Marquese Scott
Marquese Scott is an American popping animation dancer. His work has been seen in music videos that he creates, TV shows such as The Ellen DeGeneres Show and "El Hormiguero", advertisements, and live performances at award shows. He has signed with XCel Talent Agency and is part of the dance crew Dragon House. His YouTube channel is WHZGUD2, which includes many dances. His dance videos include Higher, Set Fire To The Rain, Time Control, Wake Me Up, Fresh, Hanging On, and his most popular, Pumped Up Kicks.
Life and career
Scott was born in Inglewood, California. He was first exposed to dancing when he noticed a dance contest happening at a local roller skating rink. Scott began to take dancing seriously while attending North Central High school in Indianapolis, Indiana, joining friends in his school dance club. After high school he joined the military and continued to dance whenever he got the opportunity. After his time in the Navy, Scott moved to Atlanta, Georgia to be with his family. There, he met other dancers, learned the technique of animation, and eventually began uploading videos of himself dancing to YouTube. Scott worked at a local Wal-Mart while he appeared on So You Think You Can Dance and America's Got Talent with his dance crew Remote Kontrol. After Scott's rise to popularity he wanted to dedicate himself to traveling the world.Scott has been a huge influence on people of all ages that have started dancing. Scott's 53rd YouTube upload, a video of himself in 2011 dancing to a Butch Clancy remix of Foster the People's Pumped Up Kicks, is what propelled him to stardom. The Pumped Up Kicks dubstep remix went viral, gaining 1.5 million views in four days and over five million in one week. The viral video currently has over 145 million views. All his videos on his WHZGUD2 channel currently have a combined viewing total of over 360 million with 2.38 million YouTube subscribers. Scott is one of the most famous street dancers according to the blog CuriosityHuman. In September 2019, he co-directed and appeared in the music video for The Poetic Flow by independent artist E-Styles ft Mark Fuego alongside several Venice Beach street dancers and roller skate performers.
Scott has often stated that the proudest moment of his career was dancing live at El Hormiguero.