So You Think You Can Dance Season 1 Episode 2
So You Think You Can Trip the light fantastic | |
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Created by |
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Developed past | Simon Fuller |
Directed by |
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Presented by |
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Judges |
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Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English language |
No. of seasons | 16 |
No. of episodes | 296 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Product companies |
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Release | |
Original network | Fox |
Picture format | HDTV 720p |
Original release | July 20, 2005 (2005-07-20) – present (hiatus) |
External links | |
Website |
So You Think You Can Dance is an American reality television dance competition evidence that arrogance on Fox in the United States and is the flagship series of the international So You Recall You lot Can Dance television franchise. Information technology was created by American Idol producers Simon Fuller and Nigel Lythgoe and is produced by 19 Entertainment and Dick Clark Productions The series premiered on July 20, 2005, with over ten million viewers and ended the summertime season equally the pinnacle-rated show on tv. The showtime flavor was hosted by American news personality Lauren Sánchez. Since the second flavor, information technology has been hosted past former British children's television personality and game show emcee True cat Deeley.
The evidence features a format where dancers trained in a diversity of dance genres enter open auditions held in a number of major U.Southward. cities to showcase their talents and motion forward through successive boosted rounds of auditions to test their power to adapt to different styles. At the end of this process, a small-scale number of dancers are chosen as finalists. These dancers move on to the competition's principal stage, where they perform solo, duet, and group dance numbers on live television, attempting to principal a diverse selection of trip the light fantastic styles, including classical, gimmicky, ballroom, hip-hop, street, gild, jazz and musical theatre styles, among others. They compete for the votes of the broadcast viewing audition which, combined with the input of a console of judges, determines which dancers advance to the next stage from week to week, until a winner is crowned as "America'south favorite dancer".
So You Recollect You Can Dance has won seven Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Choreography and a full of nine Emmy Awards altogether. Licensed variations of the show, produced for broadcast markets in other nations, began airing in August 2005 and dozens of localized adaptations of the show have been produced since, airing in 41 countries to date. The sixteenth season premiered June 3, 2019.[1] On February 20, 2020, the bear witness was renewed for a seventeenth flavor, that was set up to air in the summertime of 2020,[two] but, due to the COVID-nineteen pandemic in the Us, the flavor was indefinitely postponed on June xviii, 2020.[3] On Feb 16, 2021, Fox said they would non motion forrad with producing the seventeenth season in 2021, which left the evidence's hereafter in dubiousness.[four] Notwithstanding, in February 2022, information technology was appear that season 17 would caput into production.[5]
Show format [edit]
Goggle box presenter Cat Deeley has served equally the host of So Yous Recollect You Can Dance since its second season, presenting every episode since 2006.
A typical flavour of Then You Think You Tin can Dance is divided between a pick process, during which practiced judges select competitors from a wide pool of applicant dancers, and a competition phase, during which these 'finalists' (more typically referred to as the 'Top 20') compete for votes from home viewers. Although it is produced over the course of months, the selection stage is highly edited and normally constitutes only the first 2 to 4 weeks of aired episodes, with the competition episodes forming the remaining 7 to ix weeks of the season.
Open auditions [edit]
The open up auditions, the first stage in determining a flavour'south finalists, take identify in two to half-dozen major U.S. cities each season and are typically open to anyone aged 18 to 30 at the time of their audition, although season thirteen focused on a younger form of competitors, ages 8 to 14. The cities where auditions are held change from season to season simply some, such every bit Los Angeles and New York City, have featured in most seasons. During this stage, the dancers perform a brief routine (typically a solo, but duet and group routines are allowed also) before a panel of trip the light fantastic toe experts ordinarily headed past serial creator and executive producer Nigel Lythgoe. This panel then decides on-the-spot whether the dancer demonstrated enough ability and performance value to proceed farther. If the dancer exhibited exceptional ability in their performance, judges award "a ticket to Vegas" (or in more recent seasons "a ticket to the Academy"), moving them instantly one step frontward in the competition. Alternatively, if judges are on the contend well-nigh the dancer, they may enquire the contestant to expect until the end of that solar day's auditions to participate in a short test of their ability to pick upwardly professional choreography.
Callbacks [edit]
The second stage of the selection process is referred to every bit "the callbacks" (this round was referenced every bit "Vegas Week" for much of the bear witness'due south run, as information technology was held in Las Vegas, only has been called University Week since season xiii). The callbacks consist of a several-24-hour interval-long process in which the remaining hopefuls are tested for overall well-rounded dance power, stamina, creativity and their ability to perform nether force per unit area. The dancers are put through a battery of rounds that test their ability to pick up diverse dance styles; these are typically some of the more than well-represented genres that are afterwards prominent in the competition stage, such as hip-hop, jazz, ballroom, and contemporary. Additionally the dancers may exist asked to perform further solos in styles of their choosing and participate in a group choreography round in which small teams of contestants must brandish their musicality and ability to communicate professionally past choreographing a performance to a randomly selected piece of music — this claiming is notable as being the just fourth dimension competitors are asked to choreograph themselves, aside from solos.
The callbacks are frequently collectively portrayed equally one of the most exhausting and stressful stages of the competition; each successive round sees cuts in which a meaning portion of the remaining dancers are eliminated from competition and are given a limited corporeality of time to conform to styles they are sometimes wholly unfamiliar with while existence physically taxed by the rapid progression of rounds and a limited amount of rest. At the end of this procedure, ordinarily less than 40 competitors remain in a pool that last contestants are chosen from. Most seasons accept featured 20 "summit" finalists for the competition portion of the evidence, but flavor one was represented by a Top xvi, season 7 saw a Peak 11, and seasons thirteen through 15 have featured a Height x.
Finalist Stage [edit]
Following the finalist selection procedure, the evidence transitions into its regular contest phase, which lasts the residue of the season. The contest stage is typically divided into eight weeks, by and large with two contestants eliminated per week. Dancers are paired upwards into male-female couples that will sometimes stay paired for much of the remaining competition if neither is eliminated (since flavour 7, competitors take also been occasionally paired with "All Stars", returning dancers from previous seasons who partner with the contestant dancers, just who are not themselves competing). These couples perform 1 or 2 duets per week in different styles which are typically, simply not ever, randomly selected. These duets, as with all non-solo performances at this stage in the contest, are choreographed by professional person choreographers. Prior to about duet performances, a video packet of clips of the couple preparing to perform the routine is shown. These packets are intended not merely to demonstrate the couple'southward efforts to primary the routine, merely also to give glimpses of the personalities and personal histories of the dancers, as well as insights from the choreographer as to the thematic, narrative, and artistic intentions of the piece. Following each duet functioning, the week'due south panel of judges gives disquisitional feedback, often emphasizing the two key areas of technique and performance value. Duets and their accompanying video packets and critiques typically accept up the majority of an episode just are often supplemented past solos, grouping numbers, and occasionally invitee dance or musical performances.
