I'm watching TV.
Jul. 23rd, 2008 10:32 pmIt's funny, realizing just how long it's been since I had to remember to turn the TV on at a particular time, on a particular channel, because I wanted to watch something current.
I watch a lot of TV, but 99.9% of it is on DVD, after the season is over. Commercials annoy the snot out of me; I like being able to hit pause and wander off to get a drink; I like watching the show at my own pace (which is often "marathon"). But when my mother was here a few weeks ago, we watched So You Think You Can Dance, and -- gasp -- I've continued to watch it since then.
Here's why I like the show. (The dance thing, obviously, but there's more to it than that.)
For starters, they're doing a pretty good job of being open to all kinds of styles, from ballroom to ballet to street. Not only can you potentially get on the show whether you're swing or crunk, once you're there, they'll make you operate outside of your safety zone. So we get hip-hop guys doing the foxtrot, and ballerinas grunging it up, and some of them adapt spectacularly. (It also, as a corollary, means that the show has a higher degree of racial diversity than I've seen practically anywhere on TV. I predict that once this week's cuts are made, there won't be any white guys left -- and the only one remaining is a Hawaiian guy who looks like he has more than just Europeans in his ancestry.)
Also, until they get down to the last 10, the cuts are made by both popular and judge decision. That is, viewers vote, and then the bottom slice of contestants solo before the judges boot one guy and one girl. This guarantees that when you get to the final stages of the show, everybody left is actually good. You may have preferred someone who got cut, but the remaining dancers are at least worthy.
Which means that the later stages of the show are really friendly instead of vicious and cut-throat, at least as seen on TV. Tonight's episode was one big love-in, with the judges raving about what beautiful dancers all of them are; even when they criticize, they often do it apologetically, with references to all the other wonderful things the dancer is capable of, even if they failed at the current routine. And since the contestants have to dance in pairs, whatever sniping may go on backstage, you don't see it out front; trying to undercut your partner is about the stupidest move you could make. The best way to look good is to make the person you're with look good. There's no Donald Trump being an asshole at the contestants, no fake conflict generated to boost ratings.
So what you're left with is a lot of friendly people creating beautiful and diverse art.
For that, I remind myself to turn on the TV every Wednesday at 8 p.m. It's worth the effort.
I watch a lot of TV, but 99.9% of it is on DVD, after the season is over. Commercials annoy the snot out of me; I like being able to hit pause and wander off to get a drink; I like watching the show at my own pace (which is often "marathon"). But when my mother was here a few weeks ago, we watched So You Think You Can Dance, and -- gasp -- I've continued to watch it since then.
Here's why I like the show. (The dance thing, obviously, but there's more to it than that.)
For starters, they're doing a pretty good job of being open to all kinds of styles, from ballroom to ballet to street. Not only can you potentially get on the show whether you're swing or crunk, once you're there, they'll make you operate outside of your safety zone. So we get hip-hop guys doing the foxtrot, and ballerinas grunging it up, and some of them adapt spectacularly. (It also, as a corollary, means that the show has a higher degree of racial diversity than I've seen practically anywhere on TV. I predict that once this week's cuts are made, there won't be any white guys left -- and the only one remaining is a Hawaiian guy who looks like he has more than just Europeans in his ancestry.)
Also, until they get down to the last 10, the cuts are made by both popular and judge decision. That is, viewers vote, and then the bottom slice of contestants solo before the judges boot one guy and one girl. This guarantees that when you get to the final stages of the show, everybody left is actually good. You may have preferred someone who got cut, but the remaining dancers are at least worthy.
Which means that the later stages of the show are really friendly instead of vicious and cut-throat, at least as seen on TV. Tonight's episode was one big love-in, with the judges raving about what beautiful dancers all of them are; even when they criticize, they often do it apologetically, with references to all the other wonderful things the dancer is capable of, even if they failed at the current routine. And since the contestants have to dance in pairs, whatever sniping may go on backstage, you don't see it out front; trying to undercut your partner is about the stupidest move you could make. The best way to look good is to make the person you're with look good. There's no Donald Trump being an asshole at the contestants, no fake conflict generated to boost ratings.
So what you're left with is a lot of friendly people creating beautiful and diverse art.
For that, I remind myself to turn on the TV every Wednesday at 8 p.m. It's worth the effort.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 02:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 02:58 am (UTC)This year, it's hard for me - I usually have a favorite early on. This year? Not so much. They're each unique, each with their own weaknesses that make it impossible to root for them and them alone. I want the final eight to go on forever - or at least three or four weeks - so I don't have to lose the guy I think I'd most want to work with in real life.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:04 am (UTC)Nigel can be annoying, but not excessively so, at least in the eps I've seen. And I think they all do an admirable job of being open-minded to different dance forms, which is an achievement all on its own; to be a ballroom woman asked to critique crunk or disco must be pretty tough.
The guys are pretty spectacular, yeah, and I sided with Nigel a couple of weeks ago when he said he wished he could cut two girls and leave the guys. I think my preference is for Will, but Twitch keeps making me question that, and the rest are still well worth watching. The women . . . I kind of regret Jessica breaking her rib, because otherwise she would have been cut soon and Comfort would have stayed gone, and I wish Kherington had a little bit longer to prove herself. Katee's my distinct favorite there, though.
so I don't have to lose the guy I think I'd most want to work with in real life.
