Top 7 perform aka BLACKPOOL Week: Saturday 19 November 2016
Last! Week! Another
man hit the dance-off, as Greg dropped there following a problematic paso. However, he was up against Daisy and she was
obviously getting put out of her misery against anyone but Ed, and Greg’s dance
off performance was thankfully good enough to justify the save, so we’re now
down to two women and five men, but who cares about that when there’s only one
story in town: BLACKPOOL!!!
We open with a bell ringer (not the only ringer on this show, eh? EH?) and the traditional string of
locals welcoming the show and then we see all the celebrities and pro dancers
taking a seafront train. It looks super
cold and if you look closely, you can hear their teeth chattering. BLACKPOOL! When they finally get inside the tower ballroom (which also seemed cold
from the fact most of them were wearing coats inside there on It Takes Two), Ed pulls a lever to make the
BLACKPOOL tower light up in rainbow lights – and that’s not even remotely the
most gay thing to happen tonight… but more on all of that later – to the
credits! Poor Oksana, trying in vain to shut Judge Rinder up even before they’d
begun their training.
Because it’s a special event, we open with an American
Smooth-style group dance, this time to ‘One’ from A Chorus Line. We have moments of Natalie showboating marvellously
before the celebs enter. It is worth
noting that Greg and Ed don’t get to actually dance [to be fair to Greg, he does have a little brief skippy-step section to do, we can't really lump him in the same category as Ed who spends the whole thing glued to a chair - Steve]; Danny dances lots, Louise
has another fan, which she might need to watch doesn’t become a repetitive
motif, because she’s better than that. Judge Rinder descends on a very shaky, very cardboard looking star –
this thing makes that rickety moon on Over the Rainbow look stable. Brave, brave man. Oh, and Ore and Claudia are there, too. Speaking of just being there, Darcey is brought
out of a door in a grand entrance moment, whilst the other judges just appear. Then there’s some awesome business with all
the women wafting great big fans, which also prove to be useful umbrellas when
a glitter explosion occurs. That was a
lot of fun! [Agreed - the whole thing came together really well and made for a fantastic opening to the show. Much better than if we'd just gone straight into Claudia's jive, yeesh. - Steve]
Tess ‘kiss me quick’ Daly and Claudia ‘squeeze me slowly’
Winkleman arrive. I can’t help think
that there’s something amiss there – Tess is clearly the squeezer, albeit
mostly of the unwanted harassment variety. Daly Dresswatch: raspberry with yet another asymmetrical neckline. Does
she get these from a special store? What
Winkleman’s Wearing: navy, quite cute.
The judges dance on again despite being on already – one of
the weird consequences of having a group dance upfront, I guess, but surely
that could have just meant no judge introductions? Maybe they’re still dealing with the
scheduling consequences of Will’s early exit. Craig has only the middle button done up on his jacket, and when he
spins in, it really makes his belly stick out and he looks pretty unkempt. Sorry Craig, but it’s exactly the kind of
thing you’d pick up on if it were one of the celebrities.
After what is either a very quick costume change or some
shenanigans with the ‘liveness’ of the show, our celebrities and pros emerge:
Louise and Kevin; Judge Rinder and Oksana; Claudia and AJ; Ore and Jo; Greg and
Natalie; Ed and Katya; Danny – who looks like a circus ringmaster, not a
waiter, as was trailed on ITT – and
Oti.
First on tonight are Claudia and AJ, both dressed in black
and gold as a jock and a cheerleader, as this show continues its weird
obsession with presenting them as belonging to an American High School. Their VT
focuses on how BLACKPOOL is special and she’s never been – although we can’t
get the promised footage of her on the Big Dipper because the Pleasure Beach is
closed. AJ takes her to the Winter
Gardens. She declares it “amazing” and
we’re shown some photos of younger AJ and Chloe winning competitions here. So which is the sacredest of the sacred sites
in BLACKPOOL, the Winter Gardens, or the Tower Ballroom? And why does that sound exactly like a
metaphor for a battle of the sexes? Also: Claudia rides a donkey, is infantilised
some more, yadda yadda.
