Week 5 Performance Show: Saturday 22 October 2016
Last week! The
official Danny vs Ore war kicked off with the former delivering a fantastic
quickstep for 36 points and the latter another sacred holy jive for 39. Naga was comedically pushed into even uglier
hair and makeup and, despite performing arguably her best routine of the
series, forgot everything in the dance-off and left the competition, leaving
Anastacia and Brendan to fight injury porn another day.
Cue titles!
Tess and Claudia welcome us, Claudia wearing a velvety
indigo dress, with Tess in black trousers and white top with a metallic silver
belt, which would look quite nice were it not for the matching metal choker,
overly straightened hair and bright red lipstick, which makes her resemble a
robot more than a woman. ["Resemble" - Steve] Claudia is
straight in with another serious public announcement – Brendan is ill and Gorka
will be taking his place. [I feel very conflicted because obviously I feel bad for Brendan and hope he recovers soon, but on the other hand - yay! Lovely Gorka! - Steve]
The judges enter, Darcey wearing a bright yellow evening
gown which I heartily approve of as there aren’t nearly enough of those in this
world. But the most mesmerising thing is
Bruno’s hair. It’s got these two little
devil horn style curls sticking up and you’d think there’s no way that could be
deliberate, except that we know that they have a big hair and make-up team on
the show. Maybe he was late or something, or put a whoopee cushion on Lisa-from-Deuce's chair? [Maybe someone accidentally picked up the briefing sheet for next week's Hallowe'en special instead? - Steve]
Our couples now: Louise and Kevin;
Judge Rinder and Oksana; Lesley and Anton; Claudia and AJ; Ore and Joanne;
Daisy and Aljaž; Greg and Natalie; Ed and Katya; Danny and Oti; Anastacia and
Gorka. That… seems too few for this
stage in proceedings. And indeed it is,
for it’s time for our second very serious update: Laura has injured her ankle
and can’t dance with Giovanni tonight and ‘more on that later’ because we have
to string out the drama across the whole show. So by my count, that’s (at least) Anastacia, Tameka, Greg, Laura and
Brendan who’ve sustained injuries/illnesses, and Katya sounded at death’s door
on ITT yesterday. Come the final, it’ll
just be Neil and Chloe performing infinite showdances at this rate.
First couple of the evening are
Judge Rinder and Oksana. He’s playing a
GI and Tess calls him Oksana’s ‘little soldier’ – I’m not sure if that’s a sex
joke, a suggestion Oksana is his mum or some icky combination of both. Their VT trots out the standard working hard
rhetoric where she comes to his ‘court’ (TV studio) where he charges her with
filling his brain full of dance and sentences her to ’10 years in the Strictly
dungeon’. [I thought that was the name of James and Ola's Ann Summers range? - Steve] Only the worst offenders like
Cole and Du Beke have had longer sentences.
They are dancing the jive to
‘Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy’ and he’s wearing a glittery camo top slashed to the
shaved-to-the-max midriff with very tight brown trousers and she’s in a khaki
sparkly vest with camo hot pants. The
Rinder faces are out in full force and he’s very bow legged – much like his cha
cha, it’s kind of insane, in that it’s not bad in the lumpen and forgetful way
– it’s very energetic and athletic and he seems to be remembering all the
moves, but precision, sharpness and technique are not its keywords – and he
loses balance a couple of times, although, to his credit, he keeps going. And somehow, possibly the limp wrists and odd
‘ssshhh’ motions he keeps making, it’s the campest one of his dances yet.
