
Alisha Jucevic for CalMatters
Generative AI is eating culture. See how close itâs getting to disrupting dance
Dancers say their craft canât be duplicated by AI. Our tests show theyâre right â for now.
Bird singing and dancing, as practiced by the Cahuilla Band of Indians, tell a story about the creation of the world, and how the Cahuilla migrated to their current home in Southern California. Moving the same way your ancestors did, perhaps on the exact same land, makes you feel part of the past, present, and future all at once, said tribal member Emily Clarke. Sheâs done bird dance with her loved ones since she was 7 years oldâan act, she said, not only of spirituality but also of perseverance, since bird dance is among the acts of Native American culture nearly eradicated by colonization and U.S. government policy.
So when Clarke heard that some generative artificial intelligence models, like Googleâs Veo 3 and OpenAIâs Sora 2, can mimic the dance, her first thought was that it was wrong, distasteful and disrespectful. Then she wondered briefly if automated forms of bird dance could help preserve her cultureâbefore deciding they canât, since they will never replicate the conversations and community bonds that have helped give Cahuilla bird dance its distinct style and impassioned practitioners.
âIt would miss the cultural and social importance, and without that, itâs not bird dancing,â she said.
Developers of AI systems are working continuously to do an increasingly better job of replicating complex human movement, including dance. Doing so has become a sort of holy grail in the field of generative AI due to the many technical challenges involved, but it remains an open question among dancers like Clarke of how much the technology will disrupt the world of dance as it progresses.
Clarkeâs conflicting and uncertain thoughts about AI mirror those of other dancers across California interviewed by CalMatters, who were, depending on the specific question or moment in time, optimistic, skeptical and concerned about AIâs incursion into their art form. Most settled into the view that AI is incapable of capturing the uniquely human aspects of dancing, including the cultures surrounding it, the pride and passion of dancers, the energy imparted by audiences, or the formâs essential element of improvisation.

Photo courtesy of Emily Clarke
CalMatters and The Markup tested four commercially-available AI video-generation models â OpenAIâs Sora, Googleâs Veo, MiniMaxâs Hailuo, and Kuaishouâs Kling â and so far, dancers donât have much to worry about. Late last year, for the sake of this study, the four models were asked to depict humans performing nine different dances, including the Apple dance popularized on TikTok, bird dance, folklórico and the Mashed Potato. All but one of the 36 tests returned a video of a human dancing, but all of the videos failed to produce a video of a person performing the specific dance requested. Furthermore, a little under a third of the videos included many of the common issues seen in generative video, like inconsistencies in a subjectâs appearance from frame to frame, abnormalities in movement, or too many limbs.
Video generation models still make obvious mistakes like liquefying limbs or sudden changes in clothing, but they are clearly improving. When CalMatters and The Markup ran similar tests in late 2024, videos had more impossible limb movements and visual inconsistencies, failings that appear less frequently and are more difficult to spot today.
Clarke said of the AI-generated videos depicting the Cahuilla Band of Indians bird dance: âNone of these depictions are anywhere close to bird dancing, in my opinion. The regalia is only similar in that there are skirts with ribbons, but the songs and dance movements are completely off.â
Generative AI, technology that makes it possible to quickly generate audio, text, imagery or video with a simple text prompt, raises issues beyond the dance community. Itâs often made with data scraped from the internet, meaning that creatives who share their work online risk having it used to train AI models.
Understanding how AI might affect the world of dance has also taken on new urgency as AI begins to influence the art and careers of creatives in adjacent fields and slop begins to crowd out images of real people on social media.
A nearly five-month strike in 2023 by Hollywood writers was prompted in part by concerns around the use of artificial intelligence in entertainment. An actorsâ strike also addressed the effects of AI on performersâ work. Lawmakers are trying to sort out the policy implications; the California Legislature last year passed laws sponsored by the Screen Actors Guild to protect actors from getting turned into digital replicas without their consent. Next year, lawmakers will consider the passage of a bill supported by Hollywood creatives, which places digital fingerprints on copyright material so individuals can ask tech companies whether their work was used to train generative AI models and give them grounds to demand compensation or credit.
