the podium celebration
I feel I need to make a brief, general note on podium celebration and
demeanor in the age of Facebook. Why does FB change things? Because
before Facebook no one saw your podium celebration and no one cared.
But if you're going to post your podium shot on FB, well, we probably
still don't care, but you should at least put a little effort into
getting it right.
In short, you only get to lift both hands in the air if you won. The
end. Or if the stage begins to collapse and if you failed to lift your
hands you (and other innocents) would be crushed otherwise. This is the
first and most critical rule of podium celebration.
In lifting your arms, there should only be the slightest bend at the
elbow, if any at all. If your biceps are parallel to the surface you're
standing on then you're doing it wrong.
The winner may also only lift one arm if he or she chooses to.
If you finished second or third, you should lift one arm, but it must be
the arm furthest away from the winner. Don't try to steal the winner's
thunder. It's his day, not yours. You lost.
When you lift your hands, they should have something in them. Like a
trophy or a bouquet of flowers. If you don't have anything to lift,
your gesture should be as if you are celebrating, animated, the fingers
unclenched and extended, as if waving (without actually waving) to an
intimate friend from across a crowded room.
Also, if you finished second or third, it's sort of badass to look
grumpy that you didn't win, but it shows better sportsmanship to look
pleasant.
The winner should always smile and otherwise demonstrate the utmost in
grace and charm (which includes being gracious, both to the promoter and
to fellow competitors). Act like you're not unfamiliar with the top
place on the podium, but that there's no place you'd rather be.
Podium celebration done right.
1 comment:
I love that I have heard this already. You are a man who cares about this sort of finesse like others do about the shine in their sports car.
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