Tess lets him catch his breath
while we welcome Dave Arch and co, and then asks Len if he was impressed, at
which Len snaps back ‘WELL I CAN’T HEAR WHAT YOU SAID SO DON’T EXPECT ME TO
ANSWER YOU’. Eventually we learn he was
impressed and says Rinder puts the camp into bootcamp and it was like the
history of jive – lindy, jitterbug, rock’n’roll, jive… aren’t they all from
pretty much the same era? He compliments
Rinder’s bum because it’s his final series so he’s going to praise the male
posterior as much as he can. Bruno
(whose hair also has a horrible flicky up bit at the back now) says his legs
were so high he thought it was a can-can, then he expected him to fall on his
butt when he twirled but the energy is eminently watchable. Craig says he likes that he dances with
‘tempestuous abandon’ [new drag name - Steve] but it was flat-footed and needed precise, although he
loved the one-handed cartwheel and Tess does sub-Bruce ‘what? Flat-footed?’ reaction comments. They really shouldn’t make her do that, it
was bad when Bruce did it as he came off as being snappy and grouchy, whereas
Tess just sounds insincere. We don’t
need a ‘voice of the viewers against meen judges’, show, we really don’t. [And even if we do, Claudia's much better at it. - Steve] Darcey says it was full of tricks and the
kicks were a bit high and wild but she loved it.
In the Clauditorium, Rinder gushes
that he remembered the steps and we see his mum in the audience who is super
glamorous. Scores: 6, 8, 8, 7 for a
total of 29. He says it’s an improvement and Craig probably meant to give him a
7 but couldn’t find it under the table.
Claudia then says we have exciting
news. Could it be more injury porn? The announcement of who is taking over from
Len? No, it’s a really shit
ventriloquist act to read the terms and conditions. There’s a reason I don’t watch Britain’s Got
Talent, you know. Pack it in, show.
Lesley and Anton now. Their VT centres on Lesley playing a fortune
teller, so Anton pretends to be Clairvoyant and seeing their future: a
glitterball, 4 tens, standing ovations from the judges and, most likely (and
its first invocation of the series?): BLACKPOOL.
They are tango-ing to ‘Whatever
Lola Wants’ and forgive me if I wander down a rabbit hole here, as I’ve just
been reading Sofabet’s latest X Factor post, but I am wondering about the
presentation of these two tonight and if there’s some subtle deramping going on
– a VT that suggests many possible outcomes but the one Lesley is most excited
by being BLACKPOOL, coupled with a sense that her journey is likely to end soon
(focus on her doing better than expected, improving weekly – but presumably in
a few weeks’ time she won’t be seen as up there with the frontrunners) and then
this dance, which is a bit odd. There’s
red and black theming, with Anton in some weird, comedic checked trousers,
moody lighting and Lesley dressed as a comedy character but with a face like
thunder. I wonder if they’ve been
polling too close to the top and they’re trying to rein them in so they can
leave around Blackpool week having had a lovely journey? Anyway, that aside, the dancing isn’t their
best – her footwork is OK, but stuttering, and her arm is placed at a really
weird angle, which I think is a height mismatch issue, and there’s this really
awkward and ungainly lift at the start that’s a total mess. The ending isn’t bad though, with a nice drag
lift and a dramatic Lesley flounce while Anton smashes her crystal ball. Oh, and Anton is wearing really weird,
ghostly eyeshadow and it’s not even HALLOWEEN week yet.
Over with the judges and Bruno
describes her as holding on to Anton for dear life. He says he loves her intensity but a lot of
the steps were messed up. She says ‘a
couple of times’. He says it was too
skippy and not gliding. Craig says it
was too up and down rather than level, with poor shaping, especially her
shoulder. Darcey enjoyed the amount of
dance content as Anton gave everything and she ‘nearly achieved’ it but didn’t
have the correct frame. Len says it was
all there – steps, staccato, musicality, but there were some incidents along
the way ‘but you’ll get that with Anton’ and both Len and Darcey finish with
‘well done’. See, subtle deramping rather than annihilation.
In the Clauditorium, Lesley says
it’s hard to dance both with passion and accuracy. Scores: 5, 6, 7, 6 for a total of 24.