Nigel Lythgoe is co-creator of the So You Call back You Can Dance franchise, and has been executive producer and permanent member of the judge'due south panel of the U.S. and U.K. productions for their unabridged runs.
In flavor 1, each week of the contest featured a unmarried episode, with dancers' eliminations pre-recorded the calendar week they occurred and then circulate at the get-go of the next calendar week's episode. In seasons two to eight, the testify's weekly format was split between two episodes, a performance episode, as described in a higher place, and a results show which revealed the consequence of the at-home-viewer voting following the performance show of the same week. More recent seasons have returned to a one-prove-per-week format, just with each week's episode typically reflecting the results of voting for the previous calendar week'southward performances, with these results revealed at the end of the following week's performances. Depending on the stage of the contest, each week may feature eliminations which are based entirely on an at-home viewer vote, or the vote may merely create a group of lesser dancers from which the show's judges will select the terminal eliminations. Voting has likewise varied by season (and often inside seasons) with regard to whether the voter selected individuals or couples. Following the announcement of their elimination, dancers are typically given a cursory transport-off via a video montage. Each competitive episode ends with a quick epitomize of the night'south routines accompanied past voting prompts. Episodes typically last around two hours, commercials included. In that location has also been variability in how long couples are kept together and how the at-habitation-viewer votes are balanced against judge decisions, though ultimately at some point in every flavour, the judges give up their ability to salvage dancers and eliminations are determined exclusively by viewer votes. The total number of hours shown in a given week during the performance stage of the contest has varied from two to four hours.
The finale episode is oftentimes the most elaborately produced show of a flavor and features the last performances of the competitors, encore performances of many of the flavor'south most acclaimed routines, guest dancers (including returning past flavour competitors and cast members from other international versions of the franchise), musical performances, and multiple video packets chronicling the course of the flavor'due south events, all culminating in the annunciation of the winner of the competition. Well-nigh seasons have featured a single winner, while seasons nine and 10 featured both a male and female person winner. Following the closure of the season, the Tiptop Ten dancers oft keep tour for several months, performing hitting routines from the season amid other performances.
Judges [edit]
A typical season of And then You Recollect You Can Dance is presided over by a panel of 2–iv permanent judges, supplemented by occasional guest judges, with the console sometimes ballooning upwardly to twice or more its normal size for callback episodes or flavor finales. Executive producer and co-creator of the show Nigel Lythgoe is the only judge to take sat as a permanent member of the panel across all seasons, although ballroom specialist Mary Spud has also sat as a permanent member of the panel for the majority of seasons. Other permanent judges have included picture director and choreographer Adam Shankman, gimmicky choreographer Mia Michaels, pop music and dance icon Paula Abdul, noted youth dancer Maddie Ziegler, actress and vocalist Vanessa Hudgens, music and dance artist Jason Derulo, choreographer and Television personality Laurieann Gibson, and successful show alumni Stephen "tWitch" Dominate and Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval.
Many earlier seasons oft featured guest judges in occasional episodes, although this practice has become increasingly rare. These guest approximate positions have typically been filled past choreographers who regularly work on the testify (who in rare cases may also be former contestants themselves) and by iconic names from the entertainment manufacture. Guest judges for the testify take included: Debbie Allen, Christina Applegate, Robin Antin, Toni Basil, Cicely Bradley, Kristin Chenoweth, Misty Copeland, Alex Da Silva, Ellen DeGeneres, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Napoleon and Tabitha D'umo, Carmen Electra, Brian Friedman, Jean-Marc Généreux, Jason Gilkison, Neil Patrick Harris, Hi-Chapeau, Katie Holmes, Dan Karaty, Lady Gaga, Carly Rae Jepsen, Lil' C, Rob Marshall, Mandy Moore, Megan Mullally, Kenny Ortega, Toni Redpath, Debbie Reynolds, Wade Robson, Doriana Sanchez, Shane Sparks, Sonya Tayeh, Olisa Thompson, Stacey Tookey, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Travis Wall.
Overview of format and presentation by season [edit]
Flavor | Dates | Host | Permanent judges | Separate results prove? | Dancer showcase episode?[a] | Number of finalists in beginning live show | Number of contestants eliminated per week | Number of contestants remaining in finale | Number of winners | All-Stars included in format? | Point at which approximate eliminations cease | Voting for private dancers starting with |
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1 | Summer 2005 (July–October) | Lauren Sánchez | Nigel Lythgoe | No | No | 16 | 2 | 4 | 1 | No | Summit 8 | Summit 8 |
ii | Summer 2006 (May–August) | Cat Deeley | Yes | No | xx | 2 | iv | i | No | Summit ten | Height 10 | |
3 | Summer 2007 (May–Baronial) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary White potato | Yep | No | 20 | 2 | iv | ane | No | Top 10 | Top x | |
4 | Summer 2008 (May–August) | Yes | No | 20 | two | iv | 1 | No | Peak 10 | Top x | ||
five | Summer 2009 (May–August) | Yes | No | 20 | ii | 4 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Height 10 | ||
6 | Fall 2009 (September–December) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Adam Shankman | Yes | Aye | 20 | 2 | 6 | 1 | No | Top 10 | Top ten | |
7 | Summer 2010 (May–Baronial) | Nigel Lythgoe Adam Shankman Mia Michaels | Yes | Yes | 11 | 1[b] | 3 | 1 | Yep | Superlative four | Elevation eleven | |
8 | Summer 2011 (May–Baronial) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy | Yes | Yes[c] | 20 | ii[b] | 4 | 1 | Yep | Top 6 | Acme ten | |
nine | Summer 2012 (May–September) | No | Yes[c] | 20 | 2[b] | 4 | 2 | Yes | Peak 6 | Pinnacle twenty | ||
10 | Summer 2013 (May–September) | No | Yes[c] | 20 | 2 | 4 | two | Yes | Top six | Top 20 | ||
11 | Summer 2014 (May–September) | No | Aye | twenty | 2 | 4 | one | Yes | Peak 10 | Top twenty | ||
12 | Summertime 2015 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Paula Abdul Jason Derulo | No | Yes | xx | two[d] | iv | one | Yes | Height fourteen | Summit 20 | |
13[e] | Summertime 2016 (May–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Paula Abdul Jason Derulo Maddie Ziegler | No | Yeah | 10 | 1[f] | 4 | 1 | Yeah | Height viii | Top ten | |
fourteen | Summer 2017 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Tater Vanessa Hudgens | No | No | 10 | 1 | 4 | 1 | Yes | Summit 6 | Top 10 | |
15 | Summertime 2018 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Vanessa Hudgens Stephen "tWitch" Boss | No | No | 10 | 2 | 4 | i | Yes | Top eight | Top 10 | |
xvi | Summer 2019 (June–September) | Nigel Lythgoe Mary Murphy Laurieann Gibson Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval | No | No | ten | 2 | 4 | 1 | Yes | Superlative 8 | Top 10 | |
17 | Season postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-xix pandemic |
Dance styles and choreographers [edit]
Over the course of its fifteen seasons, So You Think You lot Can Trip the light fantastic toe has featured dozens of distinct dance styles in its choreographed routines. Near of these styles autumn into four categories that are regularly showcased and can be found in about every performance episode: western contemporary/classical styles, ballroom styles, hip-hop/street styles, and Jazz and its related styles. Diverse other forms of dance that do not particularly fall into these broad categories are seen as well, but not as regularly. The following styles take all been seen in a choreographed duet or group routine; styles featured only in auditions or solos are not listed.
