Week 8: Top Nine Perform (BLACKPOOL Week) - 15 November 2014
Last week! We reached
the stage in the series where all the women now start to drop like flies as the
men did in the early stage! Caroline’s
mum was in the audience and so she ended up in the dance-off! But Alison’s luck ran out and she and Aljaž
were sent home, denying us ‘It’s Raining Men’ this week for which I JUDGE YOU
ALL. [ME TOO. - Steve]
This week! BLACKPOOL!
Cue more comedy VTs and vox pops with the good ol’ British public than
you could ever dream of!
We open with a montage of…you guessed it, members of the
public being excited that Strictly is coming to BLACKPOOL and our pro-celeb
pairings packing their buckets and spades. It all ends, rather unfortunately with Anton clicking his fingers and
flashing a great big purple erection. What? It’s what happened.
Tess and Zoe enter, Zoe dancing on, Tess kind of swaying a
bit. Daly Dresswatch: a neon pink skirt that
sits very high on the waist, with a black blouse thing that isn’t the most
flattering to her bosom, but we’ve seen far worse. Ball’s Gown: A navy sparkly velvet slinky
thing. They welcome us to the Tower Ballroom
in BLACKPOOL.
Cue our first comedy VT of the night: this one featuring
young versions of all our pros dreaming of one day visiting BLACKPOOL: “Anton”
in a 60s-ish home watching Come Dancing on TV; “Natalie” (sounding very
British) and “Brendan” ‘Down Under’ looking at a globe and also seeming closer
in age than they really are; “Joanne” and “Kevin” dancing together in Grimsby
with their dad telling them they’ll dance in Blackpool; then finally “Iveta” as
a Lithuanian princess with attitude whose music box plays the Strictly theme
tune. This segues into our opening pro
dance with Iveta on a sparkly staircase dropping glitter on the pros whilst
junior “Iveta” sings a slowed down and tune-free ‘I Have a Dream’. [Between this and Children In Need, I feel like I've exceeded my recommended yearly allowance of children singing in one single weekend. - Steve] All the pros start to come to life slowly in
the background and whirl around as the professional singers take over and the
two Ivetas watch them. It becomes a
lovely ballroom showcase with lots of fairy light trees and spinning and
whirling and then the celebrities come on and it still manages to look lovely
which is an achievement giving how these things usually go – and then Iveta
rises above them all as queen of all the pros, as well she might.
The judges dance on doing Saturday Night Fever moves, and it’s
telling that this and Thriller are the most Darcey’s got into any of these
routines all series – such a 70s/80s queen, I love it. Zoe and Tess wave at Alison who is in the
audience as she promised. Go on, let her
do her dance, it doesn’t have to count, I just want to see it. [I can't help thinking it would've been a much better use of everyone's time than McBusted. - Steve]
Our pairs come in: Jake and Janette; Pixie and Trent; Steve
and Ola; Judy and Anton; Mark and Karen; Frankie and Kevin; Caroline and Pasha;
Simon and Kristina; Sunetra and Brendan.
It must be the BLACKPOOL effect or something, as most of them actually
do the theme tune shimmy this week.
The first couple of the night are Frankie and Kevin. They had a bad week last week, which is the
cue for Tess delivering a ‘water under the Frankie Bridge’ pun. Bad
scriptwriters. Stop it. Their VT storyline is about how fast the
quickstep is and Kevin gets Frankie to play Dance Dance Revolution as practice. [Best pro challenge ever, neva 4get. - Steve]
Their quickstep is to ‘A Town Called Malice’ (YES!) and sees
them both in fifties (er?)-style outfits, Frankie’s a lovely yellow and black,
Kevin’s a tight grey tartan that sort of treads a fine line of tightness. Vicky Gill’s sterling work on the trouser
front for lovers of men’s anatomies continues, but the waistcoat looks more
like ‘someone ate too much inbetween their costume fitting and the big day’
than anyone would want. They’re
accompanied by backing dancers which really clutters up the stage in a couple
of places – a shame, as this is a nice little routine – not, perhaps, the
sharpest quickstep ever, and the rock’n’roll stylings make it feel quite jive-y
in nature, but it’s fun, frenetic and fast and they both perform with a lot of
joy, which makes it an enjoyable breeze of a routine, backing dancers aside.
