FI and I both know dollar dances are in poor taste, and we NEVER had any thought of including one in our wedding.
When we booked our DJ/emcee 14 months before the wedding, he asked about doing games (he had mentioned specifically goofy dance contests and centerpiece giveaways). We're not big on games, but he made a big thing about how important it was to make things interesting for our guests and etc. so we didn't give him a hard no. We were supposed to have another conversation about it later but H dragged his feet so much on planning that in the end all we managed was an emailed list of songs, intros, etc. a couple weeks in advance. To be honest, I've heard so much on these forums about how dollar dances are in poor etiquette, and neither of us comes from that tradition, and none of the games he described were along those lines, so I stupidly didn't think to explicitly address it. I think I thought the DJ would know better (of course, I also thought he'd know better than to play "Blurred Lines" at a wedding, so clearly there were a lot of issues there).
Well, sure enough, he did a version of the dollar dance (he had one person from each table produce $1, pass it around, and then two people dance down the floor and give it to us). I wasn't familiar with this version and we were scarfing down our dinner at the time so it took a few minutes to realize what was going on and then I wasn't sure how to stop it without making a scene.
Everyone seemed to take it in good fun and enjoy themselves, but suffice it to say, I'm completely MORTIFIED. Is there something I can or should do post-wedding to atone for this happening? Our families didn't seem to understand what the big deal is, but I am so embarrassed and I feel like it reflects very poorly on both of us that this happened. We only got about $10 from it, and we used the cash at church the next morning so at least it went to a good cause (I realize that doesn't make it better, AT ALL). Because of the passing around we have no idea who originally contributed each of the bills.