Greg and Natalie now, and the
script declares ‘he’s been consistently good so far’ now he’s their gamma male
for #yearoftheman following Will leaving. Natalie takes him to the Olympic stadium, which he calls ‘sacred ground’
and she presents him with a random plaque with a piece of track on, which is a
little… odd. [I thought it was meant to be part of the track that he won his gold medal on, but a box full of sand would've been funnier. - Steve] [It was, but I was referring more to him being presented with it by Natalie via the medium of a Strictly VT rather than any kind of ceremony, or from anyone 'official'. Also: did Mo and Jess get them? - Rad]
They’re cha cha cha-ing to ‘We
Found Love’ and I really do like these two, but this is lousy. Greg’s elbows are awkwardly jutting out at
random angles, he’s clomping around looking confused and gawd luv er, Natalie’s
giving it all she can, but it is not good. Ugh, tonight suuuuucks so far.
Tess congratulates Dave Arch for
playing dance music. Erm, isn’t it all
technically dance music, Tess? If we’re
being literal, anyway. Craig says one
good thing was that he showed Natalie off, but otherwise it was stiff,
pigeon-holed and naturally bow-legged, which makes him an Olympic champion but
doesn’t suit this dance and the dance exposed all the things he can’t do. Darcey reminds him he’s ‘accomplished so
much’ each week, but every week year a dance you can’t do and this was it. Len reminds us he’s an athlete on a journey
who’s never danced before unlike all the other ringers in this show and he
thinks Greg doesn’t like the cha cha cha much, and he made a mistake but
covered it up (not well enough for it not to be pointed out). Bruno loves that he was framing Natalie, but
thought he was too stiff and was over-attacking the dance and stomping, but
‘next time you do it’ (in the dance off?) [maybe in the final! They love a cha cha in the final... - Steve] it’ll be fabulous.
In the Clauditorium, Claudia holds
his hand and says it was sweet that he apologised to Natalie at the end. Scores: 4, 6, 7 7 for a 24 that feels
overmarked for me. Claudia says everyone
was ‘what?’ at the four. That was my reaction to the 7, Claud. Sorry Greg.
Our new bottom two goddess,
Anastacia, now, dancing with Gorka (poor Neil) as Brendan is ill. The VT does its bit for building up Gorka,
who gets to say more than he did with Tameka and whom Anastacia calls her
‘Prince Charming’, so I’d say the omens are good for him returning next year.
They’re quickstepping to ‘My Kind
of Town (Chicago Is)’ and she has a shorter blonde glamorous wig which looks
nice, with an apricot dress that looks better than it did on ITT when the pink
underskirt was on display without the apricot netting. He’s a dapper gent in a suit. Oh, and she’s walking an imaginary dog –
like, not even a toy dog, just a lead. It’s weird, especially as the rest of the dance is super classical (indeed,
it’s very American Smooth-esque). The
lead ditched, they do some lovely benchography before getting in hold for a
gentle quickstep that isn’t as taxing as some of the breakneck ones we saw last
week, but it’s lovely in terms of its energy and you can tell she is having the
time of her life – and even when she fudges some of the footwork and there’s a
huge amount of gapping, she is giving it plenty of performance energy and FACE
to compensate.
Tess notes Chicago is her home
town and Anastacia says it is and her grandfather is in. Darcey says it was lovely and she was light
on her feet, although she could have leaned out a little. Len says getting a new partner is like getting
a new pair of shoes (Anastacia: ‘Awesome!’ Anastacia <3) and it was light
and frivolous and her best dance. Bruno
says a little bit of Spain does wonders for her and she was like ‘a little
coquettish swinger’ (are swingers usually coquettish? Doesn’t seem likely but maybe I’m just
stereotyping). He notes that there was a lot of gapping, though, and Craig
modifies his usual bus comment with ‘you could fell a tree through it’ –
although other than that, he found it light and lovely. [Oh sure, THIS year the judges suddenly care about gapping in quicksteps. Where was this concern in 2013, eh? - Steve]
In the Clauditorium, Claudia calls
Gorka a superhero and Anastacia says all the pros are amazing and tells Brendan
to get busy so they can go to work next week. She’s not planning on being danced off, then. Scores: 7, 7, 8, 8 for a total of 30 and
their highest. Claudia says it places
her at the top of the leaderboard, but Anastacia points out it’s the beginning
of the show (and close to half-way through!
