The Harlem shake has not been welcome everywhere. Up to 15 miners in  Australia were fired after they put a video on the Web of eight men performing  the dance craze deep underground, according to the Australian newspaper The  West.

What got the miners in trouble? Some had removed their protective gear for  the video.

The paper reported that the mining company Barminco canned the six-figure  salary workers and banned them from working at any of their projects around the  globe. One of the ousted workers complained that the company had overreacted,  saying dancing miners were just "having a bit of fun."

For those living in a hole, the Harlem Shake dance has become a Web  sensation. The videos usually start with one person doing the dance move to the  bass-driven track, then cuts of several—sometimes lots—more people joining in,  often in themed costumes.

The paper said some of the workers said they had taken off their shirts so  the mining company’s name would not show. Other miners fired did not  participate, but watched from the sidelines.

This isn’t the first time a Harlem shake video has made trouble for its Web  stars. Far above ground, students from Colorado College’s Ultimate Frisbee team  made a sky-high video dancing in the aisles of a Frontier Airlines flight.  Called “Harlem Shake Frontier Flight 157," it caught the eye of the FAA, which  is looking for evidence that regulations were not followed. Frontier spokeswoman  Kate O'Malley told Reuters that ”safety measures were followed and the seat belt sign was off."

A student on the plane said that they had asked  permission beforehand.