In addition to the classic high five, several other variations exist. (left) and
Michael Saunders of the
Toronto Blue Jays executing a two-handed high five in 2016 If one initiates a high five (or any variation thereof) by offering a hand(s), and no reciprocal hand appears to consummate the gesture, the initiator is said to have been "
left hanging". This could be interpreted as an insult, friendly joke or form of enlightenment, depending on the context of its use. Another variation is the "self high five." The action consists of raising one hand, generally the right hand, and tagging it with the other. It was often used by
professional wrestler Diamond Dallas Page as part of his persona, such as in "Self High Five," his theme song in
World Championship Wrestling (WCW). A variation of this variation was explored by Turkish artist Deniz Ozuygur who built a "Self High-five Machine," which was exhibited in New York City in 2010. It is a robotic arm that spins in circles striking another robotic arm, both of which are rubber casts of Ozuygur's own arms. A hand grab is when one or both parties grab and hold, sometimes even shaking around the opposing parties hand while still up high. The variation can be used to indicate friendship and/or personal swagger. Some will pass through a gauntlet while giving two hand high fives through a line of people.
Too slow The "too slow" variation is a sequence of high five and low five, often accompanied by a rhyme such as "Up High. Down Low ..." During the down low sequence, the initiator will surprise the counter-party by pulling their hand back at the last moment, tricking the other person into swiping at empty air, completing the rhyme with "Too slow!" There are variations on this theme, with additions of "to the side" and other hand positions for the partner to contact the initiator's hand. HFE Too Slow 1.JPG|"Up high." HFE Too Slow 2.JPG|"Down low." HFE Too Slow 3.JPG|Victim misses. HFE Too Slow 4.JPG|"Too slow!" (with optional
finger-guns) The origin of the too slow variation has not been established, but the earliest documented instance is a 1982 news article in the
Evansville Courier & Press. A robot named Fubar interacted with customers: "'Gimme three brother' he tells a shopper as he extends a golden hand with that many fingers. Then with a rapid-fire retort he confuses the greeter with 'Take It back! Up high! Down low! Too slow!'" Other notable sources have made reference to it; for example a 1983 journal is quoted as saying, "Whether we hammer, or hoe, whoop or holler, as they say, slap five up high, down low, you're too slow, we do it with the rhythmic motif that leads to harmony." The title song for
Lay on Five, a
BBC children's television programme broadcast in 1985–86 featuring
Floella Benjamin, ended "..too slow to Lay on Five." The too slow variation is in the 1987 film
The Principal in a scene where Principal Rick Latimer (
James Belushi) does it to Arturo Diego (
Jacob Vargas). In the
New York Times archives, the earliest reference is from 1993 when
Arnold Schwarzenegger did it with the son of a film-crew member while on the set of
Last Action Hero, saying: "Let's have five. Five high. Five low," at which point Schwarzenegger pulled his hand away saying "Too slow." The boy reportedly laughed. Schwarzenegger did it originally in the 1991 film
Terminator 2: Judgment Day, when John Connor (
Edward Furlong) teaches the Terminator (Schwarzenegger) to "Gimme five. Up high, down low, too slow." In 2008,
They Might Be Giants released the song "High Five!" on an album for children titled
Here Come the 123s, with lyrics "High five! Low five! Slap me five! Down low! Too slow!," a gesture described in the song as "old school" a slang term usually meaning something from a prior generation. The rhyme bears a striking resemblance to a very old
work song, possibly medieval, used by blacksmiths to teach apprentices how to best operate a bellows in a way that maximized its efficiency by opening it fully and quickly, while closing it slowly. The didactic rhyme is "Up high. Down low. Up quick. Down slow; And that's the way to blow."
Air five An air five is a variation where the hands of the participants never actually touch, needing only line of sight to make the gesture. It has an advantage for participants who are otherwise too far apart to achieve physical contact at the moment of the gesture. The participants may simply pretend to high five, or add an imitation sound of hand slapping. Also known as the
wi-five, a mix of "wireless" and "high five" with a pun on
Wi-Fi, a wireless computer technology. ==Celebrations==