They are jiving to ‘Mickey’ and, as all dances will have
tonight, there’s a bunch of prop dancers supporting them. Other than one really neat move where she
twirls under the arms of one of them and then AJ, the extra dancers mostly
serve to highlight the difference between her skills and those of professionals,
as she seems super nervous throughout and seems to make quite a few little
mistakes. It’s all a bit clumpy, especially in the leg work, which may be due
to her legs being on the short side, and there’s this really ugly side hold where
the height difference between them is incredibly pronounced. You know, what
guys, although it goes against all received Strictly
wisdom, I think her (lack of) height really hindered her here. [Bloody hell, next you'll be telling me the rumba isn't hard for men or something. - Steve] The dance ends by her waving pom-poms for a
bit and looking like she wants to die. WELCOME TO BLACKPOOL!!
We welcome our singers and orchestra and we’re over to the
judges.
Len calls it full on, crisp and sharp (LOL in what universe)
but notes that there was “a” mistake early on. He gets booed and snarks that he is only telling truth, and will ‘speak
to Judge Rinder about you lot’. That lot
who are almost definitely going to go wild for the Judge. Who isn’t an actual Judge. Bruno stands up
and sings the lyrics back at her, which is always welcome in a critique. He says it had the spectacle of a Busby
Barclay production (I was thinking more an off-episode of Glee in one of those later series where it somehow kept going and
going despite all its story arcs having been concluded and everyone clearly
hating every contractually obliged second. Which is basically every series after the first one, let’s be honest). Craig says the routine could have scored a 10
(really?) without the mistakes but he loved the kicks and flicks and really and
truly loved it (Craig always falls for the weirdest routines, doesn’t
he?). Darcey calls them ‘fast pumping
jumping magic beans’ FFS and says it was dynamic throughout with ‘one tiny
mistake’. That mistake being… the whole
routine? [That was the same conclusion I came to, yes. - Steve] And, as Claudia hasn’t been
patronised enough, Tess calls her a cheeky little cheerleader. Le sigh.
In the Clauditorium, we are reminded that BLACKPOOL is
amazing - and let’s just assume this said for everyone from here onwards. Scores 9, 9, 9, 9 for a BLACKPOOL inflated
36. Please tell me I’m not the only
person who hated that routine? [No, it was a bad routine, danced poorly. I don't know what the hell the judges were on. - Steve]
T&C time – and for some reason, this comes with a dose
of Unexpected! Peter! Kay! in a hi-vis jacket and weird hat. Natalie’s reaction
is amazing – she has a total fangirl meltdown – although it’s Natalie, she’d
probably even react like that to, let’s say, Michael McIntyre. Peter reads the terms and conditions out
wrong and Claudia frantically waves to correct him and then bursts into
hysterical laughter. The teleprompter
goes too fast and the whole thing descends into chaos. At one point, Peter pretends to be groped/bummed by Judge Rinder
(who later pinches his bottom) and I know people were offended at the implicit
homophobia there, but as I’m not a gay man, I’ll leave it to Steve to decide
how outraged to be – personally, as distasteful as it was, (and I wasn't keen), I didn’t find it
quite as troubling as what Len’s about to say (twice). [I'll be perfectly honest - I've never found Peter Kay that funny so I just kind of tuned out the moment he appeared and didn't even know he'd said anything until I saw complaints on Twitter later, so I'm hardly the best judge either. - Steve]
Ore and Jo are the second couple – she in bright cerise, looking
like a neon-rendering of Madonna circa ‘Material Girl’; he with cerise
tie. Tess makes a mention of BLACKPOOL
being the Vegas of the North and the look of utter disdain on Jo’s face is
lifegiving.
In the VT, Jo says ‘it’s the first time I’m gonna dance… in BLACKPOOL…
in Strictly… with a celeb’, just to
emphasise how ‘special’ it all is. They
go to the BBC props store which looks scruffy and a bit murdery, where she
spins him in one of those gravitron things they’ve presumably had left over
from one of the many dead-family-entertainment-Saturday-spectaculars in the
broadcasting graveyard (poor Ore, at least Greg got to go to a space
wind-tunnel) and he says now he’s done the time-honoured make you sick
exercise, he’s ready for the Viennese Waltz and Jo’s like ‘LOL no, that was
just for comedy VT purposes, you still have to learn the actual technique and
steps and stuff.’ I don’t know how I
feel about this show finally being self-aware about the pointlessness of its
VTs.