Classical styles [edit]
Routines from the classically derived way of contemporary trip the light fantastic toe are the most common dances seen on the show, being seen in every operation episode of the series (and typically at least twice per episode). While contemporary, lyrical, and modern dance are typically considered three separate (if overlapping) styles of dance, the exercise on So You Think You Can Dance has been to refer to all routines in this area every bit "contemporary", except in the first season where the label "lyrical" was used for the same purpose. Ballet routines occur much more rarely, at a charge per unit of 1 or two per season, since their introduction in the 4th flavor.
Genre | Styles |
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Western Classical styles | |
Contemporary, Lyrical, Modernistic, Ballet/Pas de Deux | |
Choreographers | |
Dee Caspary, Tessandra Chavez, Sean Cheesman, Thordal Christensen, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Talia Favia, Justin Giles, Mandy Moore, Mia Michaels, Lindsay Nelko, Dwight Rhoden, Desmond Richardson, Jaci Purple, Garry Stewart, Sonya Tayeh, Stacey Tookey, Travis Wall, Tovaris Wilson, Keith Young |
Street and club styles [edit]
Hip-hop routines are also present in every performance episode. While these routines oftentimes characteristic elements from many unlike subgenres of hip-hop (locking and popping, for example) and various "street" styles (such every bit breaking), they are typically all labelled under the umbrella term of hip-hop. An exception is the now often featured lyrical hip-hop, which is unique amongst all styles on SYTYCD in that it is the only one that is held to have get a known distinct mode at to the lowest degree in-part every bit a result of the show; the style is widely attributed to regular testify choreographers Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo and the term itself to judge Adam Shankman. These 2 wide categories are occasionally supplemented by routines which are labelled as krump, breakdancing, waacking, and stepping.
Genre | Styles |
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Street and Gimmicky Gild Styles | |
Hip-hop (umbrella term for all Popping, Locking, and New Style/Commercial Hip-Hop styles), Lyrical Hip-hop, Breaking, Krump, Stepping, Waacking, Vogue | |
Choreographers | |
Cicely Bradley, Luther Brown, Tessandra Chavez, Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo, Dan Karaty, Marty Kudelka, Lil' C, Keone and Mari Madrid, Chuck Maldonado, Todd Sams, Christopher Scott, Dave Scott, Shane Sparks, Jamal Sims, Olisa Thompson, Dana Wilson, Pharside and Phoenix, Luam, Mark Kanemura |
Ballroom styles [edit]
Ballroom styles are as well seen regularly in every performance episode. These routines may use the movement of traditional International Standard forms or lean toward American competitive styles. Other routines may employ street or regional variants or may combine elements of dissimilar variations.
Genre | Styles |
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Standard or Polish Ballroom styles | |
Foxtrot, Tango, Argentine Tango, Quickstep, Flit (including Smooth Waltz, Slow Flit, American Slow Waltz, and Viennese Flit variants) | |
Latin/Rhythm Ballroom styles | |
Bolero, Cha-Cha-Cha, Jive, American Jive, Mambo, Paso Doble, Rumba, Salsa, Street Salsa, Samba, African Samba | |
Choreographers | |
Marker Ballas, Leonardo Barrionuevo, Sharna Burgess, Dmitry Chaplin, Valentin Chmerkovskiy, Alex Da Silva, Sasha Farber, Anya Garnis, Jean-Marc Généreux, Jason Gilkison, Hunter Johnson, Jenna Johnson, Pasha Kovalev, Melanie LaPatin, Miriam Larici, Liz Lira, Michael Mead, Tony Meredith, Tomas Mielnicki, Ron Montez, French republic Mousseau, Mary White potato, Jonathan Platero, Oksana Platero, Toni Redpath, Jonathan Roberts, Elena Samodanova, Fabian Sanchez, Edward Simon, Emma Slater, Heather Smith, J.T. Thomas, Louis Van Amstel, Gustavo Vargas, Glenn Weiss |
Jazz, Broadway and musical theater styles [edit]
Jazz is featured in nearly all performance episodes. While these routines are typically labelled simply "Jazz", the genre is notable as existence ane of the most fusional featured on the show and diverse style combinations and sub-categories have been referenced. Descended from Jazz but treated as a split up genre on SYTYCD, "Broadway" is analogous to the label "Musical Theater" outside the U.Southward.
Genre | Styles |
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Jazz Styles | |
Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Modern Jazz, Lyrical Jazz, African Jazz, Jazz-Funk, Latin Jazz, Pop-Jazz/Pop | |
Broadway/Musical Theatre Styles | |
Broadway, Caricatural, Can-Can, Tap | |
Choreographers | |
Chloe Arnold, Al Blackstone, Andy Blankenbuehler, Warren Carlyle, Sean Cheesman, Tyce Diorio, Joey Dowling, Brian Friedman, Laurie Ann Gibson, Savion Glover, Derick 1000. Grant, Marker Kanemura, Charles Klapow, Ray Leeper, Spencer Liff, Mandy Moore, Anthony Morigerato, Amanda Robson, Wade Robson, Sonya Tayeh, Travis Wall, Nick Immature |
[edit]
These dance styles are featured less frequently than their ballroom relatives, just have been seen intermittently since the first season.
