Mexico In Mexico's Heroic Military Academy, card stunts are done during various occasions, especially on September 13, the anniversary of the
Battle of Chapultepec, where a program is made in honor of this great battle.
North Korea North Korea's yearly
Arirang Festival, also known as the Mass Games, in
Pyongyang capitalizes on
choreography and card stunt to create sweeping images across the stadium. The festival is famed for the use of this technique as part of the iconographic propaganda art of the regime.
South Korea During the presidency of
Park Chung Hee, card stunts were used during marches and stadium gatherings. The incorporation of these was one of several elements of Park's
cult of personality which paralleled that of the Kim family in North Korea.
Thailand Card stunts () are regularly performed in certain sporting events in
Thailand. They are especially associated with
Jaturamitr Samakkee and
Chula–Thammasat Traditional Football Match, but are also employed in most school- and university-level sporting events where performances by the seated crowd often play an important part in the competition. In addition to plain colored cards, other objects such as umbrellas, flashlights and reflective surfaces are also used, and special plates with multiple tiles of colored card booklets are used to create detailed aggregate images. The origin of such performances in Thailand can be traced back to
Assumption College, a member of the Jaturamitr, where in 1942, by the instruction of Cherd Sudara, a teacher at the school, differently-uniformed students in the audience arranged to form the school's initials. This developed into dynamic messages by physical movement of the crowd and later the covering and exposure of specific-colored clothing. The Chula–Thammasat Traditional Football Match adopted the card stunt in 1957; in the following years, cardboard cards became the predominant medium for the stunts. As a part of larger events, performances by
Chulalongkorn University students were featured in the opening ceremony of the
1974 Asian Games in Tehran, and eight thousand students from the Jaturamitr schools performed during the
1999 FESPIC Games in Bangkok.
United States The
Great Rose Bowl Hoax was a card stunt pulled off by students of
California Institute of Technology (CalTech) during the
1961 Rose Bowl. A 2006
Super Bowl commercial by
Budweiser, titled "The Wave", features a fictional card stunt using computer animation. The crowd at the
Rose Bowl performs a card stunt which shows a beer bottle being opened and poured around the stadium into a glass and subsequently being consumed one gulp at a time. The crowd finished with a collective "AHHHH". In February, 2006 the
Gillette company sponsored the "World's Largest Card Stunt" at the
NASCAR Daytona 500 with over 118,000 fans set to participate. The Card Stunts were produced by Kivett Productions. During the singing of the "
Star-Spangled Banner", the US national anthem, fans held up cards forming a patriotic design consisting of stars and stripes. Following the anthem, fans flipped the cards to display the "Gillette Fusion" logo. On August 25, 2007, the Bristol Motor Speedway and Kivett Productions broke the Daytona 500 record, by creating what is now the World's Largest Card Stunt with 128,000 cards. There were two card stunts that were sponsored by Sprint; and the Card Stunts took place during the Food City 500 Race. An army of 325 workers spend 5 hours placing the cards in the seats. The music video for Weird Al Yankovic's "Sports Song", a parody of college fight songs, includes a card stunt. During the
Super Bowl 50 halftime show, held at
Levi's Stadium in
Santa Clara, California, audience members participated in two card stunts: one at the beginning, and another at the end. At the beginning of the show, fans displayed a sunburst pattern. At the end of the show, cards revealed the phrase "Believe in Love" on a
rainbow-colored background. ==Other performances==