Len says it was fast and they got three points for speeding
straight away. He calls it a ‘kiss me
quickstep’ (GROAN) and declares it Frankie’s best dance. Tess asks if the larger ballroom is an issue
but Bruno says not for these two who flew across the whole thing. He says he was counting throughout and
Frankie didn’t put a foot wrong. Craig
says they used the floor brilliantly and because of that Frankie slightly lost
her frame in places, and her feet didn’t always come together when they should,
but it was bright and lively. Darcey
calls it a frantic, rocking quickstep and says Frankie had a great topline and
Kevin provided excellent choreography.
In the Ball pool (can’t really call it a Ballcony given they’re
just sort of in a corner on the floor), Zoe shows us a photo of Kevin and
Joanne at the Tower Ballroom when they were kids and jokes that it was just two
years ago. Scores: 8, 9, 10, 10 for a
BLACKPOOL-inflated total of 37. I am
mesmerised by Trent’s outfit, by the way. He looks like Avon from Blake’s 7 except wearing seals of Rassilon. [NERD! - Steve] Now don’t get me wrong, I love an amoral
sci-fi badass as much as anyone, I just didn’t picture Trent as one. (Brendan, obviously)
Jake and Janette are next and Tess reminds us that Jake is
in need of a redemption arc. Do I smell
a JOURNEY coming? Both say they’re doing
the ‘American Smooth Foxtrot’ – are we officially calling American Smooths by
the name of the dance they’re using as the base material now? Is this a thing since Len saved Scott (LOL) over
WUTHERING HEIGHTS the other week for foxtrot content? Jake and Janette walk around rainy BLACKPOOL
a bit and Jake says he can’t wait to get inside. And get out of the rain. He greets the ballroom with his usual
enthusiasm.
Their American Smooth (Foxtrot) is to ‘Feelin’ Good’ and
starts with Jake getting into a face-off with two backing dancers for his
woman. Jake is in tails and Janette in
red not that we want to take anything from this. They only just get going when the two backing
dancers muscle their way back in, lift Janette in the air and throw her into
Jake’s arms. As impressive as the move
was, I’m not really into all this MACKIN ABAHT with human props. The dance is sexy and punchy and both perform
it well in terms of acting the story of the dance, but it does seem to be quite
the Janette showcase and Jake doesn’t really get to do an awful lot but act as
a Janette stand as she jumps at him and poses around him - what he does get to do, he does well - lifts, turns, posturing etc - but it doesn't seem like there's enough content. It gets a standing ovation though (although
it’s BLACKPOOL so I imagine most things will).
Bruno praises the acting and storyline and says Jake is back
in the game. Craig praises Jake’s hands
and calls it a Herculean performance and says Jake knows the value of ‘stillness’. Yes, because he was standing still most of
the time. Darcey praises his catching
skills like this is Strictly Come Cricket or something. Len loved the feel and all the judges think
he’s back in the game. Is this just a ‘comeback’
because he was due one in the script or was there more to it than I saw? I enjoyed watching the routine a lot, don’t
get me wrong, but I didn’t see Jake doing that much in it – and I really like
Jake and want to see him get out of the rut he’s been in, but even upon
watching it over again I don’t quite get what was quite so fantastic about it.
Still, I’m in a minority as both Tess and Zoe reiterate it
as a comeback and the scores are 9, 9, 9, 9 for a total of 36 and Craig’s first
9 of the series.
Last week! Sunetra
went wrong and cried, and Darcey was nice to her and she cried some more. This week, Brendan is teaching her about
Brazil in preparation for the Samba and takes her to a Brazilian restaurant.
Because Brendan uses this show entirely to live out his 80s
fantasies, he opens as Tom Cruise in Cocktail, shaking his thing in front of a
gaggle of horny hens in a neon-lit bar. (The music is ‘I Don’t Feel Like Dancing’ which feels like one of those
songs that must have been used a thousand times, but apparently has only
appeared once before, way back in series 4 for Ray and Camilla’s samba.