Genre | Styles |
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American Social / Traditional Society Styles | |
Charleston, Country-Western Two-Step, Disco, Go-Go, Hustle, Lindy Hop, Stone due north' Ringlet, Swing, West Declension Swing | |
Choreographers | |
Ronnie DeBenedetta, Carla Heiney, Brandi Tobais, Travis Payne, Doriana Sanchez, Benji Schwimmer, Kristen Sorci, Maria Torres, Nick Williams |
Regional/traditional styles [edit]
In add-on to the broad categories higher up, many more than styles that are less common in the U.S. are sometimes featured. Near of these are seen merely in one case, just the Bollywood style has been featured several times per flavour since the fourth flavour.
Genre | Styles |
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Regional/Traditional Styles | |
Bollywood, African, Capoeira, Flamenco, Irish, Kalinka, Malevos, Tahitian, Tropak | |
Choreographers | |
Lilia Babenko, Leonardo Barrionuevo, Nakul Dev Mahajan, Miriam Larici, Tiana Liufau, Youri Nelzine. |
Grand finalists [edit]
Season | Winner | Runner-upwards | Tertiary place | Quaternary place | Fifth place | Sixth place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nick Lazzarini (Contemporary Jazz) | Melody Lacayanga (Contemporary) | Jamile McGee (Popping) | Ashlé Dawson (Jazz) | ||
2 | Benji Schwimmer (Swing/Latin) | Travis Wall (Gimmicky) | Donyelle Jones (Jazz/Hip-Hop) | Heidi Groskreutz (Ballroom) | ||
iii | Sabra Johnson (Contemporary) | Danny Tidwell † (Contemporary) | Neil Haskell (Gimmicky) | Lacey Schwimmer (Swing/Latin) | ||
iv | Joshua Allen (Hip-Hop) | Stephen "Twitch" Boss (Hip-Hop) | Katee Shean (Gimmicky) | Courtney Galiano (Contemporary) | ||
5 | Jeanine Mason (Contemporary) | Brandon Bryant (Contemporary) | Evan Kasprzak (Broadway) | Kayla Radomski (Contemporary) | ||
6 | Russell Ferguson (Krump) | Jakob Karr (Contemporary) | Kathryn McCormick (Gimmicky) | Ellenore Scott (Jazz) | Ashleigh Di Lello (Ballroom) | Ryan Di Lello (Ballroom) |
7 | Lauren Froderman (Contemporary) | Kent Boyd (Contemporary Jazz) | Robert Roldan (Gimmicky Jazz) | |||
eight | Melanie Moore (Gimmicky) | Sasha Mallory (African Jazz) | Marko Germar (Gimmicky Jazz) | Tadd Gadduang (Breakdance) | ||
Female winner | Male person winner | Female runner-upward | Male runner-up | |||
9 | Eliana Girard (Ballet) | Chehon Wespi-Tschopp (Ballet) | Tiffany Maher (Jazz) | Cyrus "Glitch" Spencer (Popping/Animation) | ||
10 | Amy Yakima (Jazz) | Du-Shaunt "Fik-Shun" Stegall (Hip-Hop) | Jasmine Harper (Contemporary) | Aaron Turner (Tap) | ||
Winner | Runner-up | Third place | Fourth place | |||
11 | Ricky Ubeda (Contemporary) | Valerie Rockey (Tap) | Jessica Richens (Jazz) | Zack Everhart (Tap) | ||
12 | Gaby Diaz (Tap) | Jaja Vaňková (Animation/Krump) | Virgil Gadson (Hip-Hop) | Hailee Payne (Jazz) | ||
13 | Leon "Kida" Burns (Hip-Hop) | J.T. Church (Jazz) | Tate McRae (Gimmicky/Ballet) | Emma Hellenkamp (Tap) | ||
14 | Lex Ishimoto (Gimmicky Hip-Hop) | Koine Iwasaki (Contemporary) | Taylor Sieve (Contemporary) | Kiki Nyemchek (Latin Ballroom) | ||
15 | Hannahlei Cabanilla (Contemporary) | Jensen Arnold (Latin ballroom) | Genessy Castillo (Contemporary) | Slavik Pustovoytov (Hip Hop/Blitheness) | ||
sixteen | Bailey Muñoz (Breaking) | Mariah Russell (Contemporary) | Gino Cosculluela (Gimmicky) | Sophie Pittman (Contemporary) |
Special shows [edit]
On September 2, 2009, as a prelude to season 6, a special prove aired featuring estimate picks for the top 15 routines from the showtime five seasons. At the end of the prove, show creator and judge Nigel Lythgoe presented his favorite performance, a contemporary piece choreographed by Tyce Diorio and performed by Melissa Sandvig and Ade Obayomi.
In March 2014, Chinese television station CCTV broadcast a promotional episode in which notable all-star dancers from the U.S. and Chinese versions of So You Call up Yous Can Dance competed directly confronting one another as teams. Titled Zhōngměi Wǔ Lín Guànjūn Duìkàngsài - Super Dancer Built-in This evening, the testify was shot in Las Vegas but never aired on U.S. television.
