The dancer is a woman named Alec. She has red hair styled in a pixie cut. She wears a denim vest over a light-red crop top with black stars, red leather pants, and dark blue boots. She wears a black fingerless glove and has a sky blue outline that fades at her boots.
The routine takes place in what seems to be Alec's living room, with a white couch, a pair of pink sneakers, and a wooden bookcase which changes colors with the walls. The walls are purple with white stripes in the verses and bridge. Furniture falls onto the ground, such as a television, a desk with a computer, a chest of drawers, and a washing machine. During the verses, the couch, sneakers, bookcase and walls shake. During the chorus, the walls turn red and the furniture explodes into multiple pieces. Cracks can be seen on the floor, and walls when she performs certain moves. Whenever "tonight" is sung, disco lights appear until "so what" is sung again.
Gold Moves[]
There are 3 Gold Moves in the routine:
Gold Move 1: While slightly bending down, shake your right hand, which should be bent at the elbow. Gold Move 2: Flex your right arm and kiss your forearm. Gold Move 3: Put your hands up high and quickly punch once.
When it is censored, however, there are no ellipses.
At the end of the Mashup, Alec fades away before doing the raspberry. At the end of the Puppet Master Mode, instead, she can be seen turning around while she fades away.
Classic[]
The last pictogram of the routine sticks its tongue out. This makes So What the first routine in the series to have a pictogram with facial features.
Alec’s name might be inspired by Alecia Beth Moore Hart, which is Pink’s birth name.
The right pocket of the Alec’s pants sometimes turns transparent due to an editing glitch.
The menu assets show that the walls are pink in the mirror, even though they are purple in the square, verses and bridge and red in the chorus.
In the first verse, the gameplay for Ain’t No Other Man is displayed on the TV screen.
The appearance can be seen on all versions, despite the fact that Ain’t No Other Man can only be played on the Wii U version of Just Dance 4.
Another strange fact is that this gameplay appears to have pictograms but no star bar, scoring system/interface or lyrics.
Also, the end of the pictogram bar features the flashing triangle from the Wii and PS3 versions of Just Dance 3 and Just Dance: Greatest Hits/Best Of instead of the flashing rectangle used in the final build of Just Dance 4.
Besides, the pictograms are red with cobalt arrows instead of navy blue and magenta.
Once the TV is already broken, the stand that holds the TV will stay fixed and, when the lights turn back on, it disappears
In Just Dance 4, the menu icon sometimes glitches, and a placeholder shows up instead of the actual dancer.
In Just Dance 4 and the old Just Dance Now servers, the coach is slightly stretched vertically on the menu icon and on the coach selection image.
This has been fixed in Just Dance+, where the outline has been made thinner and more solid.
Because Hot n Cold has a caption of the same name, from Just Dance 2014 onwards, "Tear It Up", a caption for So What, was renamed to "Angry Girl".
In So What’s Just Dance Now pictogram sprites, there are four Beta pictograms.
One of them only consists of a head with facial expressions.
The pictograms in Rock n’ Roll (Will Take You to the Mountain)]’s caption "Cyber Punch" fade away two beats later.
The pictogram that replaces So What’s Gold Move 3 has slightly differently positioned arms compared to the original one.
The following bugs may occur:
During Big Girl (You Are Beautiful)’s caption "Marshmallow", a pictogram for Holiday is accidentally displayed one beat before the coach appears.[1]
During Sympathy For The Devil (Fatboy Slim Remix)’s caption "Devil Wind Up", a pictogram for Good Feeling (Extreme Version) appears on the pictogram bar but disappears before it reaches the end.[2]