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Insurance2 mins ago
No offence but isn't it taking diversity to a ridiculous extreme? How long before someone in a wheelchair is taking part?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.>>> "Why Is There A Blind Bloke On Strictly?"
A much better question might be "Why shouldn't there be a blind bloke on Strictly?". Blind people enjoy dancing and, indeed, can be highly proficient at it.
AB's own, much-missed, Woodelf was totally blind but he was also a highly talented artist who taught himself to play guitar, helped to design a website for others to learn to do so, wrote children's poetry, tackled cryptic crosswords and much, much more in his life. To the best of my knowledge, he didn't dance but I know that he would have been highly offended at the suggestion that his disability made it impossible for him to learn to do so.
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I suspect it isn't about how possible it is to learn to dance when blind, but more about awareness of where the partner is during the performance. I'm sure it must be more difficult to be at exactly the right spot all the time without that confirming data, even with the ability to hear the music. The partner will need to be much more aware of everything in case they need to compensate when parting and rejoining during the dance.
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