[American Idol-izer] Top 12 (and 11) Perform
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American Idol is going through a weird scheduling flux this season (But Empire deserves all of the schedule space it gets). With two cuts in the same week, from the Top 16 to 12 and 12 to 11, the competition was a bit tougher. And once again the strict hour run time forced a bunch of contestants on stage before they were able to compose themselves and led to a bunch of wonky vocals. Thankfully, we won't be talking about those here.
We got the Top 12 on Wednesday, and contestants who made it through only had about 24 hours to celebrate as the field was narrowed down to 11 last night (during a welcome two hour block). A super weird night of new multi camera interviews, a bunch of Empire hype (and a performance of its "No Apologies" theme), red and green light up chairs, and also my boy Quentin is in trouble you guys.
Here are the Top 12 contestants:
Boys: Daniel Seavey, Rayvon Owen, Qaasim Middleton, Nick Fradiani, Clark Beckham and (Wild Card) Quentin Alexander
Girls: Sarina-Joi Crowe, Maddie Walker, Jax, Joey Cook, Tyanna Jones, and (Wild Card) Adanna Duru.
But, only 11 contestants made it to next week.
The Top 15 Glee Covers
With only a couple of episodes before the series finale, I can't help but feel nostalgic for Glee's greatest hits. I've stuck with the show through its rough patches because it's still capable of churning out an outstanding performance or two. With over 727 songs (give or take a couple) spanning its 120 episodes, it's been tough to narrow down all of these choices but I've developed a system.
For this list, I've tried to limit the amount of songs I chose per season (otherwise these choices would all be from Season 1), made my choices based on how they were used in the show (For example, as much as I loved "Cell Block Tango" it was shoehorned into a domestic abuse episode), and how the performance was laid out. So these 15 covers all had a great mix of story, visuals, and musicality.
So, here are The Top 15 Glee Covers.
Honorable Mentions: Cell Block Tango, Mr. Roboto/Counting Stars, Boogie Shoes, Heads Will Roll/Thriller, Oops I Did It Again, Bust Your Windows, I Want to Break Free, Far From Over, Push it, Take a Bow, Ride Wit Me, Bootylicious, Run Joey Run, Safety Dance, And I Am Telling You, When I Get You Alone, Cry, Don't Speak, If I Were a Boy, Defying Gravity, The Final Countdown, Anything Goes/Anything You Can Do, Don't Stand So Close to Me/Young Girl
[Trailer] Marvel's Daredevil
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Netflix has had a fair share of good luck lately. As the service continues to experiment with both original programming and picking up failed TV pilots (like Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), it seems everything is heading in a positive direction. As Marvel prepares to launch Phase Three of their film slate (beginning with Avengers: Age of Ultron in May), they're also planning to dominate the small screen with a series of four Netflix Originals starting with Daredevil.
With this first trailer, it looks like we can expect a full 13 episodes of origin story. But while it plays generic, it's visually interesting. Charlie Cox fits into Matt Murdock well, Vincent D'Onofrio has the Kingpin look down (He'll never be as intimidating as the late Michael Clarke Duncan, however), and I'm actually digging the pre-devil Daredevil costume. It's simple, streamlined, and makes a lot of sense. I can only hope the series itself follows suit.
Marvel's Daredevil premieres on Netflix April 10th.
[American Idol-izer] Top 16 Perform
The first cut is always the harshest. Some Idol seasons experiment with the Top 24 (like that season where they went from 24 to Top 13 in one round), but this season we're getting the long route possibly because of Empire's well deserved hold on Fox's schedule. With this second round whittling the Top 24 to Top 16, I get flashbacks to early cuts like Season 9's Todrick Hall or Lily Scott before we got to see how talented they really were. I was very worried for my favorites Quentin and Jax, because they're great but they're very weird.
Thankfully, the cuts weren't too surprising overall (as only eight boys and eight girls performed this week) and I'm pretty happy with the results. But I'm not happy that American Idol is already having theme weeks. While "Motown Week" led to a great performance by guest mentor Aretha Franklin, these old fashioned themes always clash with Idol's strive for relevancy. But, like in these previous weeks, all of the contestants had a few problems. The kids on Idol never quite gel with Motown.
But whatever. Praise be to our lord and savior, Aretha Franklin.
What's Going on With Glee's Final Season?
I've been watching Glee on Fox for a very long time. A "Gleek" who has been attached from its inception as a thirteen episode miniseries, to full series order, to second season debacle, trying out for its spin-off The Glee Project on Oxygen, its tumultuous third season, its fourth season semi-reboot shift to New York, its fifth season mid season shift away from McKinley to New York due to a big loss, the death of Cory Monteith and subsequent tribute episode "The Quarterback," and finally, its thirteen episode final season. The show has been through major ups and downs through the years and this last season has certainly been the worst the series has had to offer. Yes, even worse than season four's "Shooting Star."