Most dancers are not unionized, although some are part of SAG-AFTRA, along with others who earn a living by moving their bodies, like stunt performers and martial artists. Within this group, video game motion actors are at the vanguard; they went on strike last year alongside voice actors as they sought protections from AI.
Hip hop, folklórico, and the limits of tech
Edye Kelly, 23, first started dancing in a Bay Area hip-hop studio in 2016. She moved down to the Los Angeles area a couple of years ago to pursue a career in dance. She has been in a Daddy Yankee music video, and has performed at the Grammys as one of the dancers for R&B singer-songwriter SZA. She completed her first tour as a backup dancer with multiplatinum pop entertainer Usher.
Kelly heard creatives talk about how AI could affect their work during the SAG-AFTRA actorsâ strike, but she doesnât think many dancers know about the possibility that the technology could have a big impact on their livelihoods.
She said full-body motion technology is already beginning to encroach on human dancersâ territory: âIt kind of already has happened, when you think of video games and how they use dancers for âJust Danceâ or âMichael Jackson: The Experience.ââ Those video games use a combination of real dancersâ movements and motion technology, according to dancers who have talked online about their work for the games. Ubisoft, the maker of both games, on its website touts its use of AI âacross the boardâ to âcreate believable worldsâ and has posted to YouTube a video showing its capture process in action. A spokesperson for the company declined to comment on its use of software to simulate or augment dance.
Kelly, who earns money by dancing and teaching dance classes, is concerned that AI could eventually threaten dancersâ jobs and said she hopes dancers are fairly compensated if their likenesses or moves are used to train AI models.
But she struck an optimistic note, too, saying, âI donât think AI could ever get to a point of perfectly mimicking humans ⦠We are constantly evolving. They would always be behind in some kind of way.â
Nadia Arambula is an introvert, but that all melts away when sheâs dancing. Arambula, 46, started folklórico dancing as a toddler in Guadalajara. Folklórico dance styles and clothing vary by state or region in Mexico, and as a child, Arambula embraced the fashions of the Jalisco region by playing dress-up in her momâs colorful skirt and heels. When she was 5, her mom signed her up for dance classes at her daycare, and sheâs been at it ever since. Today Arambula dances at events in San Diego at places such as Padres baseball games and community gatherings with her students at Ballet Folklórico El TapatÃo.
Arambula said she has danced nearly her entire life because she enjoys how the elegant, flowing drawing movements with skirts projects pride in Mexican culture and manifests joy and a sense of freedom. She also loves teaching insecure young people to get up on a stage and live out loudâto feel the sort of joy she feels when she dances.
Arambula believes itâs impossible for AI to mimic the emotion of a dancer, especially when it comes to interacting with the audience. The tech, she said, will never be able to transmit the grace, joy and emotions she feels when she dances.
âWhen I perform, I can feel the audience,â she said. âI give life to the people, and at the same time receive life from the people. Itâs beautiful. There are no words that describe the feeling that I have when I perform and seeing the audience wants to be part of this moment.â
Shown some of Jalisco folklórico AI dance videos generated by CalMatters and The Markup, Arambula said they donât come close to representing the Jalisco dance style she grew up with and teaches today. Thereâs no proper footwork, posture or skirt movement â all essential elements of the style. In some instances, AI makes a head turn without shoulders following or makes part of a dress disappear for a moment, but she said she has to stop to catch the imperfections. She may not notice them if she scrolled past these videos in her social media feed without an indication they were made by AI.
Dance competition
Computer scientists have for years made it a grand challenge for their AI models to generate convincing dance videos on demand from textual descriptions â not unlike similar dreams of developing AI that can drive a car next to humans on city streets or one that can detect emergencies before any humans dial 911. Videos from YouTube and TikTok provided them with ample training data, helping AI systems generate movement without needing sensor-laden humans to literally dance for them, a process known as âmotion captureâ that is currently required for most video games and augmented reality worlds. (YouTube now prohibits the use of videos it hosts for training models unless users opt in. TikTok did not respond to repeated requests for comment.)