Which one is that?
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:12 am (UTC)My issue with Nigel (this year, at least) is his love for NappyTabs' hip-hop over more "traditional" styles. A couple of weeks ago he said that "this is what hip hop's been trying to be," as if the only way hip hop could become "real" dance was if it was absorbed into the Lyrical/Contemporary world.
Last year, he seemed to think the show created dance. This year, though, he's awestruck by some of the people he's gotten to choreograph, and it's a much nicer Nigel.
What I hate about Mary as a permanent judge is that we don't get her choreographing - and she's a killer ballroom choreographer.
...I miss Wade this year. Terribly, terribly.
Katee is, by far, my favorite girl. She just *glows* out there.
I have issues with Will's partnering - there's nothing charitable about his dancing; he dances his brilliant way, and his partner just better keep up. It was especially apparent, for me, in tonight's samba. He's a brilliant dancer on his own or in a group...but except for in the pas de deux with Katee, he's never really made his partner look better for dancing with him.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:22 am (UTC)Your comment on Nigel and hip-hop -- I guess I'm not surprised by that, since step one of learning to like a dance style out of your comfort zone is generally liking the bits of it that are the most like your comfort zone. So maybe it's progress, if not quite enough yet.
I do like the love the show has for its choreographers, though, and I'm deeply glad that the people who create the routines aren't made invisible. They're just as big a part of the performances as the dancers. I haven't seen any of Mary's choreography, but now you have me curious; frankly, a lot of the ballroom numbers don't quite do it for me, since I'm a lyrical/contemporary girl at heart, and a lot of the ballroom feels too . . . enclosed? I want leaps and extensions and things those styles don't give me enough of.
Interesting comment on Will. I don't think I have quite a good enough eye to spot that for myself, but you may be right. What I love about him is his adaptability, which you really see in his solos; he's about the only person who doesn't get out there and do the same damn thing every week. (Most of them really aren't great choreographers anyway, and on that front Comfort blows.)
I really do wish the show allowed for two winners, one from each side. I don't want to have to choose between the guys and the girls.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:29 am (UTC)Interesting that we have opposite takes on the ballroom - what I dislike about SYTYCD ballroom is that it's a bit too contemporary - they move past the basics, work in hold, etc, right onto lifts and tricks. There have been "waltzes" that don't move across the floor at all in hold, for instance.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:34 am (UTC)Maybe my real problem with the ballroom is that it's neither fish nor fowl. Contemporary enough to make me wish I were watching real contemporary, but not quite ballroom enough to show off the specialized appeal of that form. Then again, my sense of "ballroom I like to watch" is pretty much founded on the pasodoble at the end of Strictly Ballroom. <g>
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:18 am (UTC)I missed Nigel's comment about wishing they could cut two girls, but I sure understand it. It's getting darn difficult at this point. I feel that Mark was seriously handicapped tonight by being paired with Comfort, and with the routines they got. I hate to see him go for that reason -- but I love Twitch, Will, and Joshua. When they do there solos, Mark's is the least accessible to me -- I just don't get what he's doing.
For the girls, Katee has been amazing -- real entertainment ability and stage presence. I'm also partial to Courtney -- but wow, Chelsea's Argentine Tango tonight was amazing. Poor Comfort has long been out of her element, but I give her points for trying week after week when it's clear she's at the bottom training-wise.
My overall favorite has to be Twitch. I love his open face and his ability to adapt. But my favorite routine was Katee & Joshua's Bollywood dance.
Sorry to ramble, but I do get enthusiastic about this show!
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 03:27 am (UTC)Courtney and Chelsie are both quite good; if anything, I think the reason I don't warm to Chelsea is that she's kind of "interchangeable blonde" in my head. She doesn't stand out as an individual for me, and Courtney is only a little better. (Reverse racism? It's all the white folks I'm finding boring.)
I give Comfort points for guts, but she just doesn't have the technique. They were right to cut her when they did, and I'm surprised she didn't go right back out last week. (But of course that was viewer-voted, without the judges.)
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 12:20 pm (UTC)THey are both good dancers, and I like their routines. This year I'm not sure who will win because so many of them are so good or they are crowd favorites. The guy vote this week will be VERY interesting. We know Mark will be bottom 2, but which of the other three guys goes with him?
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 01:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 01:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 10:01 pm (UTC)I'm just curious....
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 01:36 pm (UTC)The only problem is that Project Runway now runs at 8:00 and that takes precedence for me. Yes, I know it's on later, but I go to bed at 10:30 these days, so I can't watch the whole thing.
I concur with whoever posted earlier...Fanny Pack freaking rules.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 01:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-24 10:04 pm (UTC)Wikipedia (my quick source at the moment) says: "In ballet, a pas de deux (French, step/dance for two) is a duet in which ballet steps are performed together. It usually consists of an entrée, adagio, two variations (one for each dancer), and a coda."
Alas, I have no idea if that's true, and if so, it that's actually what they did in that routine. The piece didn't impress me much -- to me, it was simply another contemporary routine. I mean, much more so than glossing over ballroom technicalities, they certainly can't require them to do real ballet!