(Thanks, Ultimate Strictly!). Brendan then goes
and sambas with all the other women whilst Sunetra mum-dances on the side like
a spare part for a bit. Given we’re now
three for three on this extra dancers thing, I’m going to have to accept it,
aren’t I? Doesn’t mean I have to like
it, mind. When they finally get
together, Sunetra gives it plenty of personality but it’s a bit fast for her
and she looks like she’s struggling to keep up pace at several points. She is better in the side-by-side parts where
she gets to shimmy and pose than in the in-hold parts, which look somewhat
clumsy. It’s a shame in the year of the
samba that this didn’t work so well – I think Brendan was being a bit ambitious
with the music choice and the amount of running around the ballroom that
entailed – something more contained might have worked OK. [Samba was never going to be Sunetra's dance, but I wonder if she might have coped with this slightly better had it happened in any other week, on a more managably-sized dancefloor. - Steve] Still she gets to chuck a drink in Brendan’s
face at the end like she’s on The X Factor. [Or The Real Housewives Of BLACKPOOL. - Steve]
Craig says it looked a bit heavy and when a moment went
wrong it was quite awkward. Brendan
snipes ‘funny how that happens on a live show’ – not sure what he’s getting at
here. Darcey says her Latin has improved
and it was full of energy and party although she needs to work on her
technique. Len says it was the most
energetic and vibrant of Sunetra’s Latin dances despite some stumbles. Bruno loves the people in the audience
dancing and says it was ‘flirtful’ and sexy with a party mood and Sunetra
covers up mistakes up top but needs to be able to do that with her feet.
Over at the ball pool, all the women are in pink Kiss Me
Quick cowboy hats and feather boas to be Sunetra’s hen party. Aww. Sunetra can’t believe she’s here and Brendan does his annual thanking
the production team speech. Scores: 6, 8
(Sunetra: ‘Wow, we got an 8 for THAT?!’ Love her.), 8, 8 for a total of 30. Oh, BLACKPOOL.
Simon and Kristina are the fourth couple, with the series’
first Argentine Tango. Tess says it’s
her favourite dance and asks Len what they’re looking for. He says the ganchos with the legs, the lifts
and the mood of a sleazy nightclub in Buenos Aires. He and Bruno then start to get a bit unnecessary
as is their wont and Tess sighs that it doesn’t take much to get them
started. Blee.
Last week, Simon had a comeback which surprised him. Their VT shows him struggling with the
footwork and the leading. He gets very,
very sweaty, too, if you like that sort of thing.
They’re dancing to the Moulin Rouge take on Roxanne and he
is in a black velvet suit, with Kristina in purple. For once, there are no extra dancers, and the
lighting is all central meaning they don’t have to use the whole dancefloor
like the others. In some ways, this
gives them a slightly unfair advantage, but in other ways it means the focus is
more on them than on the faff, so mistakes would be easier to spot. I don’t think Simon’s a natural at the ‘mean
and moody’ acting, but his movement and posture aren’t too bad and the routine
overall is pretty good and much better than I expected from him. There are some parts in the middle where he’s
looking at Kristina for guidance so I’m not sure if he went wrong or is just a
bit nervous, but then the footwork gets more intricate and it ends on a
showpiece lift with him holding Kristina upside-down by one arm which earns them
a standing ovation and lots of whooping.
Darcey says ‘Wow’ and is glad that he was ‘in charge’ of the
dance, at which, Kristina’s ‘bitch please’ face is a joy. Darcey goes on some more about how amazing it
was. Len declares it finger-licking good
and says the atmosphere of BLACKPOOL is responsible. Bruno calls him the ‘dark Lord of Buenos
Aires’. Is that a racialist moment? He loved the atmosphere and thought the
climax was spectacular. Craig says it
was a bit stiff in places and his hands are like ice-cream scoops (at which
Darcey attempts to strangle him). As he
advises on technique the audience boo him so he can’t be heard and he clarifies
‘I did love it’. Simon thanks everyone,
including his mum, who seems to be in the audience. BAD MOVE SIMON.
In the Ball pool, Simon says it felt amazing and Zoe reminds
us that his mum is present in case that’s a premonition. Scores: 8, 10, 10, 10 for a total of 38. Whilst I’ve enjoyed everyone so far tonight,
there is a serious case of BLACKPOOL scoring going on.
Coming up: ‘Me, Mark Wright, humble ol’…’ FAST FORWARD.
Tess welcomes us back standing behind Craig and Darcey and
Darcey looks so super-awkward I love it. We cut to Judy and Anton, the next couple, then back to the judges where
Bruno is scoffing candy floss, Len is picking at it grumpily and Darcey is
holding it under her face wondering what she does with it. Craig just sits there serenely going ‘number
one in the charts, bitches, I couldn’t care less for comedy posturing’.
Darcey then looks at Tess for guidance (and
when Tess is the person you need to steer you right, we’re in trouble) pulls
her candy floss out of its container with a confused face and then picks a bit
off. There’s some punchline or other
about Craig being a donut but it’s clearly something left over from ye olde
funtime Bruce Forsythe Craig is so MEEN gag book so let’s move on.