Hooray for all the injuries!).
Kevin and Louise now, doing a
rumba in the most romantic city in the world, which, Tess clarifies, is Paris,
not Grimsby. Damn right. Grimsby’s a town, not a city. They then get a
free trip to Paris because it’s ‘so important’ for their dance to see real
Paris. With that logic, I’m looking
forward to all those Halloween VTs set in graveyards, laboratories and the
inside of Louise Rainbow’s brain. Louise
also says the rumba is the hardest yet, as this series hovers between it being
difficult FOR MEN as is traditional, and difficult full stop.
They’re dancing to a very slow
version of ‘Always on My Mind’, because Elvis (/Pet Shop Boys) just screams
‘Paris’, with an Eiffel Tower model on stage. Now a rumba with these two was always going to be a hard sell as they’re
both a bit cheesy and, unsurprisingly, Louise looks like she’s cringing
throughout. It’s very chaste and her
hips do not move AT ALL. The tasteful lighting and costumes (understated, grey,
nice enough fit) almost cover a range of sins. But only almost, as yet another underwhelming dance underwhelms.
Len says it was a dance in France
(wow) and calls her consistently good, but says she’s on a plateau and she
needs a boost as others on a plateau (Danny?) are higher. [I love that. "Everyone's plateauing, but some are plateauing higher than others! Best series ever! So much talent!" - Steve] Bruno says it was distinguished, elegant and
very chic, but he saw cultural references to An American in Paris, which he
liked. Craig said it lacked excitement
and danger, that her hips need accentuating more, but at least she got a free
trip to Paris and she does have wonderful lyricism. Darcey chucks in a ‘boys are saying’ by
saying Louise needs to push things more but then says she’s going in the right direction. So is she plateauing or improving,
Darcey? And why am I looking for any
kind of consistency in her critiques.
In the Clauditorium, we give a
shout out to Louise’s mother-in-law who’s been doing her bit for injury porn by
having a hospital visit this week. Scores: 8, 8, 8, 9 for a-shit-everyone-is-crap-tonight-better-inflate-some-scores-fast
33.
Claudia previews Daisy dancing
later to a song about body parts ‘which could be ‘Heads, Shoulders, Knees and
Toes’’ – cueing a singalong that only Daisy gets right. I love her, she’s such an awkward teacher’s
pet but in an endearing way. [Daisy is easily my favourite contestant personality-wise this year. She's such a dork, in a really great way. - Steve] Tess
introduces Ed and Katya by saying he’s playing a hitchhiker and as she raises
her thumb, she’s wearing some bizarre triangle hand bracelet thing to only
further convince me she’s an android.
Ed and Katya are doing an
‘American Smooth Foxtrot’ and their training video reveals Katya wearing some
bizarre black shoes with a white pattern on that looks like spiderwebs. Too early, Katya! They are dancing to ‘(Is This The Way To)
Amarillo’, yet another song plucked from the 2016 Big Bumper Book of
Inappropriate Foxtrot Choices’. Ed is a
‘hitchhiker’ but his ickle backpack, purple short-sleeved shirt and checked
trousers make him look more like a schoolboy. The song doesn’t lend itself to elegant dancing so if he stomps, it’s
only the natural footwork this track requires. They do manage a fairly impressive lift, which must really use a lot of
Katya’s core strength to keep in the air. Then it falls apart with clumsy arms, Amarillo video dancing and a
botched (tricky) lift, where he nearly drops her, then a tiny bit of foxtrot in
hold, then he swings her round in a ‘wheee’ style, then it’s over, and then it
isn’t, so they do the complex lift again, marginally more successfully.