Ratings [edit]
So You Call back You Tin Dance premiered with over x 1000000 viewers in 2005. For season 1, it was the No. one summer show on television set. However, when NBC'southward America'south Got Talent premiered in the summer of 2006, it took the title of "#1 summertime show" and, over the following few years, broadened its pb. In summer 2009, SYTYCD premiered strong with a iii.four rating in its target demographic, although with the start of America's Got Talent roughly a month later on in the same timeslot, Dance savage to No. 4 on the ratings lath. It continued to lose viewers throughout the summer of 2009 and ended up with an boilerplate of approximately 8 million viewers. Play tricks and then moved SYTYCD to its fall 2009 schedule where its ratings continued to decline; hit an all-fourth dimension serial low of iv.6 million viewers for a "special" episode hosted by Nigel Lythgoe on September 2, 2009. The move to the fall was short-lived. After dropping to an average of 6 million viewers, Fox moved SYTYCD back to the summer in 2010. With Mia Michaels replacing Mary Murphy and one-time contestants termed equally "All-Stars" being used equally partners, the ratings for Dance connected to slide to all-fourth dimension serial lows; dropping to only 5.half-dozen one thousand thousand viewers on July xv, 2010. For flavour 7, So You Call up You Can Dance averaged just over 5 one thousand thousand viewers. Later flavor 7, Mia Michaels was replaced on the approximate's panel by returning personality Mary Murphy. The change appeared to take little effect on the ratings, and the bear witness continued to boilerplate merely over five million viewers per episode in 2011's flavour 8. Season 9 saw a slight uptick in ratings early on, with each of the season's first v episodes garnering betwixt half-dozen and 7 million viewers, but the rising was short-lived and the prove's ratings hit a new depression of 4.16 one thousand thousand viewers on August 29, 2012. Flavor 10 maintained similar numbers, averaging about four million viewers per episode in 2013, with a 4.3 1000000 viewership for the terminal episode of the flavor, an all-time series low for a finale.[half-dozen]
In April 2014, Lythgoe appealed to fans on Twitter to share information well-nigh the show alee of the 11th season'south May premiere in an try to augment the show's ratings for the upcoming season and bolster its chances of renewal thereafter.[6] [7] The testify was renewed for a twelfth season, simply ratings continued to decline, with an average of effectually 3.5 million viewers per show. FOX renewed the show for a 13th flavor, but with a drastically re-worked format focused on kid dancers. Ratings declined further for the new version, with only v episodes breaking the 3 one thousand thousand viewer mark; the finale saw a series low viewership of only two.27 million viewers.[ commendation needed ]
In 2016, a New York Times written report of the l Television shows with the most Facebook Likes establish that "in full general", Trip the light fantastic toe "is more popular in cities, though information technology hits tiptop popularity in Utah".[eight]
Season | Kickoff aired | Last aired | TV season | Timeslot (ET) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Engagement | Viewers (in millions) | Date | Viewers (in millions) | |||
1[9] | July xx, 2005 | 10.thirty | Final Performances: September 28, 2005 | 7.30 | 2005 | Wednesday eight:00 pm |
Season Finale: October 5, 2005 | viii.twenty | |||||
2[10] | May 25, 2006 | ten.70 | Terminal Performances: August 9, 2006 | ten.10 | 2006 | Wednesday eight:00 pm (operation) |
Flavour Finale: August sixteen, 2006 | 10.70 | Th 9:00 pm (results) | ||||
three[11] | May 24, 2007 | nine.50 | Concluding Performances: August 15, 2007 | 8.seventy | 2007 | Wednesday eight:00 pm (performance) |
Season Finale: August 16, 2007 | ix.60 | Th ix:00 pm (results) | ||||
4[12] | May 22, 2008 | vi.70 | Terminal Performances: August six, 2008 | 9.00 | 2008 | Wednesday viii:00 pm (functioning) |
Flavour Finale: Baronial 7, 2008 | 9.70 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | ||||
5[13] | May 21, 2009 | 8.eighty | Last Performances: August 5, 2009 | 7.80 | 2009 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) |
Season Finale: August half-dozen, 2009 | 9.60 | Th 9:00 pm (results) | ||||
half-dozen[xiv] | September nine, 2009 | 6.lx | Final Performances: | 2009-10 | Tuesday 8:00 pm (functioning) | |
Season Finale: Dec sixteen, 2009 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (results) | |||||
7[15] | May 27, 2010 | 8.20 | Final Performances: | 2010 | Midweek eight:00 pm (performance) | |
Season Finale: August 12, 2010 | Thursday 9:00 pm (results) | |||||
8[16] | May 26, 2011 | 9.50 | Concluding Performances: | 2011 | Wednesday 8:00 pm (performance) | |
Flavour Finale: August xi, 2011 | Thursday 8:00 pm (results) | |||||
9[17] [18] [19] | May 24, 2012 | 6.26 | Final Performances: September 11, 2012 | 4.33 | 2012 | Wednesday 8:00 pm |
Season Finale: September eighteen, 2012 | 4.71 | |||||
10[xx] [21] [22] | May 14, 2013 | 5.12 | Final Performances: September 3, 2013 | 4.17 | 2013 | Tuesday 8:00 pm |
Flavor Finale: September 10, 2013 | iv.37 | |||||
11[23] [24] [25] | May 28, 2014 | 5.33 | Concluding Performances: August 27, 2014 | 3.68 | 2014 | Wednesday 8:00 pm |
Season Finale: September 3, 2014 | four.12 | |||||
12[26] [27] [28] | June 1, 2015 | 4.03 | Terminal Performances: September 7, 2015 | 2.64 | 2015 | Mon viii:00 pm |
Season Finale: September 14, 2015 | 2.44 | |||||
13[29] [30] [31] | May 30, 2016 | three.75 | Terminal Performances: September 5, 2016 | 2.37 | 2016 | |
Season Finale: September 12, 2016 | 2.27 | |||||
fourteen[32] [33] [34] | June 12, 2017 | 3.56 | Last Performances: September 18, 2017 | 2.14 | 2017 | |
Flavor Finale: September 25, 2017 | one.91 | |||||
15[35] [36] [37] | June 6, 2018 | 3.25 | Final Performances: September 3, 2018 | 2.43 | 2018 | |
Season Finale: September 10, 2018 | ii.60 | |||||
16[38] [39] [40] | June 3, 2019 | ii.70 | Final Performances: September 2, 2019 | one.93 | 2019 | Monday ix:00 pm |
Flavor Finale: September sixteen, 2019 | 1.93 |
Influence and international franchise [edit]
Dance competition had been a part of American television for decades before the premiere of Then Y'all Think You lot Can Trip the light fantastic, but ordinarily in the grade of accommodating talent searches (such as Star Search, Soul Train, or First at the Apollo). However, a season-long American Idol-like talent-search bear witness with a sole focus on dance had never been broadcast on American network tv. Producers and judges associated with the testify have stated on numerous occasions, both within broadcasts of the show and in interviews, that the series was meant to rejuvenate the visibility and appreciation of trip the light fantastic toe as an art grade in the U.S. and to give exposure to struggling dancers. Series judge Mary White potato says, for case, "Of class you hope you lot can make a living at it, because you lot don't want to give up on something that you do, but the honest truth is most dancers have to bear one or two jobs and dance every bit much as they can on the side -- it's a very lucky dancer who gets a total scholarship."[41] A number of trip the light fantastic toe-themed contest shows accept been produced for American television since the premiere of So You lot Think You Can Dance, including America'south All-time Trip the light fantastic toe Coiffure, Superstars of Dance, Live to Dance, and Globe of Dance.
Since the premiere of the U.S. version in Summer 2005, localized adaptations of So Y'all Retrieve Y'all Can Trip the light fantastic toe have been produced for 39 other countries.