Judy VTs that she loved the storyline last week where she
got to be a fierce boss bitch and chuck Anton in jail, but ‘the bits I find
difficult are the bits where I have to kind of dance.’ Love Judy Murray so hard. Her VT is soundtracked by Pink’s ‘So What’
which is perfect. Bravo, VT makers. They’re dancing to ‘Let’s Go Fly a Kite’
which will involve ‘kiteography’ – meaning they get to dick about on BLACKPOOL
beach wearing woolly hats and wincing at the cold.
They’re dancing a Viennese Waltz and Judy’s in a candy pink
ballgown whilst Anton’s in pastel-striped Dick-Van-Dyke jacket and boater. They enter flying a big yellow kite and there
are backing dancers and giant props lurking ominously on the stage. Judy accidentally gets bumped into by a young
man and then she dances with him and another young male dancer and can actually
dance, unlike with Anton. I kind of want
Anton to get injured and Tristan or Aljaž to come in as rent-a-pro to see if
she’s actually been a ringer all along and all she needed was some toyboy
action to spark her to life. [I still lament that Judy wasn't paired with Pasha. Now that would have been a pairing for the ages. - Steve] The moment
Anton grabs her, quality declines (maybe she looked better with the other
dancers as she was more relaxed than in the ‘main’ section?), although it’s not
a disaster. Her footwork isn’t very
clean – she’s a bit lumpen and static as usual, but her top line has improved massively
and she’s got the rhythm of it for the most part as well as grinning through
the spins. It’s lumbered by a pointless
static lift slung in because Anton’s decided that’s the way to go, and then she
ascends on balloons, hurrah.
Len calls it candy floss – light and fluffy but a little
sticky in places, but declares it her best dance so far. Bruno says it was actually recognisable as a
Viennese Waltz, sloppy in parts but there’s hope for the future. Craig says it went wrong at the
beginning. Anton blames it on an
ice-cream cone. Bloody props. Craig says her posture is appalling and the
lifts were heavy as lead but she had a good fifteen seconds and it was her
personal best. Darcey was pleased that
she was travelling and turning and needs to lean out more. Scores: 4, 6, 7, 7 for a total of 24 and
their best score yet. Judy laughs that
it’s too much for her.
Zoe teases Pixie and Trent going back to ‘Ancient Rome’.
Ancient Rome as seen through the lens of 70s sci-fi, presumably. Tess introduces Mark and Karen sitting next
to Kacey Ainsworth AKA Little Mo from EastEnders, who is surely due a return to
the Square (Impromptu Slater ranking anyone?
Jean/Little Mo/Belinda/Charlie/Big Mo/Zoe/Lynne/Kat/Stacey/Sean). [Hang on, which direction are you going in? Either way, I have severe objections to that ranking... - Steve]
Me Lil’ Ol’ Mark Wright can’t believe he’s going to
BLACKPOOL. His cousin Sergio dances a
bit like every other child vaguely connected to a celeb has done this series,
and sort of teaches him a magic trick because Mark and Karen’s routine is based
on magic. Mark tells Sergio he’ll be
dressed exactly like him (white shirt, black waistcoat and trews) on Saturday
and will do a magic trick for him. Sergio
is seriously unimpressed with the whole thing and makes Mark do ‘fifty-two card
pick-up’ by sullenly dropping the cards (rather than flinging them everywhere)
and bolting out of the rehearsal room as fast as possible.
Their Charleston is to ‘We No Speak Americano’ which will
always and forever be Holly and Artem’s music and one of many
Artem-hates-Charleston routines. I kind
of miss that sullen white toothed tan fan.
Anyway, for this one, Karen is wheeled on in a box by two backing
dancers, whilst Mark is a tight-clothed magician (wearing skin-tight black and
red braces so… not exactly like Sergio’s outfit). The dancers (not Mark) attempt a
poorly-executed ‘woman sawn in half’ trick and then Karen comes out, dressed
like Frank-N-Furter, and they get going, accompanied by the dancers for some of
it. Now, I know Charleston is a bit
sloppy, but Mark is very sloppy and his gurn face isn’t so much Charleston
over-acting as yet another iteration of ‘Me Mark Wright Am Happy. Make Open Mouth Smiley Face.’ He looks lost in several places, too. That said, he does try and keep the pace, but
his footwork is lumpen and dreadful and he isn’t putting anywhere near enough
energy or bend into it. The routine
itself is good, but I don’t think he’s up to it – or up for it, whichever. I swear that wasn’t even as good as what Judy
did, but I suspect the judges will still be trying to MAKE MARK WRIGHT HAPPEN.
