Campus community braves the heat to stage a "flash mob" video


By Rick Waters

The TCU Magazine

Frogs for the Cure, spearheaded by Ann Louden (Chancellor's Office), has ramped up efforts to raise awareness for cancer survival and research. On a broiling afternoon last week, an estimated 1,500 people from the TCU community and around the Fort Worth-Dallas area, including 200 breast cancer survivors wearing fuzzy pink headgear, gathered in  the Campus Commons dance to Tim Halperin’s song “We Fight Back.”

 

The video will be featured at halftime of the TCU-BYU football game on Oct. 28 in Cowboys Stadium as part of the University’s annual Frogs For The Cure effort. This is the seventh season TCU has partnered with Susan G. Komen for the Cure on raising money and attention for breast cancer treatment. TCU was the first university to combine a Komen event and football game.

 

While the 106-degree temperature was stifling, it did little to suppress the enthusiasm of the group, which included student-athletes from men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s tennis and rifle teams, plus members of ROTC, the Horned Frog Marching Band, TCU Cheerleaders, TCU Showgirls and numerous fraternities and sororities.

 

“I think one of the survivors said it best, ‘This heat doesn’t compare with what the survivors have had to face,’” said Brian Youngblood, band director, who also served as traffic cop for the video.

 

The event also drew several Metroplex luminaries, notably Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, country music star Pat Green, Fort Worth mayor Betsy Price and former mayor Mike Moncrief and his wife Rosie. Other local celebrities who participated included KXAS/Channel 5's Deborah Ferguson and her husband, WBAP/820 AM's Steve Lamb; WFAA/Channel 8's Paige McCoy-Smith; TV personality Scott Murray; and KTVT/Channel 11 weather forecaster Garry Seith.

 

The dance also included members of the Fort Worth Fire Department, employees of McDonald’s, Wal-Mart, Linbeck Construction and a couple hundred cancer survivors, including Westlake mayor Laura Wheat. “It just shows you that it wasn’t just a TCU event, but a Metroplex-wide effort,” said Louden, herself an almost five-year cancer survivor.  “The turnout we had really makes a statement about how important a cause this is, not just to the University community but to our neighbors and friends around us.”

 

Despite the heat, Louden was pleased with the result, acknowledging that the organizing committee considered moving the video shoot inside the cool of Daniel-Meyer Coliseum as recently as last week. “An endeavor of this size isn’t something you can ever totally plan out,” she said. “We talked a lot about the weather and had made provisions for it with water and medical personnel on hand. Ultimately, we decided to go ahead with it outside in the Commons because we wanted the quality of the video to reflect the importance of the cause.”

 

The stateliness of the four residence halls and bubbling Frog Fountain surrounding the Campus Commons were too good to exclude for the project. So Frogs For The Cure got its sweat on. “There is a synergy between students watching from the windows of the residence halls and the enthusiasm of the people dancing,” she added.

 

Additionally, organizers did not want to alter the schedule after receiving commitments from celebrities, several of whom changed their weekly plans to be a part, and securing donated time from photographers, videographers and their camera equipment, including a helicopter.

 

Last year's Frogs For The Cure effort included Halperin's song and a series of short videos spliced together. This year, the organizing committee took it a step further with a massive crowd for one giant video shoot.

 

Louden never does anything half-hearted, Halperin said. “This year’s effort is better than ever,” he said. “We had big dreams for this when we started, and I think that’s reflected in how many people got involved and how smoothly it went.”

 

Lindsay Shoulders, director of the TCU spirit teams, chipped in this year by choreographing the dance, which she and Halperin taught to students, faculty and staff in a video disseminated early in the summer.  “I’m excited by how many people are here and they have it down,” said Shoulders, who admitted to being nervous before the taping. “But I know we’re going to do great and people will love it.” But there is still more work to be done.

 

TCU senior Film-Television-Digital Media major Katie Norry will now edit the footage from 15 cameras from the live event, plus more than a dozen separate shoots of groups who could not participate, such as the football, volleyball and soccer teams, into a video for the halftime show. It will count as her senior thesis.

 

Louden is also reaching out to BYU and the Salt Lake City chapter of Susan G. Komen for the Cure to participate in the Oct. 28 halftime show.

 

"I recognize heart when I see it," the Mavericks’ owner announced to a crowd at the indoor rehearsal before the outdoor shoot. "When people know that things aren't going the way they planned or aren't going the way they wanted, they don't get down on themselves. ... They get after it and make things happen, just like this event."

 

Green echoed those sentiments. “As a member of the community, I can’t imagine not helping another group within the community, especially one facing what they’re facing,” he said.

 

For more information on Frogs for the Cure, visit frogsforthecure.tcu.edu.

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