you do and I'll film it." I shot the first clip in Hanoi.

Q. How would you describe the dance?

A. It's what my body does when I start flinging limbs around. It's not something that's choreographed, and it doesn't have a name. It's sort of the dance a 3-year-old kid does, where you start jumping up and down and swinging your arms. It's just that I kept doing it into my 20s.

Q. How many countries had you danced in by the end of the first trip?

A. I probably danced in 15 countries total, maybe 17, in the first video.

Q. How did the gum company end up financing your second tour?

A. I finished the first video and put it up on my Web site at the beginning of 2005 ... and it wound up on some blogs. The media got hold of it, and with all of the media attention, Stride gum found me. They contacted me and asked if I'd be interested in making another video for them for the debut of their gum, which happened in June of this year.

Q. And you said ...

A. I thought that sounded like a great idea. They offered to pay for me to travel around the world for six months and go anywhere I wanted. They let me pick the places, and they didn't give me any restrictions other than to stay out of the "axis of evil," which was more to keep me from getting killed. So, in December of last year, I started, and got to go to 39 countries on all seven continents. I finished in June of this year and put the video up on June 21.

Q. How did you pick the places for your second trip?

A. Antarctica is the kind of place where it's very difficult to go to, and it costs a lot of money, and it takes a lot of time. It was somewhere I figured I'd never have an opportunity to go to, so that was at the top of my list. Also, Easter Island and the South Pacific, Micronesia, the Galapagos Islands.

Q. Which places were the most difficult to dance in?

A. The hardest dance was on the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. I spent nine hours climbing up to the peak, I vomited eight times on the way up, and I just had nothing left by the time I got up there. ... And the most terrifying was on the Kjeragbolten rock in Norway; it's just a tiny rock wedged between two faces of a chasm 3,000 feet up and only a few feet across. Dancing on that rock, yeah, I came very close to killing myself.

Q. In the second video, I noticed that the elephants of Botswana were pretty upset. What happened?

A. The elephants in Botswana ... were being culled and sold as pet food. This Sri Lankan man had been living in Botswana and bought the orphaned elephants and kept them on his farm. I spent a few minutes around them trying to get them used to me, but obviously not long enough, because as soon as I started dancing, they made it very clear that they did not want me dancing near them ...

Q. Were people inspired to join in your dance?

A. The only time that happened was in Rwanda. I went out to this village and started dancing ... and within a couple minutes, all the kids in the village had circled around, and we were all dancing together.

Q. Would you encourage people to go tour the world and do a little dance?

A. Absolutely. It proves the point that I did want to show, which was that there's really nowhere you can't get to in a small amount of time. We're all stuck here together on this small planet.

Q. What's next?

A. I am still getting over this last trip ... But I've started taking tap-dance lessons. I figured it was time to learn how to dance for real.