The dancer is a mannequin who turns into a girl with pink hair with a yellow hair clip in it. She has a navy blue cropped sweater with red lips and light blue clouds on it, red sequined trousers and yellow wedges with black heels. During some parts of the song, her clothes briefly change colors.
Background
The background is a boutique window. There are several comic book expressions which read "Oh" and "No!". When the screen zooms in before the dance begins, it is possible to see a window with a CLOSED sign to the right of the boutique window.
There are also two backup dancers which appear to be mannequins. Both of them wear a blue dress (only the dancer on the right has a silver belt), and appear to have no head or legs.
Gold Moves
There are 2 Gold Moves in the routine: Gold Move 1: Punch the air with your right hand and lift your left leg off the ground.
Gold Move 2: Lower your head and cup your hands over your mouth as if you are shouting. This is the final move of the routine.
The Beta version of the routine was going to feature some spherical lights and some light blue chairs with a heeled shoe on it, and the two mannequins were not there.
The lead dancer and the mannequins vanish instead of reverting to their original state. This is strange, because they are meant to stay in the boutique instead of simply vanishing.
The mannequins near the dancer do not appear in the Mashup or Puppet Master Mode.
Also, the dancer is not in her mannequin state at the beginning of the song.
In the Mashup, the dancer appears with a black face at the start and in the end. But in the Puppet Master Mode, the dancer doesn't appear like a mannequin or with a black face.
In Good Feeling’s Puppet Master Mode, Oh No!’s pictograms for the moves during the chorus appear with arrows, even though the original pictograms do not have them.
Also, if you select the caption Robot Rise, a pictogram from Touch Me Want Me will accidentally appear for some split seconds.
Also, when you select "Strike A Pose", a weird bug can happen; a slot will contain a stack of random pictograms.
In Just Dance 4, the camera zooms into the boutique; however, in Just Dance Now, it's already zoomed in. Additionally, the mannequins in Just Dance Now have the same void effect as every Just Dance coach (the effect that makes the silhouettes overlap).
When the final gold move occurs, the two mannequins light up gold.