In 2009, Lythgoe came together with fellow SYTYCD judge Adam Shankman as well as Katie Holmes, Carrie Ann Inaba and others in the dance entertainment industry in an effort to launch The Dizzyfeet Foundation, with the aim of providing scholarships and training to young dancers of limited means.[42] The foundation has been referenced sporadically on the show since. In 2010, Lythgoe, with the assistance of other SYTYCD personalities and long-time healthy lifestyles proponent Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, was successful in getting some other of his dance-oriented concepts realized—an official National Dance Day, at present held annually on the last Sat of July, to promote fettle through movement.[43] This national dance day has been historic annually by the evidence since.[44]
Earlier the finish of 2005, the year the serial first premiered, its format had already been licensed for the first of a number foreign adaptations. To date, the resulting So You Remember You Can Dance franchise has produced 28 shows representing 39 different countries and comprising more xc individual seasons. These adaptations have aired in Armenia, Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, French republic, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Republic of iraq, India, State of israel, Hashemite kingdom of jordan, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Lithuania, Malaysia, Morocco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Palestinian Territories, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Russia, South Africa, Sudan, Sweden, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, the Uk and Vietnam.
Awards and nominations [edit]
As of 2017, nine one-time SYTYCD contestants have been nominated for the Primetime Emmy Laurels for Outstanding Choreography. V were nominated for their work on Dancing with the Stars: Chelsie Hightower in 2010, Travis Wall and Nick Lazzarini in 2012 (with Teddy Forance), Alison Holker in 2013 (with Derek Hough) and Witney Carson in 2015. Hokuto "Hok" Konishi, Ryan "Ryanimay" Conferido, and Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval were nominated in 2022 as part of the B-boy troupe Quest Crew for their work on America'southward All-time Dance Coiffure. Dmitry Chaplin in 2009 and Travis Wall in 2011, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2022 were nominated for their work on SYTYCD itself. The merely former contestants to have won the Choreography Emmy are Konishi, Conferido, and Sandoval in 2022 and Wall in 2022 and 2017.[45]
Emmy Awards [edit]
Emmy Awards and nominations | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Outcome | Category | Recipient(southward)/ Choreographer(s) | Style | Music |
2007 | Won[g] | Outstanding Choreography | Wade Robson | Pop-Jazz | "Ramalama (Bang Blindside)"—Róisín Murphy |
Mia Michaels | Contemporary | "Calling You"—Celine Dion | |||
2008 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Wade Robson | Jazz | Hummingbird and Flower/"The Chairman'south Waltz" from Memoirs of a Geisha |
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Jazz | Table/"Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)"—Eurythmics | ||
Nominated | Shane Sparks | Hip-hop | Transformers/"Fuego"—Pitbull | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
2009 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Tyce Diorio | Contemporary | Adam and Eve/"Silence" from Unfaithful |
Nominated | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-hop | "Bleeding Honey"—Leona Lewis | ||
Nominated | Mia Michaels | Contemporary | "Mercy"—Duffy | ||
Nominated | Dmitry Chaplin | Argentine tango | "A Los Amigos" from Forever Tango | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Won | Outstanding Costumes For A Multifariousness/Music Program Or A Special | Soyon An | |||
2010 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Mia Michaels | Gimmicky | "Koop Isle Blues"—Koop feat Ane Brun |
Contemporary | Addiction/"Gravity"—Sara Bareilles | ||||
Contemporary | "I" from A Chorus Line | ||||
Nominated | Stacey Tookey | Contemporary | Fear/"2 Steps Away"—Patti LaBelle | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Won | Outstanding Costumes For A Variety/Music Program Or A Special | Soyon An Graine O'Sullivan | |||
2011 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-Hop | "Scars"—Basement Jaxx ft. Kelis, Meleka, and Chipmunk |
Lyrical Hip-Hop | "Fallin'"—Alicia Keys | ||||
Hip-Hop | "Outta Your Listen" (Commune 78 Mix)—Lil Jon and LMFAO | ||||
Won | Mia Michaels | Gimmicky | Alice in Mia-Land/"Every Little Affair She Does Is Magic"—Sting | ||
Contemporary | "When Nosotros Trip the light fantastic toe"—Sting | ||||
Contemporary | "This Bitter Globe/On the Nature of Twilight"—Max Richter and Dinah Washington | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Pop-Jazz | "Oh Yeah"—Yello | ||
Jazz | "Boogie Shoes"—KC & the Sunshine Ring | ||||
Gimmicky | "I Surrender"—Celine Dion | ||||
Nominated | Stacey Tookey | Gimmicky | "Mad Earth" (Alternating Version)—Michael Andrews ft. Gary Jules | ||
Contemporary | "Sundrenched Earth" (Live Session)—Joshua Radin | ||||
Contemporary | "Heaven is a Place on World"—Katie Thompson | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Collide" (Acoustic Version)—Howie Day | ||
Contemporary | "How It Ends"—DeVotchKa | ||||
Contemporary | "Fix You"—Coldplay | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Program | True cat Deeley | |||
Won | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Diverseness, Music, or Comedy Series | Robert Barnhart Pete Radice Patrick Boozer Matt Firestone | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2012 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Stacey Tookey | Contemporary | "In This Shirt"—The Irrepressibles |
Contemporary | "Turning Tables"—Adele | ||||
Contemporary | "Heart Asks Pleasure First"—Ahn Trio | ||||
Nominated | Christopher Scott | Hip-hop | "Misty Bluish"—Dorothy Moore | ||
Hip-hop/Gimmicky | "Velocity"—Nathan Lanier | ||||
Nominated | Spencer Liff | Broadway | "Whatever Lola Wants"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Broadway | "Please Mr. Jailer"—Rachel Sweet | ||||
Broadway | "(Where Practice I Begin) Love Story (Away Team Remix)"—Shirley Bassey | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Programme | Cat Deeley | |||
Won | Outstanding Lighting Pattern/Lighting Management for a Variety Serial | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Pete Radice Patrick Drunkard | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Contest Program | Producers | |||
2013 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Sonya Tayeh | Gimmicky | "Possibly Perchance"—Björk |
Contemporary | "Turning Page"—Sleeping At Last | ||||
Jazz | "Sail"—Awolnation | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "The Power of Love"—Celine Dion | ||
Contemporary | "Wild Horses"—Charlotte Martin | ||||