Bruno says he likes a man with plenty of tricks up his
sleeve and can’t believe how much Mark has improved. He says he was swift on his feet and comical. Craig says he’s starting to fall in love and
Mark bounds over and kisses him. That’s
the first time I’ve vaguely liked Mark’s personality. [And even then Ben Cohen did it better. - Steve] Darcey says she’s seen more strengths in him
that she doesn’t feel he’s ever going to produce, whatever that means. Len makes a knob gag. Scores: 9, 9, 9, 9 for a total of 36. And I know BLACKPOOL scores are about as
valid as Donny scores, but seriously, WHAT THE FUCK? [I feared it might actually get 10s, so I considered this overscoring to be a comparative relief. - Steve]
Pixie and Trent are next and Pixie, with big hair in her VT,
jokes she kept last week’s do. Pixie
wants them to do fun stuff like donkey riding and not just boring
rehearsals. So their BLACKPOOL promo VT
involves them being cold and windswept on a big wheel, eating fish ’n’ chips (or
holding them, anyway) and a comedy prop sign saying ‘Donkey’s gone south for
Winter’ which I am choosing to assume means a donkey, singular, called Donkey,
rather than being a grammar abomination. Trent then dresses as a Donkey and sleaze-voices ‘donkey rides for everybody’. So much fan fiction being started with that
moment, I betcha.
Their Paso is to ‘Eve of the War’ and Pixie is basically
Servalan to Trent’s Avon (LOL Rome what now?), with two kinky leather-clad ‘soldiers’ accompanying their intergalactic
foreplay (indeed, the opening has a lot of, um, four-play). Pixie’s snarling paso face is a bit too
cutesy, but the kicking is very her and whilst there are clearly some fumbles,
they make up for it with dramatic posturing and shaping, flaming torches and
the adoption of every 60s and 70s sci-fi and cult B-movie cliché in the
costuming (which is amazing, obvs). I love how camp and
ridiculous the whole thing was, despite its imperfections, and I never would
have thought a couple who started out so seemingly beige could pull out the level
of high-concept theming and epic dramaz we’ve had recently in their
routines. [I never thought I'd say this, but I think I want Pixie to win? - Steve]
Craig loves it and thinks Pixie’s pretty much
invincible. Darcey loves the attack but
says she needs to make her upper body as strong as her legs. Len says if she was Blackpool rock, she’d
have brilliant written right through. Not, um, BLACKPOOL? Bruno loved
her having three men and wonders if he can borrow one and loved that they had
substance even with a big concept.
A breathless Pixie declares how much she loved it in the
Ball Pool. Scores: 9, 9, 10, 10 for a
total of 38 and the joint-highest score tonight. Zoe declares Trent a great Spartacus. Anton, Brendan and Kevin then each do the ‘I
am Spartacus’ line and then Judy squeaks out ‘I am Spartacus’. Aww, I love the camaraderie between the cast
and the way they’ll all do daft things like that. [I know - it was clearly as rehearsed as all hell, but Judy squeaking totally sold it. - Steve]
Steve and Ola now. My
seven-year-old goddaughter told me to ‘just wait’ until I saw this routine so I’m
not sure whether to be scared or excited by what’s ahead (bearing in mind she
liked Dave Myers when he was in this). Their VT is soundtracked by Kylie’s ‘I Was Gonna Cancel’ and having seen
the Kiss Me Once tour twice now, I still can’t decide whether or not I wish
that had been in the set-list. (Although
I would totally have taken it over Beautiful. For why did you do that, Kylie?) The storyline involves Steve checking out the Blackpool wildlife. I thought that was Sunetra’s hen night
routine, ho ho. Oh wait, the wildlife is
the ‘dancer’ and he spies on all the pros, including the randomers who’ve been
on backing duties tonight. [Not entirely random, incidentally - one of them is Trent's wife Gordana. Gordana as new pro for 2015 plz. - Steve]
Their American Smooth (Unspecified) is to ‘Rolling in the
Deep’ and involves two of the backing dancers waving around sheets like it’s
parachute day in PE (which I assume is what excited my seven-year old friend). Dry ice and blue
lighting fills the room as Steve (pinstripe waistcoat and trews) lets Ola
(glittery Princess Jasmine-type dress) dance around him and then lifts her,
amid a sea of fabric that keeps hiding them. Ola gives him a bit more to do than Janette seemed to give Jake, even
though Jake is clearly more capable. Steve copes OK with the spins but his
frame is somewhat ungainly and his face looks quite pained in places, and then
he ends with a lift and Ola’s skirt falling over his face. I trust and hope James Jordan was suitably
outraged on Twitter.
