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JK Wedding Entrance Dance" is a viral video originally uploaded to YouTube on July 19, 2009, featuring the wedding of Jill Peterson and Kevin Heinz, [1] using "Forever" by Chris Brown as the song for their wedding march. [2] In its first 48 hours, the video accumulated more than 3.5 million views.
On July 19, 2009, a video was uploaded on YouTube that received significant media attention, using "Forever" as the song to a wedding march. The video, known as the JK Wedding Entrance Dance video, received over 1.7 million views in its first seven days.
The dance down the church aisle to Chris Brown's "Forever" is based on the popular 2009 YouTube viral video, "JK Wedding Entrance Dance", [4] in which a young couple (JK, standing for "Jill and Kevin") dance down the aisle to the song along with their wedding party. Pam mentions that the song was specifically put on a "Do Not Play List", but ...
JK Wedding Entrance Dance – The wedding procession for Jill Peterson and Kevin Heinz of St. Paul, Minnesota, choreographed to the song Forever by Chris Brown. The video reached 1.75 million views on YouTube in less than five days in 2009. [238] The video was later imitated in an episode of The Office on NBC. [239]
On 15 April 2011, T-Mobile uploaded a video parody of the JK Wedding Entrance Dance [4] portraying the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton weeks before the actual Royal Wedding using choreography with the group's song. [5]
[22] [26] Several reviewers noted the "homage" of the wedding procession dance, including Hankinson, Anthony Benigno of the Daily News; [29] [34] the Wall Street Journal invited readers to compare the original viral "JK Wedding Entrance Dance" YouTube video and the subsequent dancing procession from the "Niagara" episode of The Office with Glee ...
JK Wedding Entrance Dance – The wedding procession for Jill Peterson and Kevin Heinz of St. Paul, Minnesota, choreographed to the song "Forever" by Chris Brown. Popularized on YouTube with 1.75 million views in less than five days in 2009. [112] The video was later imitated in an episode of The Office on NBC. [113]
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