Nominated | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Jazz/Hip-hop | "The Circumvolve of Life/Nants Ingonyama (Commune 78 Remix) from The King of beasts King"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Jazz[46] | "The Lovecats"—The Cure | ||||
Jazz | The Beautiful People (District 78 remix)"—Marilyn Manson | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Gimmicky | "Where the Light Gets In"—Sennen | ||
Contemporary | "Without You"—Harry Nilsson | ||||
Gimmicky | "Unchained Melody"—The Righteous Brothers | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition Plan | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Management for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart Matt Firestone Pete Radice Patrick Boozer | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Plan | Producers | |||
2014 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Christopher Scott | Hip-hop | "Trigger (Original Mix)"—Kezwik ft. Mel Presson |
Jazz | "Sand"—Nathan Lanier ft. Karen Whipple | ||||
Contemporary | "The Gravel Road" from The Village (Score from the Movement Picture) | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "I Can't Make You Love Me"—Marking Masri | ||
Jazz | "Feeling Good"—Jennifer Hudson | ||||
Contemporary | "Edge of Glory (Alive from a Very Gaga Thanksgiving)"—Lady Gaga | ||||
Won | Tabitha and Napoleon D'umo | Hip-hop | "Gold Blitz"—Clinton Sparks ft. 2 Chainz, Macklemore, & D.A. | ||
Hip-Hop | "Run the Earth (Girls) (Nappytabs Remix)"—Beyoncé | ||||
Hip-Hop | "Puttin' On the Ritz"—Herb Alpert ft. Lani Hall | ||||
Nominated | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Hangin' By a Thread"—Jann Arden | ||
Contemporary | "Medicine"—Daughter | ||||
Gimmicky | "Wicked Game (Live at Kilkenny Arts Festival, Ireland 2011)"—James Vincent McMorrow | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Contest Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup For A Multi-Camera Series Or Special (Non-Prosthetic) | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality-Competition Program | Producers | |||
2015 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Wave"—Beck |
Contemporary | "When I Go"—Over the Rhine | ||||
Contemporary | "Current of air Beneath My Wings"—RyanDan | ||||
Nominated | Sonya Tayeh | Contemporary | "Vow"—Meredith Monk | ||
Contemporary | "And so Broken (Live)"—Björk | ||||
Contemporary | "Europe, After The Rain" —Max Richter | ||||
Nominated | Spencer Liff | Broadway | "Hernando's Hideaway"—Ella Fitzgerald | ||
Broadway | "I've Got the World on a String"—Frank Sinatra | ||||
Broadway | "Maybe This Time"—Liza Minnelli | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Contest Program | Cat Deeley | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Management for a Variety Series | Robert Barnhart, Matt Firestone, Patrick Boozer, Pete Radice | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Hairstyling for a Multi-Camera Series Or Special | Sallie Nicole, Sean Smith, Dean Banowetz, Ralph Abalos, Shawn Finch, Melissa Jaqua | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Makeup for a Multi-Camera Series or Special | Heather Cummings, Marie DelPrete, Amy Harmon, Tyson Fountaine, Adam Christopher | |||
Nominated | Outstanding Reality Competition Program | Producers | |||
2016 | Nominated | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "Cute Friends"—Helen Coin |
Contemporary | "November"—Max Richter | ||||
Gimmicky | "Gimme All Your Love"—Alabama Shakes | ||||
Nominated | Anthony Morigerato | Tap | "Dibidy Dop (Swing Mix)"—Club des Belugas feat. Brenda Boykin | ||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Management for a Variety Serial | Robert Barnhart, Matt Firestone, Patrick Drunkard, Pete Radice | |||
2017 | Won | Outstanding Choreography | Travis Wall | Contemporary | "The Mirror"—Alexandre Desplat |
Contemporary | "Send in the Clowns"—Sarah Vaughan and the Count Basie Orchestra | ||||
Contemporary | "She Used to be Mine"—Sara Bareilles | ||||
Nominated | Mandy Moore | Contemporary | "Unsteady (Erich Lee Gravity Remix)"—Ten Ambassadors | ||
Contemporary | "This is Not the End"—Clare Maguire | ||||
Nominated | Outstanding Lighting Design/Lighting Direction for a Diverseness Series | Robert Barnhart, Matt Firestone, Patrick Boozer, Pete Radice |
Teen Option Awards [edit]
Year | Issue | Category |
---|---|---|
2006 | Won | Choice Idiot box: Breakout Show |
Option Summer Series | ||
2007 | Nominated | Choice Summertime Television receiver Testify |
2008 | Nominated | Pick Summer Boob tube Bear witness |
Option TV: Reality Trip the light fantastic | ||
2010 | Nominated | Choice Personality: Cat Deeley |
Pick Summer TV Bear witness | ||
2018 | Won | Option Summer TV Show |
Come across likewise [edit]
- And then Yous Think You Tin Trip the light fantastic toe franchise alphabetize and overview
- List of And then Yous Retrieve You Can Trip the light fantastic toe finalists
- Trip the light fantastic toe on television (list of shows)
Similar dance contest TV shows:
- America'southward Best Trip the light fantastic toe Crew
- Alive to Trip the light fantastic toe/Got to Dance
- Superstars of Trip the light fantastic
- Globe of Dance
Notes [edit]
- ^ From its inception in season 6 and through flavour ten, the dancer showcase episode represented a non-competitive round with no viewer voting or subsequent eliminations, followed the next week past the showtime competitive round. In season 11, it was the outset episode of the flavor upon which viewers voted.
- ^ a b c In seasons 7 and 8, the judges decided not to eliminate any dancers on the occasion of one results show; in both cases, this outcome was followed past the emptying of double the normal number of contestants the following week. Similarly, for format reasons, season nine featured two shows with double eliminations, with 4 dancers eliminated instead of two for each of these shows.
- ^ a b c For seasons 8 to 10, the dancer showcase episode was combined with the Top 20 reveal episode, with groups of dancers performing immediately after being revealed equally finalists.
- ^ Unlike all previous seasons, season 12 featured the elimination of i "street" dancer and ane "stage" dancer each week, as opposed to one female and one male contestant (as in all previous seasons which eliminated 2 dancers per week).
- ^ Season 13 (during which the show was subtitled 'The Side by side Generation') featured competitors betwixt the ages of 9 (or as young as viii at fourth dimension of application) and xiv.
- ^ In flavour 13, the judges held the audition rounds, but the all-stars, rather than the judges, made the eliminations during Academy week to choose the top x. Afterward this, in episodes vii and 8, from the ii contestants with the lowest viewer votes, the judges fabricated the elimination. In episode 9, the two contestants with the everyman viewer votes were both eliminated, and in episodes ten and eleven, the contestant with the lowest viewer votes was eliminated.
- ^ Wade Robson and Mia Michaels were articulation-winners along with Rob Marshall and John Deluca from Tony Bennett: An American Classic.
