Sorry, folks, but this conversation is pushing a personal button about not 
using words like "always" and "never" unless it's truly so. I completely agree 
with Greg, Martha, and others that in general, the caller does and should bear 
responsibility for problems on the dance floor. But I can't agree that this is 
always the case. Consider these two scenarios, among others:

1) In a large dance hall at a festival with 500 dancers, one of ten contra 
lines begins to break down when pairs of less experienced dancers happen to 
meet simultaneously in three different minor sets and become confused. The rest 
of the hall is fine. The caller can't intervene personally by, for example, 
running out on the floor.

2) During the 12:15 am - 2:00 am set at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival, again 
with hundreds of dancers, the caller calls a relatively easy dance requiring 
little thought. Some dancers, who are in a range of mental states from alcohol, 
etc., have trouble staying oriented and coordinated, causing recurring problems 
in their sets.

I'd argue that in these contexts, though the dance floor itself is experiencing 
a breakdown, the caller hasn't done anything wrong, nor does s/he have the 
responsibility of fixing the problem. In the first scenario, the caller must 
select dances for and call to the broadest possible swath of dancers among 
those present, recognizing that some minor problems are inevitable. In the 
second scenario, the inebriated dancers are entitled to participate in the 
dance at that venue, and there's little the caller can do to improve their 
mental coordination.

So I'd say the caller almost always has responsibility for problems that occur 
in the hall, but in certain scenarios does not, or at least has limited 
responsibility relative to most situations. --Jeremy

> From: Martha Wild <[email protected]>

> Oh, yes, and it's always the caller's responsibility. 

> > From: Greg McKenzie <[email protected]>

> > There are never fires in the hall--only in your own mind.  If there
> > is trouble anywhere in the hall it is because you have screwed
> > up...somewhere. <snip>  The caller should take full responsibility for  
> > the gaff.

                                          
_________________________________________________________________
The New Busy is not the old busy. Search, chat and e-mail from your inbox.
http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?ocid=PID28326::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL:en-US:WM_HMP:042010_3

Reply via email to