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TORRENT DETAILS
So You Think You Can Dance S04E14 NL XViD-SHOWGEMiST
TORRENT SUMMARY
So You Think You Can Dance
Status:
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TV Release: 1970-01-01 Torrent Release: 27-11-2011 by user Petey85
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0 Seeds & 0 Peers
TV Show Genre:
Game-Show, Music, Reality-TV
Runtime:
60 min.
Parental Rating:
[12+]TV-PG - Parental Guidance Suggested
This program contains material that parents mau find unsuitable for younger children. The theme itself may call for parental guidance and/or the program contains one or more of the following: moderate violance, some sexual sitatuion, infrequent course language, or some suggestive dialogue.
Awards:
Won 15 Primetime Emmys. Another 5 wins & 71 nominations.
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Episode: The Top 12 Perform (4x14)
Episode Plot:
Host Cat Deeley reminds viewers that the final six couples will be competing for a place in "your" Top10. We're introduced to the final 12 dancers, followed by judges Mia Michaels, Mary Murphy and Nigel Lythegoe.Chelsie & Mark: Up first for the couple is an Alex Da Silva-choreographed salsa (mmm, salsa), featuring tricks Chelsie thinks are "insane." Nigel says it was a "great routine to open the show," praised the footwork of both dancers and makes a thinly veiled and disturbing erection reference. The routine "worked" for Mary, who singled out Chelsie as "phenomenal." Mia thought the routing was "smoking-hot," but thought Mark was awkward. Routine No. 2 was a Broadway number by Tyce Diorio which Nigel thought was hotter than Las Vegas. Mary raved that it was bluesy and sultry, though Mia was lukewarm on both dancers.Comfort & Thayne: Starting with a hip-hop number choreographed by Napoleon and Tabitha Dumo, Thayne fears he will look a "major white boy." Nigel thought the couple performed the moves capably but didn't think the two add of their personality and predicted we will again see them in the bottom three. Mary didn't think there was any chemistry and Mia was worried neither is doing enough to stay in the competition. The couple went contemporary for its second routine, with Nigel thinking Mandy Moore's choreography was better than the dancers. Mary didn't find it believable, and Mia liked Thayne far more than Comfort.Jessica & Will: The couples first routine was put together by Tyce Diorio, a contemporary number the choreographer believed "says the Garden of Eden" and both dancers seemed to like. Nigel thought the pair had a connection the previous two lacked, Mary called it "one of the most amazing pieces Ive ever seen on the show" and Mia added it was "perfect moving body art". Tony Meredith and Melanie LaPatin choreographed the couple's second dance, a quickstep ballroom number which seemed to terrify both dancers in rehearsal. Nigel was a fan of the routine but didn't care for the quickstep aspects of the performance. Ballroom expert Mary said it was "very heavy" and was glad the pair had a good first number to fall back on. Mia thought Jessica regressed and believed Will looked tired of having to carry the couple.Courtney & Gev: The couple's first dance was a cha-cha-cha to Rihanna's annoyingly catchy "Don't Stop the Music." Nigel thought it was "brilliant" and "great fun to watch," Mary screeched that "it was magic" and Mia called it "fabulousity at its best." A Jazz routine by Mandy Moore was next for the couple. Nigel called it "cotton candy" (not a compliment), but Mary loved the routine and both dancers. Mia thought the couple "had a great night."Kherington & Twitch: Lil C put together a "super buck" (his words) krump dance with the issue seeming to be whether Kherington will be able to locate said buckness. Nigel thought Kherington did a "damn good job" but thought the couple lost it at the end. Mia thought it was "dirty, and disgusting, and nasty, and ugly, and stank" which, of course, meant she loved it. A tango by Jean-Marc Genereux was the couple's second dance, a number Twitch compared in rehearsal to the Pitt-Jolie fight scene in "Mr. & Mrs. Smith." Nigel didn't think the performance was honest, and thought both dancers looked uncomfortable. Mary hated the middle of the routine, particularly the turns, and Mia didn't find either dancer committed.Katee & Joshua: The couple performs a Jean-Marc Genereux waltz during which Joshua is supposed to be a ghost Katee can feel but not see. (Plus Katee tells us there are "mucho lifts.") Joshua was "too bouncy" for Nigel but the judge liked the rest of the dance. Mary questioned the Viennese execution but thought the lifts made up for technical shortcomings. Mia liked Katee, who she feels is "meant to dance," more than Joshua. One of the tougher challenges of the night came with the show's final dance, a Nakul Dev Mahajan-choreographed Bollywood routine neither dancer seemed to get during rehearsal. Nigel talked primarily about the cultural significance of having Indian dance on the show, Mary called the pair "stars tonight" and Mia thought it was a lot of fun.
Episode Release:
1970-01-01
Episode Genre:
Game-Show, Music, Reality-TV
Staff:
Actors: Joshua Allen, Stephen Boss, Cat Deeley Writers: Simon Fuller, Nigel Lythgoe Directors: Don Weiner
Other episode info:
Awards: N/A. Originally recorded in N/A.
DESCRIPTION
Dancers skilled in everything from ballroom and ballet to salsa, jive, hip-hop and krumping, all compete to be named the best. Dancers must impress the judges with their moves and rigorous routines in order to survive the auditions and be invited to Hollywood. Producers traveled to Chicago, New York and Los Angeles in search of dancers who represent the soul and rhythm of America. Some dancers wow the judges, while others leave them speechless. See who struts into the producers' hearts and who trips up on the series premiere. A fortunate 50 dancers who survive the auditions will go to Hollywood to work with five of the top choreographers in the business: Alex Da Silva, Brian Friedman, Dan Karaty, Mia Michaels and Mary Murphy. During the "Hollywood Week," the semifinalists will dance their hearts out, as they learn challenging routines and hope to impress the choreographers.