It was in no way meant as an offence, just a mere pop-music-ahead warning :-)
My note was in no way meant to critique, I meant that I enjoy reading about all the different ways in which people use ChucK.
I myself have used it in a pop-like setting playing a joypad as well (though only in a non-public context, need practice). In a way that's a obvious choice; pop often has synth sounds in a dominant role but the poor synth player is typically all the way at the back of the stage, in a position that couldn't be called "dominant" in the slightest, due to the big keyboard standards needed. I think joypads in custom synth-sound setups are a great solution for that.
I suppose keytars were meant for that but there is a shortage of commonly available, wireless, motion sensing, compact, keytars at low prices while joypad manifacturers are continually trying to outdo eachother.