A few weeks ago I wrote an entry about my guilty TV pleasure, ‘Dancing With the Stars’, and how I noticed that one of the professional dancers – Derek Hough – had created a dance for his celebrity partner that was awfully reminiscent of a dance created by one of my favorite professional dance couples, Max Kozhevnikov & Yulia Zagoruychenko. I had promised you a video with the two dances edited together, spliced so as to show off the specific unique moves and overall dance timing that were remarkably similar between the two dances. Unfortunately, shortly after I wrote that post, I got a bad case of the flu, time slipped ever onward, and I never finished the video. Ultimately I decided, hey, it’s just not that important, right?

    Well, apparently, it was kind of important. Why? Because the con lives on! Tonight was yet another performance night on Dancing With the Stars, and Derek Hough & his celebrity partner, Brooke Burke, performed yet again earlier this evening. Sure, they weren’t performing the same dance as Max & Yulia, but there were still striking similarities. Where? In the costumes.

    I’m sure you’re saying, hey, aren’t all those costumes basically the same? It seems like they have two or three styles of costume for each different style of dance, they just change the fabrics around, right? Yeah, that’s normally the case, but not tonight. Tonight they created a complete carbon copy of Yulia’s costume from precisely the same dance they stole the steps from a few weeks ago! It seems like Derek Hough simply can’t come up with his own ideas, whether it’s the dance moves or the costumes, because this is getting really irritating.

    The reason I’m so miffed about the costume is because I know for a fact it was a unique idea created by Yulia herself. The very first time I saw Max & Yulia perform this number, the commentator made special note of how “unique” Max & Yulia’s costumes always are. The commentator – a ballroom champion in his own right – went on to detail that Yulia designs their costumes all on her own. The costume she was wearing that night was one that had garnered her a lot of attention, as it did a beautiful job of accenting every precise move she would make along her beautifully elongated frame.

    What was that costume? A bright yellow fringed pant suit. This bright yellow fringed pant suit:

Yulia Zagoruychenko

    And what was Brooke Burke wearing tonight? The exact same fringed pant suit, in the exact same color. Coincidence? I think not. (It’s too early to find photographs of Brooke in her costume, but as soon as I find them, I’ll post them for you all to see.)

    This really bugs me. Here are two specific instances that I’ve caught where Dancing With the Stars – and Derek Hough in particular – outright plagiarized the creative works of others! First dance steps, now costume design. That’s pretty much the entire essence of what makes a unique work of art in the ballroom dance world. And the really stupid part is, I’m not even a ballroom expert! I can only really name two ballroom dance couples from memory, Max & Yulia and Toni & Elena. Other than that, I’m clueless when it comes to professional ballroom dancers. But if I can recognize two different incidents on two different nights where the same professional dancer has stolen the creative work of another ballroom dancer in only one season of Dancing With the Stars, how plagiarism is going on here that I’m not seeing? Or is Derek Hough the only dancer on the show lazy enough to steal from other dancers without giving them credit?

    Since I never finished editing together the videos of the different dances, I’ll just show you the raw footage here. For those of you unfamiliar with the differences between basic ballroom dance steps and the specifically unique moves developed by Max & Yulia, this might not make a whole lot of sense to you. So for those of you in that category, just pay attention to the overall feel, flavor, and tempo of the dance. That should at least clue you in to the type of plagiarism I’m talking about. Note I’m not talking about Derek producing an exact carbon copy of the dance, I’m not saying that at all. But he stole enough of the unique moves, and enough of the basic moves in the same order, for it to qualify as plagiarism – at least, in my opinion anyway.

    Now, to show you Max & Yulia’s, I’ll have to show you two clips. There were two versions of the dance – one short, one long. They’re both the same dance, except obviously, the long one is longer and thus has more steps. I’m showing you both because the short one shows some of the specific moves in question at a better angle, but the long one shows steps not included in the short version that were used by Derek Hough. That said, here we go:

    – Max & Yulia, Short, from America’s Ballroom Challenge

    – Max & Yulia, Long, from Blackpool 2006

    – Brook & Derek, Week 4 Samba, Dancing With the Stars

    First the steps, then the costume. That’s pretty much stealing the whole thing. Sorry, Derek, but I think you pulled one of the dirtiest tricks in the book, taking another professional’s work and claiming it as your own. Shame on you!

    So what now? Either Derek Hough needs to come clean, give Max & Yulia the credit they deserve, and then somehow face the some consequences here, or Dancing With the Stars needs to come clean and finally admit that their professional dancers aren’t really coming up with their own choreography all on their own each and every week. The show presents it specifically as if the dancers come up with original dances entirely of their own design each week specifically for their celebrity partner. If that’s not really the case and they have other professionals helping them out, they need to come out and say it. But as the show is presented right now, Derek was supposed to come up with his own dance, not steal moves and costumes from others. Based on how the show is presented and what I’ve seen thus far, both tonight and a few weeks back, I’m crying foul – Derek Hough has clearly plagiarized the work of Max & Yulia. First with dance steps and now with costumes. Personally, I’ve had enough.

    Update – Friday, Nov 21: After a rapid succession of rather intense comments, I’ve posted a little explanatory comment of my own to try to clear up some misunderstandings. So please go to the comments section and check that out! Thanks to everyone who’s commented and apologies for any misunderstandings! Of course we can disagree, but I don’t like to offend anyone and I certainly didn’t mean to.