Here's an interesting article by the New York Post. I like the guy and he cracks my kids up!
BOOGIE MAN MYSTERY
By DON KAPLAN
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June 2, 2004 -- MOVE over Mickey Mouse, Six Flags is trying to turn the mysterious dancing old guy from their new ads into the next theme park icon.
In the infectious national spots the centerpiece of the amusement park operator's $100 million "It's Playtime" ad campaign a bald, bespeckled old man with suspiciously young-looking eyes pulls into a suburban neighborhood in a colorful bus, shuffles onto the sidewalk and breaks out into a wild dance.
"He represents the spirit of Six Flags," says Six Flags Inc. spokeswoman Debbie Nauser of the man who's favorite music in the ad seems to be "We Like to Party," by the Venga Boys.
"He's our ambassador of fun, his dance and lively antics are to show people that at Six Flags you can let loose."
Nauser said the character currently has no name and declined to say if he's played by a real senior citizen or is, as many suspect, a limber young dancer made up to look really old. He has been confirmed as a male, according to published reports as opposed to a female dancer dressed up in a bald wig and a suit.
It's Six Flags first national ad campaign in seven years and a switch for the company, which used to focus mainly on local spots.
Ever since the spots started airing last march to promote Six Flags 31 theme parks world-wide, 28 in the U.S. the origin and true identity of the dancing geezer has been the focus of speculation by talk radio DJs and countless posts across the Internet.
"I can't believe no one recognizes the guy from the Six Flags ad," writes a tongue-in-cheek fan who goes by the handle NVRTIGO on the Web site coasterbuzz.com.
"Doesn't anyone watch 'The Sopranos'? It's Corrado 'Junior' Soprano. He needs to do that dance on the show!"
Some have likened finding out who the dancing man is to trying to figure out the name of the person wearing a Mickey Mouse suit at Disney World.
Regardless, Six Flags is banking on the old (young?) guy to help reverse a two-year attendance slump that has been attributed to the sluggish economy, weak consumer confidence and post-9/11 travel wariness that's been squeezing the theme park industry.
It's too early to say if the ad campaign has had an effect on park attendance, Nauser said.
But fans of the dancing man are expected to turn out later this summer when he makes several personal appearances at Six Flags parks around the county.