But why is that? Because Glee doesn't care whether or not we like it anymore. With nothing to lose, the show is taking the biggest risks in its history and that should make for an entertaining watch, yet we've gotten nothing of the sort. Rather than going out with an explosive bow, it's like we're watching these characters circling the drain slowly singing their woes away.
Let's start from the beginning. When the final season began, I was extremely hopeful for what was to come. For those who haven't been sticking around, Glee was no longer the show about losers it originally started as. The New Directions went on to win sectionals, regionals, nationals, and Rachel went on to NYADA (a performing arts university) in New York, landed a role in a Broadway revival of the movie Funny Girl, and then quit that in order to pursue a TV career. Basically, success had become moot as it just seemed to endlessly come. As Rachel reached higher and higher, her stories became less palatable and less engaging. But the final season's premiere fixed that. It reset all of the easy (and noticeably faux) success given to the New Directions as Rachel is forced to go back home to Lima after her TV career fails to take off. And in awesomely Glee fashion, it was during a surprisingly emotional musical number. Rachel and Kurt decide to restart McKinley's Glee club, recruit a new team of kids, and for the first two episodes everything was pretty great.
There were tons of allusions to the first season too. The "New" New Directions started with five kids, like with the original season, they were full of seemingly nuanced characters (and not just the plain archetypes featured in the past), and there was a seemingly tight storyline that set the final season in motion. But that all fell by the wayside pretty quickly. The show quickly forgot about the new perspectives and once again shoehorned in old ideas. With episode three, "Jagged Little Tapestry," we got all of Glee's faux pas in one sitting. Bringing in graduated characters and making them seem like they never grew up, focusing an entire episode on a esoteric set of songs, and one of the saddest character arcs in its history.
My favorite characters through Glee's six season run are Dave Karofsky and Coach Shannon Beiste. It should be telling that Glee can't really write its characters well when two secondary characters actually had the most evolution through the show, but their journeys have been incredibly emotional. But this final season has made a tragic decision. By celebrating itself and promoting equal treatment, it strains and stretches all of its characters into caricatures. Don't get me wrong, equal treatment advocacy on television is fantastic, but it can't work like this. Glee hasn't dealt with these topics with a deft hand in the past and the negativity has built to such a point, it's all blowing up in its face. During episode three, Beiste confessed she had Gender Dysphoria. She stated that she was never comfortable in her body, and always felt she was more masculine. Then after two of the worst episodes in series history (they're completely unrelated to this and deal with Sue wanting Kurt and Blaine to get married just because it's what the show wants even if it makes zero sense), Shannon becomes Sheldon. Although episode seven, "Transitioning," featured one of the best covers in the series (and a choir of 300 trans individuals) this decision made zero sense overall.
First of all, Shannon has dealt with dysphoria throughout the series but it was never a result of her feeling more masculine than feminine. Her entire arc centered around not being treated like the woman she felt she was. The writers just never knew what to do with her. She once had a crush on Will Schuester, competed with Sue for a boyfriend, was in and out of an abusive marriage, and just sort of floated around in the wayside while Glee focused on the same six characters it always had. Glee hasn't had the best track record with trans equality either (it spent its fourth and fifth seasons demeaning Unique by referring to her as "He/Him/It " several times without fulling acknowledging her wishes to be a woman), so this just screams of a false attempt at balancing out the past. It's a ploy rather than the grand gesture it's meant to be and it feels incredibly manipulative...much like its double gay wedding episode.
Yet, Glee no longer cares. This final season is a result of throwing caution into the wind and fulfilling all sorts of desires without giving us a real reason to want to watch. Instead of feeling like a celebration and victory lap, it's a culmination of everything that's been bad about the show over the years. Sure the show hasn't had the best ratings in later seasons, but that's no reason to give up and be as completely esoteric as it is. I never thought I'd watch a double gay wedding episode featuring a song by Gloria Estefan and simply roll my eyes. How can something so effervescent feel so bland and colorless?
I've known Glee was a problematic show from the start, but I stuck around because it managed to hit some genius places every now and again. It's a unique show in television history, and I'm glad I waded through the muck to get here. But was it so wrong for me to want more before it takes the stage one last time? Instead we're getting these thrown together episodes with very little thought put into them as these characters forgo thought processes in order to sloppily serve the story.
It's a shame this won't be as good as the tightly wound first season but, with only a couple of episodes left, there's still time to bring about a satisfying endgame. Aww, who am I kidding? I'll be fine with just a re-up of Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'."
Because after all, I'm also just a small town girl livin' in a lonely world.
[American Idol-izer] Top 12 Boys & Girls Perform
Over the years, American Idol's contestants have skewed younger and younger. Lowering its audition age to 15 following the Bieber craze, while still keeping its age cap at 29, we've seen plenty of questionable choices make it this far. Its biggest competitor, NBC's The Voice (in its seemingly 20th season), has gotten so popular because it capitalized on that void and always produces fun to watch acts groomed through years of performing experience.
