Reading these posts makes me realize how much salsa is really a pa y to play, pay to win Hobbie. Once a social stret dance from poor country, now for rich I ternational people (like jazz music and Bboy summits).
You get that impression because you are on these boards. Traveling within Europe and staying in hostels is inexpensive. Students can afford to do it too.
In USA and North America, most dancers didn’t go to festivals. If anyone got curious, they would go to one in close by (90 minutes flight or 5 hours drive).
Salsa dancing was very cheap monetarily compared to going to bar and spending money on drinks. You could pay $10 or $15 cover and dance to live band for 3 hours. If not live music, to DJ music for 4 hours. Most dancers stopped taking lessons after a couple of months. Today the cover charges tend to be $15 to $20.
Only those who joined performance teams, spent more. Half them don’t come out social dancing. You can consider it as a separate hobby than going out social dancing.
Most social dancers do not go to workshops or classes by celebrities when they visit. Most do not care. Only small segment of hard core dancers will sign up for such workshops.
Think of most social dancers like high school graduates. Small subset is like college graduates. And a few are like PhDs. That is the make up of the dancers, at least in the USA. So if majority is like high school graduates or drop outs, they are satisfied dancing locally. They don’t feel any great urge to put in more effort to improve or go to festivals. Social media has changed a bit but still most of this local crowd doesn’t know anything about who ET or FM is. Forget about the rest.
If you are working class, from a small city in the middle of nowhere, there is a cap, and even travelling to the bigger city, those teachers are not always amazing. , because they look up to the same people.
Salsa generally lacks good instructors. So if you want to rise above local level, you have to find good instructors elsewhere. That’s not easy due to general lower quality of teaching in salsa.
Small towns and cities always have a problem of not having critical mass for any activity. Salsa and partner dancing is even more niche.
Having gtaken workshops from some of these famous teachers, I don't understand the hoopla. I get the same experience.. all the top dancers are at the front, blocking the view and can do it all already. I learn nothing.
One of workshops at festivals are not going to help anyone. You need continuous learning. Either intensive immersive training like you do when you go to Cuba. Or 8-10 weeks of regular weekly training. The more you learn and get better, the more time it takes to get better at incremental things.
And (no surprise) I don't think a lot of them are anywhere near as good as some of the non famous dance teachers in havana.
Or locally. This is true in other dances and hobbies too. Some of the enthusiasts for whom it is a serious hobby, can be better than pros. It shouldn’t surprise anyone. We see that everywhere in life. Most popular tends to somewhere between average and above average. There is Starbucks and there are Indy coffee shops.
But that is all subjective. But again goes to my point of pay to play. It is their dance (depending non the convenience of the argument), and they are stuck there. The only ones that make it have rich euro spouses.
It is only if you want to play that game. You choose to visit Cubs. They choose to go to festivals. A big majority does neither
It makes me realize my ceiling and how much I should care. I started with local teachers at 38, didn't get quakiy teacher (had to own car and afford gas to leave town, plus tuition) until 42, then covid lol. Now I'm 49. What does this all mean now lol.
There are many who started around mid to late 30s. I think most of the studio crowd started in 30s rather than in 20s. In 20s the people are going out drinking, playing video games, going to clubs, playing sports, etc. Partner dancing is not among popular activities. At least that’s how it has been here.
You are at college grad level and comparing to those PhDs or aspiring to be. The cost is equivalent of 4-5 years of your life. Most PhDs once they join the workforce don’t earn that much more than grads. Ten years back I ran into a few PhDs in neurology and other subjects, working in a mall or driving uber because they couldn’t find jobs.