They are dancing to ‘That’s Life’. And it has a spectacular opening involving a
card game with Jo, Neil, Janette and two prop dancers, where they keep freezing
in tableau and then unfreezing into dramatic poses, which they continue
throughout much of the routine. It looks
amazing but it is probably the kind of thing that should have been saved for a
pro dance, as it means we are watching them, not Ore, who is pretty much lost
in the mix – something that’s only enhanced when one of the women puts her hand
into Jo’s cleavage (makes a change from all the male-centred homoeroticism,
huh?). Given all the shenanigans,
there’s not much time for actual Viennese Waltz content, bar a never-ending,
super-fast fleckerl at one point. When
they do move about, his legs seem a bit stuttery – but I guess that’s possibly
the pace of the song. There is a good
end moment where he pulls out an ace and then spins Jo off into a cool end pose,
but it feels very much a dance of spectacle over content, and I am not sure if
that’s down to Jo or the production team, but it just doesn’t really work as a
VW – an American Smooth, possibly. So
we’re two down and both have underwhelmed, drowning the celebs in a sea of
better dancers. Yay, BLACKPOOL!
Bruno calls it ‘a jazz Viennese Waltz out of Ocean's 11’ (I
don’t remember that scene myself, but it is many years since I saw that film –
the remake one, anyway - and I’ve only watched it the once). Craig says the top line in the fleckerl bothered
him and he was a bit skippy at the end, but he loved the double jumps and calls
him an amazing showman. Darcey says it
was the longest lasting fleckerl ever (in these post-Record Breakers times is there any way we can verify these things
or not?) and no one could hold it that well (again, I’d like some
verification). Len says it was a mix of
flair and care. He’s just sticking
together words that rhyme as critiques, now isn’t he?
In the Clauditorium, Claudia reckons there were 12 spins in
a row and Ore says there were ‘a few sicks in the week’. Mainly after everyone celebrated his and
Greg’s birthdays, I expect. Scores 8, 10, 10, 10 for a total of 38 and Jo is
somewhat baffled and hysterical at that score.
I mean, I concede it was worth a couple more marks than what Claudia did,
so… Yay, BLACKPOOOOOOL!! That hangover
is gonna hit haaaard next week, good luck with that Steve.
Louise and Kevin now and I’m kind of looking forward to this
but also kind of nervous given the BLACKPOOL paso history (well, the history of
the previous three BLACKPOOLs anyway with Susanna and Kevin, Pixie and Trent
and Anita and Gleb. Also – 10 women have
scored 37 or more in a paso, compared to two men – Jay and Austin - and yet the
show still thinks rumba is the hard dance for blokes). In their VT, they go to a rock factory and
have the message ‘L&K BLACKPOOL’ inscribed in it, which is about as EDGY as
you’d expect from these two. Why not
‘DANNY MAC RINGER’ or ‘ED BALLS IS CRAP?’ or the evergreen classic ‘MY SISTER
IS A POOHEAD’? They dance around in the rock factory and get given a few sticks
from their batch of rock. I bet the show
sold the rest of them at an inflated ‘SUPER STRICTLY SPECIAL PRICE’ like all
those shops that get ‘duped’ into buying useless crap on The Apprentice do.
Their paso is to something called ‘Explosive’ and it seems
to be set in an alt-universe Game of Thrones, and I bet there are already a ton
of crossover fics on AO3. Louise
descends the stairs dramatically as a bad-ass matriarch in a huge capey skirt
that gets removed. [I'm sure I can't be the only person who feared some sort of Madonna-at-the-Brits moment happening here. - Steve] The prop dancers are
used more effectively here to lift Louise and mostly support the routine –
other than one point towards the start where they full on obscure both Louise
and Kevin, though that may just be bad camerawork. There’s lots to like here – amazing dramatic lighting,
high-intensity strings, fantasy-medieval staging – all of which add to the drama,
but her footwork is lacking in a couple of places and she keeps grinning, which
dilutes the mood a bit. Her arms and
posturing look good, especially as it’s fast. I love it – it probably feels a bit performance over
technique, but it is BLACKPOOL and
putting the celebrity both at the centre and in a routine where they actually
seem too be able to do the dance they’ve been given is a welcome turn of
events. [I loved it too. I agree with you that it wasn't perfect, but it was just so much FUN (and so very camp) that I didn't care. - Steve]
Craig says he loved the skirt work, the arabesque and the flamenco
hop, and calls it ‘full of gorge’. Darcey says she loved how Louise kept control and that the routine was
dynamic and strong, with beautiful arms. Len says he was blown away (enough about your private life etc). Bruno
loved the Game of Thrones style and
her being a killer queen commanding her turf – with beauty, artistry and power.