Bruno says he was terrified Ed was
going to drop Katya but he always takes them places, and there were moments of
foxtrot where he showed he could do it and then bits that were too random. Not sure if that’s Ed’s fault, Katya’s, or
the show’s, though. Craig calls it the
antithesis of smooth and he did four lifts, not three – but the three other
than the failed one were good lifts. Darcey says he started well and he does have the strength for the lifts
but it was a shame he didn’t recover from the failed lift. She then tells him to come back ‘next year’
and then realises her mistake and ends up crying laughing. Len does a
not-at-all-scripted, ‘the trouble with hitch-hiking is you get a dodgy
lift’. He says there was a terrific
section but it was a shame that the big moment went pear-shaped. So this week Len isn’t the arbiter of illegal
lifts then?
Ed says he loved doing the lift
and they invented it this week. He says
he was going to dedicate the dance to Tony Christie and Peter Kay but after
they did it, maybe not. Scores: 2, 6, 6,
4 for a total of 18. Claudia says he had his first spray tan last week and Ed
says if he stays in, he’ll go ‘the full Jeremy Vine’, which is still several
steps down from the ‘Kevin last week’ point on the Chigvintsev fake tan scale.
Ore and Joanne now. Last week, blessed jive bla bla bla. I mean, I really enjoyed that jive and I’m
already sick of hearing about it. Going
from that to a waltz is only likely to be a comedown, so instead, they go to
the Team GB and Paralympics GB parade (which is interesting, as wouldn’t
Claudia and Greg have actually been on that parade, yet Ore gets the VT? Mmmm-Hmmm. Ramp him like you ramped Ramps, show. Future rival Strictly contestants the Brownlees
wish him luck).
Their waltz is to ‘I Will Always
Love You’ (Whitney version) and the lighting is completely gorgeous – darkened room
with golden specks like candle flames and white follow spots exploding into
blue at the key change. It makes it
seem very romantic and lovely, along with the nice outfits they’re in (Jo in a
white dress with her hair looking amazing, Ore in a white shirt and tight-ish
black trousers). There’s also a floor
spin that may or may not double as an illegal lift. It looks gorgeous, but it’s hard to tell what
is the dancing itself and what is all the stuff they’ve chucked around it. These two do have good chemistry, though, and
it isn’t going to harm his frontrunner (joint) chances any.
Tess praises Andrea’s vocals –
which were good, given that’s a song the band could have, well, you know. Craig says it worked really well and putting
the song into 3/4 time also worked and there was beautiful swing and sway and wonderful
storytelling. Darcey praised how controlled
and still it was in places although he needs to watch his right shoulder popping
up. Len calls it quiet, calm and
sophisticated and says the waltz is a big, flowing dance rather than a small,
dainty one. He says his turning lock (I think?)
got a bit sticky, but he’s an incredible dancer. Bruno says they look wonderful together and
their chemistry and connection is outstanding (well, there’s no Giovanni and
Laura this week, so we take our showmances where we can).
Ore says it’s been a difficult
week and he’s been really nervous. It’s a
waltz love, calm down. Scores: 9, 9, 9,
9 for a total of 36.
I have just realised that if
Joanne wins this year, she’s more than likely getting a comedy contestant next
year, isn’t she? That’d be a shame,
given how much better she’s been the last two weeks after ditching the props. [Unless you're one of those people who believes the Pro-Clifton Bias Conspiracy where ALL THE CLIFTONS GET ALL THE RINGERS ALL THE TIME. You know, like how Karen's only had two partners who could dance worth a damn in her five years on the show, and how Jo's partners for her first two years were Human Millstone Scott Mills and Literally Nobody. - Steve]
Daisy and Aljaž are my
lulling-into-thinking-they’re-the-penultimate couple of the night (it’s always
Claudia and AJ I forget). Their dance
involves darkness so they eat a meal in the dark with horror-film infrared cam
on). Louise got to go to Paris, what
shizz is this?