The lack of experience has never been more evident than this season. While few of the contestants stood out before now, the live shows are usually their chance to break out and get votes. But instead, all we've gotten is a bunch of kids garbling and warbling through poorly chosen songs. It's created a highly visible rift between those who ready, and those we won't want to watch later on.
[American Idol-izer] Top 24 Revealed
After a few weeks of auditions and drama, we've finally got our Top 24 contestants for American Idol XIV. While I don't particularly agree with some of the decisions, unlike other years, I'm okay with the spread overall (even if it skews very, very young this year) There was one moment in particular that irked me during the "Green Mile" process (Why do they call it that?), and I'll get to that in a bit. But if you've been following the posts I've written for this show so far, you already have a jist of my opinions.
So, without further ado, here are the Top 24 finalists heading to the live shows next week (where voting begins) arranged by how much I'm rooting for them.
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[American Idol-izer] Hollywood Week(s)
One of my favorite parts of American Idol is Hollywood Week. Through its fourteen season run, the arduous week of auditions, which include a solo round, a group number, and two follow up solo auditions, narrows the 300 something contestants into an eensy Top 24. Agree or disagree on whether or not each singer deserves their spot as much as you like, but we can all agree how wonderfully dramatic all of it is. Taking advantage of how staged the process is, and AI's usually goofy editing, Hollywood Week is always the best reality TV money can buy.
For Season XIV, it's been a bit different. With fewer spills, fewer breakdowns, but many more talented contestants, there's been less of a focus on the crazy stuff. It's better for everyone that way anyway. Let's go over the highlights of the last two weeks of this, uh, single week.
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Hollywood Week Part 1 (2/4/15)
Last season, the first part of Hollywood Week had the most interesting change yet. The folks who didn't get three yeses during the city auditions had to audition once more in some abandoned airline hangar somewhere all Mad Max style. It was incredibly nerve wracking as you could see contestants crumble over the shake up. Then the coolest part of all of that was the idols to be were placed on two different buses, one going to Hollywood and one to the airport to take them back home. I was hoping for a huge shake up to follow during this season, but was unfortunately given none of that. Instead we got a consequence free (as no one was sent home despite wonky performances) day of performances from the auditioners who stood out the most.
But it wasn't all bad. Jax was the highlight (I'm rooting for you, girl) and one girl fell under the pressure because she felt she need to get her parents "out of the hood." That's way too much pressure for a child to bear, but luckily she's pulled it together long enough to perform.
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Hollywood Week Part 2 (2/5/15)
So this is where all the good stuff started. The group rounds have always led to the juiciest edits as the round naturally creates villains and in-fighting among team members. Some team members go to sleep before others, people blame each other for faulty performances, and so on. But this year we didn't get any of that. The only drama we got was when one girl, Alexis Granville, couldn't find a group, joins a group full of folks I don't like (and Jax) and almost passes out due to panic attacks. This also meant the episode ended on a cliffhanger for some reason. The problem was I didn't care about this girl. They haven't shown any of her auditions in full, and her singing voice is nowhere near the level of the others.
One thing has bothered me since Simon (and to a lesser extent, Nikki Minaj) left that ties in to all this: the constant "kid gloves." In years past, if a contestant forgot the lyrics or broke down under pressure, they'd be sent home instantly. It showed how little experience they had and how they'd fare during the live shows. We shouldn't be getting situations like this anymore. We all know Alexis Grendel won't make the cut, so why make a big deal?
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Hollywood Week Part 3 (2/11/15)
Surprisingly, Alexis makes the cut. She still made it to the next solo round for some reason while arguably more deserving contestants like Rocky, who called and told his mom their life was going to change before getting cut. Ugh, it was heartbreaking. But at least there were some good group auditions. Blvd. (which was comprised of my early faves Cody Fry and Rayvon Owen) was fantastic and Ladies Keep Your Clothes On (formed with precocious youngsters that're all probably going to make the Top 24). All in all, nothing big happened here.
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Hollywood Week Part 4 (2/12/15)
After the group rounds, the remaining 100 something contestants go through one more solo round before getting cut to the Top 48. Here's were it got particularly frustrating as lots of great folks went home for stupid reasons. Jess Lamb (who I pointed out in my first article for the season for her piano audition), and Adam Lasher (Carlos Santana's nephew) who both delivered great Hollywood week performances. It all seems strange when a contestant like Joey Cook, great as she is, can forget her lines twice and still make it through or Nick Fradiani is praised as "experienced" at age 28 when Jess Lamb was more "beaten down" at age 29.
But it wasn't all bad news. One standout solo in particular was Quentin Alexander, the extremely cool and stylish contestant would be missed if he didn't make the final cut. There's no way he's not making the Top 24. Also, Alexis Granville was finally sent home after she broke down again and failed to sing on key. No more free passes, so yay!
That's it for this catch up! This week takes the Top 48 to the House of Blues where they'll perform once last time before the Top 24 is officially revealed. Rumor has it something big went down during the performance so I can't wait to see what comes next.