So GoT works better for a paso
than Harry Potter, what a surprise.
In the Clauditorium, Louise says she didn’t want to let Kevin
down with his favourite dance. Scores: 9
(which is booed), Darcy scrambling for ‘a passionate’ 9 (which produces some laughs),
10, 10 for a total of 38.
Danny and Oti now, which… kind of means it’s likely to go
downhill from here, doesn’t it? [Yes, the running order this week was a bit baffling, front-loading all the ringers and leaving Ed, Greg and Judge Rinder for the second half. - Steve] In their
VT, we see him dropping her badly. Fortunately
they have a crash mat in place, so she’s fine. They also go to a ‘restaurant’ for him to get into character as a
waiter-dressed-as-a-ringmaster but lol it’s a chippy. God, I would really like some chips right
now.
Their Charleston is soundtracked by ‘Putting on the Ritz’ and pretty much
off the bat they go into a single handed (each!) joint cartwheel, holding hands. I literally shouted ‘WOAH’- I’ve never seen
anything like it from a celebrity that I can recall, especially as they just
naturally went in and out of it in time with the music – properly
thrilling. There’s another spectacular
lift but after that, it is a lovely, jazzy, well-danced and joyous routine,
with some table-top tapping to boot. The
problem is that having two spectacular moments early on meant it just needed
one more spectacular moment at the end to be a truly shut-the-show-down routine,
but I still wouldn’t like to be one of the dancers following that. The prop
dancers were used as support here, rather than overshadowing the dance, which
made it look like an excellent stage show routine, not that Danny’s ever been
involved in anything like that, of course.
Darcey says it was impressive, especially the cartwheel and that
it’s hard to distinguish who’s the professional dancer and who’s the West End
Ringer. Len says it was a choreography
overload and he likes dances on the edge where they could easily go wrong but
don’t. That… doesn’t normally strike me
as the kind of dance Len likes, but OK. Bruno
calls it a table topping showstopper, like watching a Broadway show (which is
obviously not West End, not at all, that’s a whole different thing which
usually just involves sitting in a chair). Craig’s only comment is a ‘fab-u-lous’ so he’s presumably giving up his 10
like he said he would on ITT. He’s made weirder choices for his first 10 in
the past, to be fair.
Scores: 10, 10, 10, 10 for our first 40. The noise is deafening. Claudia says there’s some technical difficulties
with the phone messages, and if you’re thinking no-one votes on the phone, you’re
wrong. Ed Balls voters do – I heard one in a café last weekend – so maybe
technical hitches are how they’re going to manage to get him into the
dance-off. [I vote on the phone too. Three free votes are never enough. - Steve]
Time for our weekly dose of Claudia comedy – this week’s gag
is cueing up Ed hanging 40ft up on a piano, and Claudia holding it by a
rope. Tess says Claudia dropped a prop
last time she held it up, and Claudia makes a pinky promise not to… Kerrash.
Ed and Katya’s VT opens with him playing a real piano
(although not necessarily really playing a piano), then Katya decides to get him
to play a poor plastic-sheet-like version of the floor piano from Big. Badly and half-heartedly.
As we have known since last week, they are jiving to ‘Great
Balls of Fire’ one of those classic first week song choices somehow arriving
late in the day. He descends with a piano,
looking way more stable than Judge Rinder’s infant-school-nativity level star. The routine starts with Katya and the prop dancers
dancing for a while before he comes on, which is probably for the best. This is not his dance - as much as anything could be his dance, and you can see
him thinking about what move comes next rather than it feeling natural the whole
time, leaving it disjointed and lumpen. The final line of the dance, as
he leaps into the arms of five women dancers? ‘Goodness gracious Ed Balls of fire’ – just in case you hadn’t spotted
the connection. [My patience has been running thin with Ed of late, and I think "Ed Balls of fire" might be the point where it snapped. - Steve]
Len says he’s getting better… as last week he was 8th and this week the worst he’ll be is 7th. Miaow.