Tess comes over all ‘phwoar, TESS LIKES MANZ’. Good job he’s not a rugby player, eh? Darcey says it was clean but with his
physique and strength he can mark things too much and needs a bit more light
and shade. Tess gets all giddy about his
strength and manliness some more. Len
says it showed the smoothness of the dance but like a small man at a urinal, he
has to get on his toes. Can we retire
him yet? Bruno says he was rolling along
and Craig says he was calm and collected.
In the Ball pool, Zoe asks how the guns are holding up and
he flexes them and is mobbed by the female pros. Hee. Scores: 7, 8, 8, 8 for a total of 31.
Finally, we have Caroline (dressed as Ginger Spice at the
Brits) and Pasha (dressed as a toy soldier). Last week, they were in the bottom two. She goes to see a “clairvoyant” (Pasha in a costume doing his usual bad
acting) for reassurance. He tells her
she’ll be dancing with a tall handsome guy. She perks up and goes ‘What, Aljaž?’ and Pasha gets all wounded. Boy knows his fanbase (watch those hurt/comfort
fics on AO3 increase tenfold). [I'M ON IT. - Steve]
Their jive is to ‘Crocodile Rock’ and involves Caroline
running on with two female friends to find three handsome beefeaters, one of
whom is Pasha. They dance about trying
to get a reaction and then Caroline nicks Pasha’s hat and they dance (as do the
backing dancers of course). I love how
brazenly she flirts although I bet this makes her a big hate target from
certain sections of the audience. Like
most dances tonight, it has its technical issues, but the performance and
energy are really selling it and her grin is infectious. It’s a very fast and bouncy routine and lots
of fun.
Len says if she’s in the dance-off, he’ll run to the end of
the pier and dive off naked. I can’t
work out if I want them to be in the bottom two just so someone calls him on
it, or if that is an image made entirely of DO NOT WANT and I should be
pressing the redial button continually, but I suspect the latter. The thought certainly terrifies Pasha. He says ‘you can’t half flick, Flack’ which
he has been clearly dying to say all series. Bruno calls her the best of Britannia, says he loves the concept and
then shouts RULE BRITANNIA like the, er, Italian that he is. Craig says it was sharp and clean and
executed with military precision. Darcey
says it was clean and exact, just as THE BOYS said.
They bounce over to the Ball who implores us to vote for
Steve and Ola (because they gave out the wrong number earlier, but way to take
the shine off Caroline there). Scores:
9, 9, 9, 10 for a total of 37.
Shall we have a look at that BLACKPOOL-inflated leaderboard
then?
Simon and Kristina - 38
Pixie and Trent - 38
Frankie and Kevin - 37
Caroline and Pasha - 37
Jake and Janette - 36
Mark and Karen - 36
Steve and Ola - 31
Sunetra and Brendan - 30
Judy and Anton - 24
Quick recap: BLACKPOOL being cold! Frankie and
Kevin taking the 80s back to the 50s! Jake
fighting two other men for Janette! Sunetra and Brendan having a drunken party dance! Simon and Kristina being the only people
blessed with no bloody backing dancers getting in the way! Judy and Anton flying kites! Mark being sloppy and unconvincing and
praised to the hilt again anyway! Pixie
and Trent’s big camp retro Roman space opera! Steve and Ola rolling in sheets of fabric! Caroline and Pasha jiving in the most BRITISH
way possible!
Tomorrow! Someone
will be going home. I’d say Sunetra was
the most in danger, although Simon does have the disadvantage of a mother in
the audience. We get two musical
performances including SHIRLEY BASSEY and some other people who don't have the range.
Join me then!
3 comments:
I know Zoe claimed it was Craig's first 9 of the series, but Pixie's recap VT showed him giving her a 9 last week.
Maybe the excitement of BLACKPOOL made them forget...
Maybe it was scripted that he'd give his first 10 and they got it wrong. /CONSPIRACY
Ooooh, you may have a point! To James Jordan's twitter feed!!
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