So this is an unusual Charleston
(to ‘Happy Feet’). We see everything in
black but their hands and feet in white gloves. This could be revolutionary, or it could be full-on Dummy Dance in the
list of misguided quirks this show chucks at us from time to time. Or it could just be a quick opening gimmick
and then business as usual, because I can’t imagine we’ll get through a whole
Charleston without the opportunity for gurning. Indeed, it only goes on for a couple of bars – they should maybe have
attempted one thing in hold or one tricky move that way for maximum effect, but
that might have been a tough ask. Other
than that, it’s decent-Charleston-by-numbers. Daisy seems to be enjoying it but it lacks a little something for me –
not entirely sure what. I like it (a lot
better than AJ and Claudia’s), but I’m not madly wowed. [I like Daisy a lot, but it left me cold too. I think it was that the gimmick didn't particularly wow me, and that the black-and-white costuming that they needed for the gimmick but were then stuck with for the rest of the dance didn't flatter her at all, it just washed her out. - Steve]
Darcey says she loved the silent
movie homage and thought it was well danced but she started flagging at the end
and needs to tighten her core. Len’s
critique is fucking boring. He liked
it. Bruno loved it and says it was like
Betty Boop coming back to life. Craig
loved it other than a slightly late end. What is the world coming to when Darcey gives the most sensible
critique?? Scores: four 8s, despite neither Len or Bruno giving them anything
to improve on, for a total of 32.
And now our next thrilling instalment
of ‘this cast is broken, can we get a refund?’ as Laura and Giovanni already
recorded their VT so we can’t let all that komedy footage go to waste. We see them learning Giovanni’s ‘favourite’ dance,
the jive and Laura grimacing through pain in her ankle. She says it was the dance she always wanted
to learn, but then Ore did a practically perfect one last week and she’s a
dance-off contender, so they decided to sit the week out and make people on the
internet froth CONSPIRACY!! I assume,
anyway. Giovanni, in his best black
mourning suit, wishes her well.
Danny and Oti aren’t in the pimp
slot which means they must be expecting something good from Claudia and AJ. Or else have felt they had to at least try
and pretend the women this year have any chance. Also, Danny has BLOKE!RUMBA so ain’t no-one
wanting to close a show out with that. Their VT? Rumba is like tightrope
walking, in the same way that it is like a free trip to France.
They are dancing to ‘How Will I
Know’, which is not a rumba song, it’s a pop-disco CLASSIC and Sam Smith’s done
that balliding of good pop songs shizz that we stopped recapping the X Factor over
(well that, and it being so far beyond parody. And each episode being three hours long, fifteen minutes of which was
actual content). So, in other words,
fuck this noise, however much I like these two. Egads, you’ve actually got me hoping Claudia and AJ will pull something
amazing out of the bag, show. And who
thinks to themselves every week that they’re really looking forward to Claudia
and AJ? (Apart from Claudia’s
babysitters and childminders and AJ’s wet nurse and whoever else they can drag
out to infantalise them this week. I
fully expect their final VTs to involve their pregnant mothers going to an
ante-natal class teaching their foetuses the intricacies of the paso doble).
The singer switches the lyrics to ‘if
you really love me’ not ‘if he really loves me’ #gaypanic. Oh, the dancing? Quite nice, as bloke rumbas go, I suppose. Bit over-exaggerated and West-End (RINGER). His hips moved more than Louise’s, at least. [I really liked this one, but Danny's still dead boring, sorry. - Steve]
Len says it was a MASCULINE
performance. RAWR. He did a step called the sliding doors that
Len loved. Bruno says his hips are ready
for action and the dance is DIFFICULT FOR MEN and he balanced things but was a
little jagged and he’d like to see it again. Tess panics ‘but not in the dance-off!’ Craig says there was a bit too much energy in it and it felt like a ‘jazz
dance’ more than a rumba. Darcey ‘agrees
with the boys’ (which ones? They all said
different stuff) about his hips.
