America’s Best Dance Crew — Season 2: When B-Boying Took the Crown

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When Season 1 of America's Best Dance Crew proved that crew culture could thrive on national television, Season 2 answered the next question: could a pure b-boy crew — built on power moves, air flares, and decades of breaking tradition — win the whole thing? Super Cr3w said yes. Their victory in August 2008 didn't just crown a champion. It validated an entire lineage of b-boying on the biggest stage the art form had ever reached.

Why This Season Matters to Dance Culture

Season 1 opened the door. Season 2 proved the door was staying open. With fourteen crews auditioned across New York, Chicago, Houston, and Los Angeles — and a format that now demanded Janet Jackson tribute routines, Missy Elliott interpretations, and around-the-world challenges — the show pushed crews further than ever. Audiences were no longer watching a novelty. They were watching artists compete at the highest level.

Super Cr3w's win was historic because of what it represented. They were a collective forged from three established b-boy crews — Battle Monkeys, Full Force, and Knucklehead Zoo — who had been grinding for years before the cameras ever showed up. Their style was rooted in the foundations of breaking: power, precision, and the kind of physical mastery that takes a lifetime to develop. When Shane Sparks declared that Super Cr3w had "officially brought breakin' into the mainstream," he was acknowledging something the b-boy community already knew — this art form deserved every bit of the spotlight it was finally getting.

Meanwhile, crews like SoReal Cru, Fanny Pak, and Boogie Bots showcased the full spectrum of what American dance culture could produce — from Houston's theatricality to LA's genre-bending creativity to DC's funk roots. Season 2 wasn't just a competition. It was a national showcase.

"They've officially brought breakin' into the mainstream." — Shane Sparks, ABDC Judge & Hip-Hop Choreographer, on Super Cr3w's championship win

Season 2 Overview

The second season premiered on June 19, 2008 and concluded on August 21, 2008 on MTV. Mario Lopez returned as host, with Layla Kayleigh as the backstage correspondent. The judging panel remained intact: rapper Lil Mama, former *NSYNC member JC Chasez, and hip-hop choreographer Shane Sparks.

Fourteen crews were selected from auditions in four cities — New York City, Chicago, Houston, and Los Angeles — and organized by region: West Coast, East Coast, Midwest, and South. After a live auditions special narrowed the field to ten, crews competed weekly for the $100,000 grand prize. On August 21, 2008, Super Cr3w was crowned champion, with SoReal Cru as the runner-up.

The Competing Crews

Crew Hometown Region
Super Cr3w 🏆 Las Vegas, Nevada West
SoReal Cru Houston, Texas South
Fanny Pak Los Angeles, California West
Boogie Bots Washington, D.C. East
Supreme Soul San Francisco, California West
A.S.I.I.D. Detroit, Michigan Midwest
Phresh Select Philadelphia, Pennsylvania East
Xtreme Dance Force Naperville, Illinois Midwest
Sass x7 Piscataway, New Jersey East
Distorted X Houston, Texas South
Full Effect Chicago, Illinois Midwest
HIStory Houston, Texas South
Shhh! North Bergen, New Jersey East
Team Millennia Fullerton, California West

Week-by-Week Breakdown

Week 1 — Crew’s Choice Challenge

Aired June 19, 2008

Ten crews took the stage for the first time, each performing to a song of their own choosing. This was their introduction to America — a chance to establish identity and prove they belonged. Super Cr3w set the tone early with James Brown's "Get Up Offa That Thing," while SoReal Cru opened with Omarion's "Entourage." Phresh Select repped Philly with Boyz II Men's "Motownphilly."

Bottom 2: Fanny Pak, Distorted X  |  Eliminated: Distorted X

Week 2 — Video Star Challenge

Aired June 26, 2008

Each crew was assigned a music video with a signature dance sequence — and had to perform it while keeping their own crew identity intact. Super Cr3w tackled Chris Brown's "Run It!," Fanny Pak took on Gwen Stefani's "Wind It Up," and Boogie Bots were given B2K's "Bump, Bump, Bump." The challenge separated the adaptable from the one-dimensional.

Bottom 2: Boogie Bots, Sass x7  |  Eliminated: Sass x7

Week 3 — Rock the Title Challenge

Aired July 3, 2008

Crews were given a song and had to use its title as the creative inspiration for their entire routine — physically illustrating the concept through movement. Super Cr3w got "We Fly High" by Jim Jones and turned it into an airborne showcase of power moves. SoReal Cru brought R. Kelly's "Snake" to life with fluid isolations, while Fanny Pak transformed Britney Spears' "Toy Soldier" into a theatrical military routine.

