It was clearly meant to be a moment of levity: 10 South Dakota teachers scrambling on the ice for $1 bills at a minor league hockey game. The crowd at the Sioux Falls Stampede game Saturday night loved the “Dash for Cash” and the teachers who spoke with the Argus Leader said they were grateful for the chance to snag some extra money to spend on their students.
But the main reaction from Twitter users when video of the event went viral was abject horror. That disconnect between the two reactions speaks to a fundamental shift in how Americans are viewing one-off events like Saturday’s event. What were once viewed as lighthearted local interest stories are being more properly seen as workarounds for very, very broken systems.
Here they go! pic.twitter.com/G0MH3Y1VXU
— Annie Todd (@AnnieTodd96) December 12, 2021
Americans used to automatically laud these examples of targeted assistance as forms of community togetherness. You can tell as much from this quote to the Argus Leader from a representative of CU Mortgage Direct, which provided the $5,000 in single dollar bills for the event:
“With everything that has gone on for the last couple of years with teachers and everything, we thought it was an awesome group thing to do for the teachers,” Ryan Knudson, Director of Business Development and Marketing for CU Mortgage Direct, said. “The teachers in this area, and any teacher, they deserve whatever the heck they get.”
It’s the self-congratulatory nature of the thing that gets me. At some point, someone got the idea that this was the best way to make a difference in the community. You see, it was for the teachers’ benefit that they were made to provide entertainment, literally crawling on their hands and knees in competition with each other for the resources being offered. That double duty is clearly much more efficient than just providing teachers with a check.
The Sioux Falls Stampede’s media liaison did not immediately respond to an emailed question about just who proposed the format for Saturday’s event.