In the Clauditorium, Claudia says
Danny didn’t want to shave his chest (which is almost entirely out and has a small
amount of hair centrally, to try and appeal both to those who like that and
those who do not. Smart move, wardrobe,
although a bit close to sexual harassment) and he says they had an argument
about it until they ‘ran out of buttons’. He wishes his nan a happy 82nd birthday. Wow, it’s grandparents’ day up in here. Scores: 8, 9, 9, 9 for a total of 35 and whilst this and Ore’s were
good, it feels like they mainly got the scores so the week didn’t seem quite such a comedown from last week
(see also: Louise).
Finally! Aww look, it’s ickle baby AJ and Claudia,
look at their widdle faces! Pinch their cheeks! [NOT *THOSE* CHEEKS, DON'T GET US IN TROUBLE. - Steve] Claudia is shown struggling and AJ says she needs to loosen up her core
and put aside her gymnastics training. That’s it – no comedy VT, no bringing out of cuddly toys and rattles.
Their samba to ‘Young Hearts Run Free’
opens with Claudia atop a flight of Perspex stairs from the judges’ table, and
then sees them prancing about next to a huge glitterball. You can finally see why AJ was cast as, him
being a Latin dancer, he seems so much more comfortable this week than in
previous weeks – he’s quite mesmerising to watch, which I can’t say about his
previous dances – but that does mean you’re looking at him rather than Claudia
as is often the case with female pros and lacklustre male contestants, so it may
or may not be a good distraction technique. It’s super-fast and she is really struggling to keep up with him and her
arms are a godawful mess and there’s a really cool gymnastic-style underarm
turn thing at the end which is probably the closest they could find to a
show-stopping moment among this week’s slim pickings.
Bruno begins by praising the
glitterball, always a good sign. He says
there was so much stuff in there and ‘the girl’ had to do every step she might
expect but he thought she was panicking and going ahead of the music. Craig says it was a bit frenetic and she was
like a tornado and the bounce action suffered with the speed, but it was a
brilliant endeavour. Darcey thinks she
was over-pushed. It does seem like AJ
wanted to show off what he could do rather than choreographing for his
celebrity. Len says ‘the last couple and
the party starts. Great.’ Yeah, that’s how I feel, too. He then says AJ sacrificed technique for
speed by giving her too much to do and now I agree with Len and Darcey and feel
a bit queasy.
Claudia (F) tells Claudia (W) that
AJ makes her feel good about herself when she performs. Scores: 8, 7, 8, 9 for a total of 32 because
it was clearly scripted to get 32 and Bruno had to inflate his score to counter
Craig? IDK, the scoring tonight feels
super perfunctory, like ‘what are the scores we should be seeing in week five?’
perfunctory.
Lacklustre Leaderboard:
1. Ore and Joanne - 36
2. Danny and Oti - 35
3. Louise and Kevin - 33
4=. Daisy and Aljaž - 32
4=. Claudia and AJ - 32
6. Anastacia and Gorka - 30
7. Judge Rinder and Oksana - 29
8=. Lesley and Anton - 24
8=. Greg and Natalie - 24
10. Ed and Katya - 18
With Laura out of the running,
bottom two could be almost anyone except Ore and Danny tonight. I’m thinking it could be Anastacia vs Claudia
or Greg but, other than the top two, I’d not be hugely surprised at anyone else
dancing off. Join me tomorrow to see
what happens!
*Bonus points if our readership is comprised as I think it is and you get the reference.
3 comments:
I'm sure Ed said Tony Curtis rather than Tony Christie. That's the sort of mistake we'd get on X-Factor.
I did wonder if he said Curtis actually but thought I would give him the benefit of the doubt.
I'm going to stick up for Oksana here and surmise that (unlike my sister who used to think that all cats were girls and all dogs were boys...) that she doesn't think moths are male butterflies; either because English is her second language, or just through getting tongue-tied on live tv, I think she meant to say "[for costume purposes] moths are more masculine looking than butterflies"
Not saying I agree with her, just trying to make sense of what she said. At the risk of perpetuating narrow-minded ways of thinking. And gender-stereotyping insects. And anthropomorphising them. And not implying that boys can't wear butterfly wings. You get my drift.
Are ladybirds girls and stag beetles boys...?
Post a Comment