Researchers at UC Berkeley made important strides in 2018, when they used YouTube videos to train AI to do acrobatics like backflips, martial arts, and, perhaps most importantly, the Gangnam Style dance. Subsequent work by Berkeley researchers in 2019 used video of a ballerina on YouTube as training data. In 2022, a UCLA researcher, along with their collaborators, introduced Bailando, a generative dance AI model. The same year, Stanford researchers introduced EDGE, which can generate lengthy state-of-the-art breakdancing videos based on only five seconds of music and video. In 2024, researchers from the University of Southern California and TikTok parent company ByteDance introduced AI models that imitate facial expressions and dance moves.
Making videos with AI has become even easier with the advent of generative AI models from companies like OpenAI, Midjourney and Runway.
Despite this progress, AI models still struggle to create natural movement. For example, itâs easy to make a video of a fireplace ablaze or a Hollywood explosion, said UC Berkeley computer science professor James OâBrien, but itâs hard to make a video of a wildfire impacted by strong winds. This limitation means AI models may do a poor job at imitating some dance moves today, but OâBrien said itâs important to appreciate that when AI developers fix their sights on a challenge, they can make vast improvement within a matter of months. Two years ago, for example, text-to-video models were incapable of producing videos of Will Smith eating spaghetti (which, like dance, is another de facto benchmark for AI models). Today such videos are not perfect, but theyâre much more lifelike than they used to be.
Computer scientists are interested in being able to generate realistic videos of dance because the capability is a gateway to creating a range of photorealistic human movement, said Yuanhao Zhai, a recent Ph.D. graduate in computer vision from State University of New York at Buffalo. If you can generate video of a gymnast doing a backflip, for example, it will be easier to produce footage of a person walking down the block.
Feeling dance moves under your skin
A ballerina figurine atop a music box is what inspired Emma Andre, 26, to dance. They were 3 years old and mesmerized by the miniature as it spun around a tiny piano, bent in an arabesque. They told their parents they wanted to go to dance class. A creative movement class led to lessons in ballet and contemporary dance, attendance at the Boston Conservatory, and training with dance companies in New York City. Today Andre choreographs dance performances and teaches dance to kids in Berkeley in the same kind of classes where they got their start.
Lately, they have enjoyed movement in dance shows like My Obsession with Hamletmachine and the Yerba Buena Garden ChoreoFest in San Francisco. They also enjoy working with their partner and fellow dancer Henry Winslow on a duet Andre calls the coupleâs dance theater idea farm. Last year they performed a three-part duet in front of an 11-person audience in their one-room apartment in Oakland, a feat that required some modifications to ensure Winslow didnât stick a leg out a window or upset downstairs neighbors.

Florence Middleton for CalMatters

Florence Middleton for CalMatters
Andre said they are open to exploring the use of AI in dance, but believes that it is a uniquely human form of movement, incorporating elements that cannot be imitated by AI. Even if AI got every step right, it cannot capture the lessons and experiences that sometimes determine the next step for human dancers. A pirouette, a spin on one leg, is different every single time, they said.
âI do a lot of improvisation for my choreography, so I donât even know what Iâm gonna make. And so itâs really crazy to me that an AI could predict that?â they asked. âWe talk a lot about fascia, which is the layer of connective tissue under your skin that goes throughout your entire body. And I feel like a lot of my movement stems from a fascia level. You canât map that externally.â
What drives them to continue to dance is the joy of movement and connection, of meeting people and building relationships through dance. Ephemeral, beautiful, intimate moments of movement make dance what it is, they said. Andre is also motivated to pass on that passion to young people â seeing them discover and feel creative and confident the same way Andre learned when they were a child fuels their interest in exploration.
âI have a choice, but I will always choose to dance,â they said.
Andre said they found a depiction of the Horton modern dance style generated using the Veo 3 model âstaggeringly lifelike,â but they caught moments in a majority of the generated videos where something isânot quite right,â like when a dancerâs head is momentarily on backward in one video, or when a ballet dancer bounces on to their tippy toes, but theyâre wearing soft shoes, and you would only do that in hard toe ballet slippers.
âItâs really confusing to me why anyone would prefer this instead of hiring one of the thousands of really capable, really talented dancers in most major U.S. cities,â they said. âThe whole point of dance is connecting with the human form.â
Winslow enjoys how dance connects him with Andre and other people in order to create something meaningful together, and delights in feeling the history of movement styles developed over generations that traveled across continents.
