IDF Tick Tock

IDF Tick Tock, originally uploaded to YouTube as Batallion 50 Rock the Hebron Casbah and posted on Facebook under the name Rock the Casbah, is a viral dance video in the flash mob style produced by soldiers in the Israel Defence Forces (IDF). The video was filmed in 2010 by soldiers serving in the IDF's Nahal Brigade.

Video
The video opens with six infantry soldiers on patrol in Hebron, a tense flash point of sniper, stabbing, and other attacks on Israeli soldiers. The soldiers are walking cautiously down a deserted Jabel Rahma Street, near the Tel Rumeida site, in the Jewish section of Hebron, armed and wearing full combat gear, including bullet-proof vests. The Muslim call to prayer can be heard coming from the loudspeaker of a mosque (all the sound in the video was edited in after the footage was shot).

Suddenly, the voice of American electropop singer Kesha breaks in. She is singing her hit # 1 pop song Tik Tok: "Tonight I'm gonna fight, Till we see the sunlight, Tick tock on the clock but the party don't stop, no".

With the music, the soldiers break into choreographed dance moves. The soldiers step in sync and gyrate, somewhat clumsily, with moves more often used to dance to the cult Spanish track "Macarena." Then, just as suddenly as they started, the soldiers resume their positions and continue patrolling.

The 106-second amateur video was praised for its artistry in "juxtaposing tension and cathartic dance."

Other videos
The video is a spoof on a long-viral Israeli television comedy skit that ran for months on the satirical TV show "Eretz Nehederet." There, two clothes shop salesgirls who are giving begrudging service suddenly go ballistic when shoppers disrupt their folded clothes, and require the offenders to fold with them in moves synchronized to the Tik Tok tune. In the hit TV video, known as hamekaplot ("the folders"), celebrities and politicians are featured as the "violators". Israelis made numerous spoof clips applying the idea to everything from rolling joints to preparing sushi. Peace Now made a version, "starring" Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak folding T-shirts bearing inscriptions such as "two-state solution," "civil rights", and "settlement evacuation."

The IDF video also followed several videos posted by soldiers in other armies, including one showing American soldiers in Afghanistan dancing to Telephone by Lady Gaga. Israeli soldiers have produced and posted numerous comedy videos, in addition to several videos of Israeli soldiers in uniform dancing and singing. The lighthearted genre includes video of uniformed tank mechanics "busting a move" on a sidewalk, in which three soldiers lip sync to The Tokens' recording of The Lion Sleeps Tonight, and another in which Avril Lavigne sings  Girlfriend while a group of female soldiers dance.

Controversy
The IDF released a statement which read: "This was a joke by the soldiers, and the matter is currently being investigated by the battalion commanders."

The Hong Kong newspaper The Standard noted that the troop which had turned into a troupe had shown off "daring maneuvers", which "appeared to indicate they had undergone some sort of special training". The British newspaper Daily Mail joked that the soldiers' next performance could be Jailhouse Rock.

Haaretz reported that the soldiers involved "could face disciplinary action." Agence France-Presse reported that the soldiers were likely to be be "punished" for "inappropriate conduct during a military operation."

The soldier who uploaded the video removed it from YouTube. But it had already spread across the Web, and was quickly reposted on YouTube, Facebook and other web sites. Political science professor Gerald M. Steinberg commented: "We're talking about 18- or 19-year-old kids in an unimaginably stressful environment. They are trying to lighten up."

There were calls by some for the soldiers to be punished harshly on the grounds that the video hurts the IDF's image. But others called it a "funny" sketch made by 18-year-old youths. According to reporter Dominic Waghorn of Sky News, official reaction to similar IDF videos in the past had "ranged from a threat of disciplinary action to a shrug. Military life can be boring, they've got phones, they listen to music."

The two sergeants who were the squad commanders of the patrol were punished. They were ordered to participate in an IDF educational military film geared to preventing such videos being created in the future, which will explain why doing filmography and dancing is forbidden in time of operation. Their educational video is to be screened in IDF units. The other "dancers" from Battalion 50 were already on vacation leave, as they were due to be released from the military in a few days.