Bruno says he’s booked a shrink, a chiroporactor and a trip to Himalayas
to get over Ed’s dancing [but he's never been to me - Steve] – so Bruno is into alternative medicine, who’s surprised? Craig says it looked like playing hopscotch
in a girls’ school (#everydaysexism) and he had very heavy feet, when a jive
needs to be lighter but he likes that Ed keeps going. Darcey says he needs more retraction but she loved
the end. Cold.
In the Clauditorium, we hear that Ed went to the Winter Gardens
yesterday to watch the professionals and this makes him want to keep dancing. For
another week, two tops, before the bussing that began tonight starts to
approach with the intensity of one that will blow up if it goes at less than
50mph. Scores: 4, 6, 7, 6 for a total of
23.
Greg and Natalie are our penultimate couple. Their VT sees them perform in aisle of a packed
train to lots of ‘happy’ customers who aren’t at all enraged at being stopped
from getting to the buffet. First Corbyn
starts blocking the aisles and now this? [I mean I'd be far happier to bump into Greg Rutherford on a Pendolino than to bump into Jeremy Corbyn but perhaps I'm biased. - Steve] Anyway, a random passenger asks him to ‘do it for the gingers’. I’m thinking ‘the gingers’ are going to be
out of luck until we eventually get MegaRinger Bonnie Langford competing. [NICOLA ROBERTS DOMINATION 2017 - Steve]
They are dancing the quickstep to ‘Born to Hand Jive’ and
the setting, with its rainbow balloon arches and streamers suggests this is set
at prom in that LGBT+ school Claudia and AJ go to with the rainbow lockers, and
Nat and Greg are the youngish teachers who like to think they’re cool. Greg is
wearing purple velvet, not the pink we were threatened with in the week. Not that this seems to have made him more
comfortable because he looks completely terrified throughout, especially at the
bit in the middle where they have a little sit down and do the hand jive. It’s
super quick and parts of it are reasonable, but there are several small
mistakes and it’s not very ‘clean’ and I think it bodes ill for his chances. [Although I did laugh at how even when he clearly went wrong, he still had more body contact with Natalie than Abbey Clancy did with Aljaž in her 10-scoring Blackpool quickstep YES I AM STILL CROSS ABOUT THAT ACTUALLY. - Steve]
Afterwards, Greg says it was one of most incredible and fun
moments. I’d advise him to tell his
face, but he’s a professional athlete and looking miserable/terrified seems to
be their idea of ‘fun’, if Louis Smith, Pendledrama and Andy Murray have
taught me anything. Bruno says it was
bubbly and bouncy like a springbok on the run and it was nice to see him having
a good time but his footwork needs to be refined. Craig says there was too much power going into
the floor, giving him too much height in the chasses which made it bouncy (I’m
guessing the sprung floor maybe didn’t help?). Craig argues that Greg went off the wrong leg in the jeté and Natalie
says not, but even she doesn’t quite have the energy for a full-on fight about
it. Craig then says he did dance brilliantly. Hmmm,
bokay then. Darcey says he has a natural
spring in him, which I guess is like natural rhythm for white
sportspeople? She liked that he was
smiling all the way through. He
was??! Len says he maintained speed and
great movement throughout, but the queer thing was that he messed up the
leap. I haven’t heard that term used in
that particular way for a good couple of decades and it makes me feel super
uneasy, especially given this show’s audience and many of its cast and
crew. I dunno, to me snarling that something
is ‘queer’ as an insult seems even worse than Peter Kay insinuating Judge
Rinder was after his ass – but there’s not been any outrage about this so maybe I’m
oversensitive. *shrug*. [With Len's general track record of distaste for anything effeminate I would prefer him not to use the word "queer" for anything, but I think he genuinely intended it for its stated meaning of "a bit peculiar", so I couldn't really bring myself to get aerated about it. - Steve] Greg says he’s been trying to calm down his
athletics and Len is like ‘yeah but you’re supposed to be a world champion long
jumper and you messed up the jump.’ Is Len’s love affair with SPORTSMEN officially dead and buried now?