Bottom 2: Phresh Select, Xtreme Dance Force  |  Eliminated: Xtreme Dance Force

Week 4 — Speed Up Challenge

Aired July 10, 2008

One of the toughest formats in ABDC history: crews had to transition from a slow-tempo song to a faster one while staying on beat the entire time. This tested musicality, discipline, and real-time adaptability. Super Cr3w navigated Santigold's "Creator" with precision, while Boogie Bots brought new energy to Lil Wayne's "Lollipop."

Bottom 2: Phresh Select, Supreme Soul  |  Eliminated: Phresh Select

Week 5 — Janet Jackson Challenge

Aired July 17, 2008

Following Season 1's Michael Jackson tribute, Season 2 honored his sister. The episode opened with every crew performing together to "Rhythm Nation" — one of the most iconic choreography pieces in pop history. Then each crew was assigned a Janet track and had to incorporate her signature sharp choreography into their own style. This was the week that nearly ended Super Cr3w's run, landing them in the Bottom 2 against A.S.I.I.D.

Bottom 2: Super Cr3w, A.S.I.I.D.  |  Eliminated: A.S.I.I.D.

Week 6 — Bring the Beat Challenge

Aired July 24, 2008

Crews were assigned both a song and a school subject set in a high school gym — and had to use stage props to create the beats for their routine. Fanny Pak got P.E. and turned it into one of the season's most memorable performances with N.E.R.D.'s "Spaz." SoReal Cru handled Eve's "Tambourine" with pep rally energy. Super Cr3w survived the Bottom 2 for the second time.

Bottom 2: Super Cr3w, Supreme Soul  |  Eliminated: Supreme Soul

Week 7 — Missy Elliott Challenge

Aired July 31, 2008

One of the most anticipated challenges of the season: every crew performed to Missy Elliott tracks, whose music demands creativity, rhythmic complexity, and visual storytelling. Missy's catalog has always been a proving ground for choreographers, and this episode forced crews to go beyond their comfort zones. Boogie Bots, a fan favorite from D.C., were eliminated after a hard-fought season.

Bottom 2: Fanny Pak, Boogie Bots  |  Eliminated: Boogie Bots

Week 8 — Eighties Theme Challenge

Aired August 7, 2008

A double challenge: the Groove Step Challenge and the Dance Movie Challenge. The Final 3 — Super Cr3w, SoReal Cru, and Fanny Pak — had to prove their range across two performances in a single night. The '80s theme honored the decade that gave birth to b-boying's golden era, hip-hop's mainstream explosion, and the dance movie genre. Fanny Pak was eliminated, leaving two crews standing.

Bottom 2: Super Cr3w, Fanny Pak  |  Eliminated: Fanny Pak

Week 9 — Championship Showdown

Aired August 14, 2008

A triple-challenge showcase for the Final 2. Super Cr3w and SoReal Cru faced the Around the World Challenge, the Original Dance Craze Challenge (where crews created their own original music, lyrics, and choreography), and the Last Chance Challenge. Eliminated crews returned for regional collaborations, and instead of going head-to-head for the finale, the two finalists teamed up for one last performance together — a show of mutual respect that embodied everything ABDC stood for.

Non-elimination showcase — Final 2 advance to the live finale

Week 10 — The Live Finale

Aired August 21, 2008

After surviving three separate trips to the Bottom 2 — a feat no other ABDC champion has matched — Super Cr3w was crowned the winner of Season 2. Their journey from the edge of elimination to the championship was a testament to resilience, crew unity, and the power of staying true to your roots. SoReal Cru finished as a worthy runner-up, and the season cemented ABDC as the definitive platform for American dance crew culture.

🏆 Winner: Super Cr3w  |  Runner-Up: SoReal Cru

Legacy of Season 2

Super Cr3w's post-show legacy is remarkable. They opened three dance studios, including one in Las Vegas. Members appeared in films including Battle of the Year, Planet B-Boy, and Honey 2, and in commercials for Pepsi. They toured with Madonna, Gwen Stefani, Missy Elliott, Christina Aguilera, J.Lo, and Paul McCartney. They are the only hip-hop crew to have been personally invited to perform at the White House by First Lady Michelle Obama.

The bond between Super Cr3w and Season 1 champions JabbaWockeeZ became legendary. Members of both crews joined forces so frequently they coined the name "Super Wockeez," and Super Cr3w members later joined JabbaWockeeZ on stage for their Las Vegas residency show MÜS.I.C at the MGM Grand. In 2015, Super Cr3w returned for ABDC's All-Stars season, advancing to the finals alongside Quest Crew and Kinjaz.

Season 2 also demonstrated the geographic diversity of American dance culture. Crews from Detroit, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Houston, San Francisco, and suburban New Jersey all brought distinct regional identities to the stage. The season proved that ABDC was more than a TV show — it was a census of American movement culture.

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