Sometimes a dance step is new and sometimes itâs something in the zeitgeist or you didnât know you picked up from theater camp as a teenager. The majority of the time it isnât new but something you learned over time, something programmed into a dancerâs nervous system over the span of days or decades, or mirror neurons that fire in the brains of experienced dancers when they watch other dancers perform. He questions how AI can imitate those human processes.
âBecause weâve been doing this for a while, thereâs just a lot under the surface,â he said.
Social media: To share or not to share
Andre said they stopped sharing their dance on Instagram in order to take a mental health break from the unhealthy dopamine dependency such platforms can enable. Posting dance videos on Instagram has helped Andre find jobs, but they said that if generative AI started imitating their favorite dance styles they would be less likely to post videos online in the future because they donât like the idea that their body and movements can be copied and used by an AI model.
And they are worried about constricting their posting that way because they believe dance is meant to be shared. If fewer dancers share their videos, it can reduce learning and access. They have a contemporary dance degree from Boston Conservatory, but learned how to do fouetté turns from a YouTube video and has drawn inspiration for how to choreograph dance performances from other videos posted on social media.
âMy body and my dancing is mine, and the idea that that can just be siphoned through this process and then become part of AI without my consent is something that I donât love the idea of,â they said.
Conversely, Arambula said sheâs fine with the makers of AI scraping video of her performances because sheâs confident that a machine cannot imitate the way she connects with an audience.
Emily Clarke said that if she found out her videos were part of data used to train video-generating AI, she too would stop publicly posting videos on social media, but sheâs not worried about that negatively impacting community connection since itâs more common to learn bird dancing from an elder or another tribe member than it is to learn on social media.
Zion Harris is 25 years old and has been dancing since he was 5. He was 12 when he made it onto the Golden State Warriorsâ Junior Jam dance team as a part-time employee of the NBA franchise, which is when he said he seriously began to think of making a living as a dancer.

Alisha Jucevic for CalMatters
Now heâs doing it. Harris, who grew up in the Bay Area, has been on tour as a backup dancer with Puerto Rican rappers Bad Bunny and Daddy Yankee, getting to explore North and South America in the process. He has performed at the Grammys with country/hip-hop crossover star Lil Nas X. Heâs been in a Coach commercial with Houston rapper Megan Thee Stallion.
Dance has helped him get through his âhardest times,â Harris said. âIt blows my mind every day that I can do this.â His main sources of income are tours, music videos and stage performances. When there are human dancers at a concert, âit definitely helps with the crowd⦠and brings the artistâs vision alive,â he said. âHaving a hologram, or digital images on a screen, would be boring.â
There are times when things get slow for Harris. But when heâs not on a job, he is training â taking dance classes or holding practice sessions with his fellow dancers.
Harris is signed with a casting agency that helps him book jobs, but social media plays a huge role in getting him noticed and sometimes helps him find opportunities directly. So the possibility of his moves and likeness being copied off social media platforms by AI is âdefinitely a big worry,â he said.
âEverything is becoming easy to replicate or use without consent,â Harris said. âBut if we donât post [on social media], our opportunities could stop. You really just have to take the gamble.â
Dancers and educators experimenting with AI
Though some dancers are clearly concerned about having their work exploited to build artificial intelligence models, others are experimenting with incorporating AI into their craft. Performers associated with the dance tech nonprofit Kinetech have used AI in a number of ways since the organization formed in 2013, including in dance performances with robotic arms or AI systems that use motion capture to mimic the steps of a live performer.
Regular contributors to Kinetech shows run the gamut from a computer scientist so stiff it looks like they canât move their shoulders to dancers with little to no experience in technology, said Daiane Lopes da Silva, a dancer who cofounded Kinetech alongside technologist and director Weidong Yang.

Juliana Yamada for CalMatters
Members of the group come together in order to use technology as a tool to highlight humanity, Yang said.