References [edit]
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- ^ "Emmy Award-Winning "So You Think You Can Dance" Returns For 17th Flavour on FOX". The Futon Critic. Feb 20, 2020.
- ^ "Play tricks Not Moving Forward With Production On 'So You Think You Can Trip the light fantastic' Due To COVID-19". Deadline Hollywood. June 18, 2020.
- ^ Ausiello, Michael. "Has SYTYCD Performed Its Concluding Trip the light fantastic toe?". Retrieved February 17, 2021.
- ^ Ausiello, Michael (February 16, 2022). "So You Think You Can Dance Eyes Return With Delayed Season 17 at Fox". TVLine . Retrieved February 16, 2022.
- ^ a b Yeo, Debra (Apr 29, 2014). "Nigel Lythgoe asks Twitter followers to save So You Call back Yous Can Dance". The Toronto Star . Retrieved May one, 2014.
- ^ Brown, Laurel (April 29, 2014). "Is 'So You Think Y'all Can Trip the light fantastic toe' in trouble? Nigel Lythgoe tweets for support". Zap2it . Retrieved May ane, 2014.
- ^ Katz, Josh (December 27, 2016). "'Duck Dynasty' vs. 'Modern Family': 50 Maps of the U.S. Cultural Divide". The New York Times.
- ^ "So You Retrieve You Can Trip the light fantastic - Episode List - TV Tango". TV Tango . Retrieved May twenty, 2018.
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- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 12, 2012). "Tuesday Final Ratings: 'The Voice' Adjusted Up; No 18-49 Adjustments for 'Go On,' 'The New Normal' or 'Parenthood'". TV past the Numbers. Archived from the original on September fourteen, 2012. Retrieved September 12, 2012.
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- ^ Bibel, Sara (September five, 2013). "Tuesday Final Ratings: 'America'south Got Talent', 'And so You Call up You Can Trip the light fantastic' & 'Extreme Weight Loss' Adapted Upwards". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 8, 2013. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September xi, 2013). "Tuesday Final Ratings: Final Ratings for 'And so You lot Remember You Can Dance' Finale and 'America's Got Talent'". Boob tube by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September xiv, 2013. Retrieved June viii, 2014.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (May 29, 2014). "Wednesday Last Ratings: No Adjustments to 'The 100' or 'So Yous Think You Can Trip the light fantastic toe'". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 30, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (August 28, 2014). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Extant' & 'Taxi Brooklyn' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on Baronial 31, 2014. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (September 4, 2014). "Wednesday Terminal Ratings: 'America's Got Talent' & 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. zap2it.com. Archived from the original on September v, 2014. Retrieved September 4, 2014.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (June 2, 2015). "Monday Terminal Ratings: 'Then You Think You Can Dance' Adjusted Upwards; 'The Isle' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on June 3, 2015. Retrieved June 15, 2015.
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- ^ Porter, Rick (June ane, 2016). "Monday concluding ratings: Stanley Cup Finals and 'Memorial Day' adjust upwardly". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on June 2, 2016. Retrieved June ane, 2016.
- ^ Porter, Rick (September 7, 2016). "Monday last ratings: 'American Ninja Warrior' adjusts up". TV past the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 9, 2016. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
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- ^ Porter, Rick (June 13, 2017). "NBA Finals cease with a bang: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on June 13, 2017. Retrieved May thirteen, 2018.
- ^ Porter, Rick (September 19, 2017). "'Dancing With the Stars' and 'To Tell the Truth' conform downward: Monday final ratings". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 20, 2017. Retrieved May 13, 2018.
- ^ Porter, Rick (September 26, 2017). "'Big Bang' and 'Young Sheldon' adjust upwardly, 'Practiced Doctor,' 'DWTS,' 'The Brave,' 'Me, Myself & I' downward: Monday final ratings". TV past the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 27, 2017. Retrieved May 13, 2018.
- ^ Porter, Rick (June 5, 2018). "Stanley Cup Finals Game 4 adjusts up: Monday final ratings". Idiot box by the Numbers. Archived from the original on June 8, 2018. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
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- ^ Welch, Alex (September eleven, 2018). "'Bachelor in Paradise' adjusts down: Mon final ratings". Tv By The Numbers. Archived from the original on September 11, 2018. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
- ^ Rejent, Joseph (June 4, 2019). "The Stanley Cup Finals accommodate up: Monday final ratings". Idiot box past the Numbers. Archived from the original on June four, 2019. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
- ^ Rejent, Joseph (September 10, 2019). "'Bachelor in Paradise,' 'American Ninja Warrior' adjust downward: Monday concluding ratings". Boob tube past the Numbers. Archived from the original on September xi, 2019. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
- ^ Rejent, Joseph (September 17, 2019). "'American Ninja Warrior' adjusts down: Monday final ratings". TV past the Numbers. Archived from the original on September 25, 2019. Retrieved September 17, 2019.
- ^ "L.A. Music Examiner - Catching Up With Mary Murphy at the So You Think You Can Dance 50.A. Auditions" . Youtube.com. Archived from the original on Nov 17, 2021. Retrieved October twenty, 2013.
- ^ Stewart, Andrew (July two, 2009). "Holmes, Lythgoe team for Lightheaded Anxiety". Variety . Retrieved July 9, 2009.
- ^ "Norton Introduces Resolution to Launch Annual National Trip the light fantastic toe Twenty-four hour period (seven/13/2010)". Norton.house.gov. Retrieved October 20, 2013.
- ^ [1] Archived June 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ http://www.emmys.com; https://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/22/arts/tv set/2013-emmy-accolade-nominees.html; https://world wide web.yahoo.com/music/quest-crew-discuss-emotional-emmy-winning-americas-best-trip the light fantastic toe-coiffure-routine-075116614.html
- ^ Camus, Renee (September 20, 2013). "Choreographing Couple Tabitha and Napoleon Dumo: Non Just Hip-Hop Anymore". Los Angeles Magazine . Retrieved September 22, 2013.
'That offset slice we did was not hip-hop at all,' Napoleon says almost Beloved Cats. 'True cat [Deeley, the host] introduced it as hip-hop. During dress rehearsal, nosotros made it very clear that information technology's jazz-fusion.'
External links [edit]
- Official website
- And so You lot Remember You Can Trip the light fantastic episode list at TVGuide.com
- So You Think Yous Tin Trip the light fantastic at IMDb
- And so You Think You lot Can Trip the light fantastic at Television.com
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/So_You_Think_You_Can_Dance_%28American_TV_series%29
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