'It didn’t feel real': Georgia teen dances his way to New York City for Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
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As the vibrant floats and lively marching bands paraded down 34th Street in New York City, a Camden County dancer found himself in the midst of the spectacle, beaming with joy and executing leaps that embodied the fulfillment of a cherished aspiration.

KINGSLAND, Ga. — Amidst the grandeur of New York’s famous parade, a young performer from Camden County seized the moment, radiating happiness and performing with a passion that had been nurtured quietly in his hometown of Georgia.

Ezekiel Brooks, a senior at Camden County High School, didn’t come from a family steeped in dance traditions.

Remarkably, he honed his craft independently.

“I’ve been passionate about dance for around 12 years,” Brooks shared. “My mom withdrew me from formal lessons when I was quite young, but that didn’t stop me. I continued to dance on my own, driven by enthusiasm.”

Working long hours after school and weekends at Chick-fil-A, Brooks used every spare moment to watch TV dance shows, study YouTube tutorials and practice.

“I’d watch shows like Dance Moms and try to recreate the dances,” Brooks said. “Go on YouTube like, ‘How do I do this?’ And I’d learn it.”

He never thought dancing would lead him to Manhattan.

“It’s something I always wanted since freshman year, and after being in the school marching band, my parents were finally like, ‘Okay, you can audition for the team,’” Brooks said.

After putting together an audition tape one night in January, tired and doubting himself, he surprised himself even more when he got the acceptance email.

“It was 9 at night. I didn’t like my video, so I just got up and improvised. I submitted it thinking, ‘That was so bad’ — and then I got the email saying I made it,” he said.

Of 300 hopeful dancers, only 27 were selected. It marked the beginning of a whirlwind Thanksgiving week unlike any other he — or his family — had ever known.

“We looked out the window and there was New York City. It didn’t feel real,” he said.

Brooks says the trip wasn’t just about him, adding he felt the weight of that support: the hopes of family, his school his community.

“Chick-fil-A paid for my flight. The Board of Education sponsored my trip. It really did take a village,” Brooks said. 

And the moment he danced down the parade route with cold toes, early call times and all, he felt something shift.

Brooks knows what this moment means for kids back in Camden County, Georgia, all over the First Coast and across America — especially those who’ve never seen someone who looks like them on a giant parade float or a national broadcast.

For him, this performance is more than a milestone — it’s a message: passion and persistence can lead to possibility. And he’s not done dreaming.

Brooks says this is only the beginning as he hopes to purse a career as a lawyer, journalist and/or dancer.

He also has a message for other young dancers trying to break in:

“Just keep going. You’re not in that room on accident — you’re there for a reason,” he said.

Brooks will be performing in the Camden County High School “Nutcracker” performance in early December. More information on show timings and tickets can be found on the school’s website.

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