The West Coast Swing competitive circuit is, in theory, American. It grew in California, spread across the United States, and built its major institutions — US Open, MADjam, Boogie by the Bay — on American soil. The World Swing Dance Council maintains rankings that span international borders, but the heart of the circuit has always been domestic.
And then there are the people who fly 19 hours to be there anyway.
He lives in Singapore. He has been dancing West Coast Swing for seven years — discovered it through a YouTube video, found a local community, trained without access to the density of instruction available in the American circuit, and competed regionally whenever the geography allowed.
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