That play and experimentation takes place at a weekly âopen labâ gathering in San Franciscoâs Mission District. Amid exercises at an open lab last year ahead of the groupâs annual DanceHack show, Lopes da Silva led warmups for about 30 dancers and technologists with snaps, claps, shoulder rolls, and an order to âmake magic with your hands like an alchemist.â
Lopes da Silva thinks motion capture technology can help dancers, capturing their unique style of movement and serving as a tool for self reflection. She recently used motion capture to discover that she dances more enthusiastically on her right side than her left.
The best part about humans making art with machines, Yang told dancers and technologists at an open lab ahead of DanceHack, is when things go wrong.
âArtists like glitches,â he said. âThat can lead to improvisation, unexpected events that cannot be reproduced.â
Ari Kalinowski runs a lab at Gray Area, a nonprofit arts organization known for putting human dancers on the same stage as robots. He supports lawsuits against companies like Stability AI and Midjourney, which artists accuse of copyright infringement. Neither company responded to requests to comment. At the same time, he has also been working with Kinetech on AI that can mimic and interact with dancers and wants dancers to explore dancing with AI agents.
The art form can withstand integration with AI, he believes.
âPeople still play chess after Deep Blue beat Garry Kasparov,â he said. âWe now have in addition to chess, augmented chess, and as an artist Iâm not interested in replacing artists. Iâm interested in expanding creativity to include human-agent interaction in different ways.â
Kate Ladenheim is an assistant professor of choreography at UCLA and a self-described creative technologist. Ladenheim was once asked to choreograph a ballet about Anonymous, the hacker group, which âpointed me toward digital life as a really strong influence for my work,â Ladenheim said.
Ladenheim uses motion capture extensively and has explored the intersection of dance and technology in various other ways, including by teaching a class about modern dance as it relates to tech development, and working with a member of the Martha Graham Dance Company on a chatbot that responds in the voice of Graham, the famous dancer and choreographer.
Ladenheim said the impact of technology on dance is nothing new, and that fears about technologyâs effect on labor have been around since the industrial revolution. Generative systems that are producing dance animations arenât very good yet, in Ladenheimâs opinion. Still, they acknowledged that AI has the potential to get so adept that it brings up an âessential question for the field of choreography: What is the implication if we can (subtract the human) body from it?â
About half an hour away at the University of Southern Californiaâs Glorya Kaufman School of Dance, associate professor d. Sabela grimes is facing AI head-on instead of fearing it. Many dancers have been early tech adopters, he said, embracing sampler and drum machines, and the internet as a way to share music files.
The professor encourages his dance students to use ChatGPT to help formulate questions. He also believes generative AI can help students in their choreography classes and help teachers engage students. AI models are âgoing to be integrated in so many systems, so why not get ahead of it,â he said. Yet he added that thereâs an important conversation to be had around âthe ethics of plagiarizing peopleâs styles and using it for datasets.â
Should dancers be worried about AI replacing them? It depends on what audiences and artists want, grimes said: âIf people value a virtual experience vs. a human experience, there will be a danger.â
Kat Lin is a technologist who has danced since she was 3 years old and taken part in Kinetech performances since 2018. Sheâs never seen Kinetech do shows that didnât involve AI in some way. Though AI or metaphors about AI are part of many Kinetech dance performances, Lin doubts that AI can easily replicate their shows because theyâre often improvised and technological glitches are treated like opportunities to explore the unexpected.
Thereâs a lot of fearmongering today about AI taking jobs from creatives, Lin said, but she doesnât view the relationship between AI and art as antagonistic. Humans might take inspiration from dancing with AI or learn things, like how their dance steps land heavier on their right side than their left. But Lin doesnât believe AI is a threat to dancersâ jobs. âThereâs always going to be something different about having a human stand in front of you and moving,â she said. âNothing will ever replace that kind of energy, probably because humans are very social, and thereâs just something magical to that.â
Lin said AI canât imitate the community she enjoys at Kinetech open labs, which she has participated in since moving to San Francisco seven years ago. And it canât mimic the connection she felt with Weidong Yang, whom she met while doing a handstand. He joined her there, upside down with his legs against the wall, and she now considers him a great friend.
âI often say that getting to do dance pieces or be in rehearsal is just an excuse to hang out with friends,â she said. âCommunity is everything.â
This story was produced by CalMatters and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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