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What is the Camden Bop, the region’s latest viral dance that has earned over a million fans across the world?

Starting out on the basketball courts of Camden High School, the move is a love letter to the city that’s often considered New Jersey’s most dangerous.

Dancer Rodney Barge Jr., a member of the Camden Bop Orignators, pictured doing the viral dance at the Camden Waterfront on June 8, 2026.
Dancer Rodney Barge Jr., a member of the Camden Bop Orignators, pictured doing the viral dance at the Camden Waterfront on June 8, 2026.Read moreEarl Hopkins

Last week, just outside the Camden Waterfront walkway, stood a group of five men, ages 18 to 25. They were all decked in embroidered hoodies with the words, “Camden Bop,” stitched on the front.

They were quiet at first before the sight of a camera and sound of an up tempo beat grabbed their attention. They smiled and their motionless bodies kicked into action.

They shifted their hips from side to side, while their arms and heels bounced to the song’s drum kicks and chopped vocal sample. They added leg extensions and shifty pivots into the mix, creating a synchronized dance that flowed like water.

The words stitched across their hoodies, took on new meaning.

This is the Camden Bop. Viral TikTok videos and Instagram clips of the group, known as the Camden Bop Originators, has turned the move into a social media sensation.

The crew comprises Camden natives Ethan Tarte, Myles Thompson, Nafi Muhammad, Rodney Barge Jr., and Haleem Muhammad.

At 16 years old, Tarte, unintentionally created the Camden bop by trying to imagine what it would be like to circle the rink at Camden’s Millennium Skate World. Before he had skates, he practiced his moves, barefoot in front of his mirror.

What emerged became the foundation of the “Camden bop.”

The influence of Jersey Club dances is present in the heel-toe slides, leg extensions, and quick pivots they add to the Camden bop over up-tempo, club remixes of popular rap and R&B songs like Ryan Leslie’s “Addiction” and R. Kelly’s “Freaky in the Club.”

“We grew up Jersey Club dancing...back when dancing was allowed,” Tarte, now 25, joked, “so it definitely comes from that.”

‘We’re more than what everybody thinks we are’

When the dance didn’t yet have a name, Tarte flirted with the idea of calling it the “E Boogie Bop,” after a nickname he had earned for his quick moves on the basketball court at Camden High School. But he opted for the name of his hometown, hoping the dance would change people’s perception of a city that was once among the nation’s poorest and most dangerous.

“I hear how people talk about Camden, and people are genuinely afraid sometimes to come through here,” Tarte said. “I was excited it was the ‘Camden bop,’ so that everyone knew that there was something good that came out of Camden. We’re more than what everybody thinks we are.”

Not long after, Tarte started posting Snapchat videos of him doing the dance with his friends, Thompson, Barge, and Nafi Muhammad. The 18-year-old Haleem Muhammad joined later. Some of their peers called them “corny” at first but the bop eventually caught on with others at Camden High.

“It really started from us having fun, and wanting to be us,” Tarte said. “People used to make fun of us, but it really comes from the love [of dancing].”

The same people who called the dance “corny” are now tripping over their feet to learn it, said Tyray Green, who graduated from Camden High with Tarte.

“People are insecure with themselves,” he said. “The whole time, they could have minded their business.”

“I feel like they’re doing it worldwide now,” Green added.

A fan in 2Rare

The dance shared among high schoolers has now drawn the attention of artists, athletes, and content creators from around the country.

Among them is North Philly rapper 2Rare, best known for his viral TikTok songs and dance videos, who featured the Originators in the video for his single, "Camden Bop," after seeing the group’s TikTok videos.

2Rare, born Naseem Young, reached out to the Originators so he could put a face and name to the dance that was taking over people’s social media feeds.

“I know how quickly people can steal a wave, and nobody will ever know who the dance was from, who started this or started that,” he said. “I’ve had it happen to me. People have stolen my dances and ran off with it, so reaching out to them was a big deal.”

He first considered shooting the video in Philly, but thanks to advice from Gillie Da King, he recognized the significance of bringing the production to the birthplace of the dance.

“I had to make it happen,” 2Rare said. “I want to really shed light on them, and Gillie said, ‘They will never forget about you for doing something like that,’ and he was absolutely right.”

For Green, the recognition proves what he’s always known: Camden has more than just athletic talent. For him, it’s a city with both grit and style, deserving of its own recognition.

“We get overlooked a lot,” he said. “To see [2Rare] who has eyes on him, stick their arms out to give our city notoriety is big.”

‘There’s love all over the map’

In April, the dancers joined 2Rare outside of Camden High School to film the music video, now sitting at 2.8 million YouTube views since its May 7 premiere.

“It’s humbling,” Tarte said. “This all happened for a reason. It all fell into our lap.”

Earlier this month, their performance on the New York-based music radio show, On The Radar, with 2Rare shined a brighter light on the movement. The viral clips from that performance have reached more than 3 millions views on Instagram, with hundreds of commenters lauding their performance and the homage to their hometown.

“Keep [putting] on for the city @camdenboppers 🙌🏾🕺🏾," one user commented.

Even Chance the Rapper followed the group’s Instagram page, and top streamer Tylil dropped a comment, giving 2Rare and the crew props for their performance.

Nafi Muhammad, 23, who started bopping as a junior at Camden High, said the reactions have been “overwhelming.”

“My nephew watched it on his tablet like a thousand times,” he said, “it’s been a lot of love.”

For years, Muhammad wondered where the group would be if they dedicated more time to promoting the dance back in high school. Now, with the millions of viewers they have reached, little is left to the imagination.

They are living it.

“If TikTok was jumping like it is now back in high school, we would have the dance in another stratosphere,” Muhammad said. “But we kept saying it, and then it happened.”

“There’s love all over the map, and it’s definitely only the beginning,” Tarte said.

The group has met criticism too, with online comments often ranging from “wild dance” to “horrible song.”

The criticism isn’t new territory for Tarte. “People used to call me weird in high school, and now I hear I’m too old to do the dance,” he said.

None of that has ever stopped him.

“Camden is a small city, but we’re making big noise right now, and we’re trying to keep that going,” Barge said, adding that he’s grateful for the collaboration with 2Rare.

The love is not one sided either. 2Rare said the collaboration has elevated his career too.

“They are part of the reason I’m hot right now, so I could never not acknowledge them,” the rapper said. “If it wasn’t for the dance, it would have still been difficult. I had a quiet moment, but I had to pop out and show out. That was a big jawn.”

The rapper is already planning for a remix of “Camden Bop,” and wants to bring the Originators to Atlanta for Streamer University, a multi-day workshop for growing and aspiring content creators.

As for the Originators, they want to continue spreading the joy that dancing has afforded them, and encourage others to absorb it as well.

That’s the Camden way.