In the Clauditorium, we learn that when Natalie and Greg
were first paired up, Natalie said she was worried about doing the quickstep
with ‘that man’ but that she loved it in the end. Scores: all 8s for a total of 32.
Our final dance of the evening (I love it when the numbers
dwindle… although not the point where they dwindle so much that two-dance week
is initiated, which must be fairly imminent) is from Judge Rinder and Oksana,
and it seems odd that they put his salsa here rather than, say, his
foxtrot. I could be wrong, of course,
and maybe it’ll be a salsa for the ages. I'm sure that's what will occur.
We’re reminded that last week we met his amazing
grandparents, but sadly there is no word on whether or not they’re in the
audience tonight. I suspect Tess might
have taken a restraining order out, which would be the first time she’d be the
one needing protection rather than the one people need protecting from. Even though the Pleasure Beach is meant to be
closed, Oksana and the producers have found somewhere with fairground rides and
they send Judge Rinder up on one of those enormous tower type rides. The tenuous connection is training him to
stop being scared of lifts and, in another knowing VT, he whines about how loose the connection is and sarky voices the ‘Oh, now
I can do the lift.' I refer you to my earlier point about knowing VTs.
They are dancing to ‘Spice Up Your Life’ and this is really
not a track that suits our generally-improved Strictly singers in the
slightest, who not only struggle with the notes but sound so unimpressed with
the whole thing that it feels less ‘party anthem’ and more ‘murder ballad’. The staging for the dance is a load of
technicolor flowers and Judge Rinder’s in bright cobalt blue with Oksana in
clashing lime. This dance plays to his theatrics, he has a big gaping gob
throughout, to the extent that his previous facial expressions seem
subtle. There are lots of wiggles and
bum shakes and those arm rolls they have in ‘Agadoo’. He lifts her
successfully, but looms scared the whole time, never more so than when her
skirt falls in his face. STRAIGHT
PANIC! There’s a lot of energy in this
routine, but it’s lacking in timing and technique and I really wish we’d gone
out on Louise or Danny’s dances because then BLACKPOOL would have gone out with
a bang and not a whimper. [Oh, I thought this was a bang, personally. It was a mess, but it was a glorious mess and I loved it. - Steve]
Craig calls it hiptastic, and says he loved the booty shakes and wants to call him Judge Grind(e)r. Darcey says she’s never seen a guy shake his cheeks as well. I kind of feel we need a direct comparison with Aljaž and Greg here. Just for scientific research purposes, you understand. Len says he got excited and started rushing and then, again, ‘something queer happened’ – well, the whole routine could be classified that way, depending on the way you’re using the term, and, more importantly, who is using the term. People boo him saying this and he snaps and says he doesn’t hold a grudge for the Judge. Bruno calls it ‘spicier than a scotch bonnet’, despite the timing issues, it heated up the ballroom. Maybe they should have gone on first in that case, given the bracing BLACKPOOL weather.
Not much of interest happens in the Clauditorium beyond
dance being marvellous and BLACKPOOL likewise.
Scores: 8, 9, 8, 8 for a total of 33.
Shall we have a specially-inflated BLACKPOOL leaderboard?
Danny and Oti 40
Jo and Ore 38
Louise and Kevin 38
Claudia and AJ 36
Judge Rinder and Oksana 33
Greg and Natalie 32
Ed and Katya 23
I’d say the four bottom couples all look in danger, although
I don’t think they’ve put the brakes on the Ed Express or Rinder Railways hard
enough yet so a Greg vs Claudia dance-off with Greg going would be my prediction.
To open the vote, Peter Kay has been safely stashed out of
sight, and instead, Ore has a neon ‘open’ sign of the style you get in shops and
it doesn’t work. When he eventually gets
it switched on, the light quality is so poor that he may as well not have
bothered. And they say BLACKPOOL’s
illuminations are world class. Tomorrow! We somehow fall through a wormhole and end up in 1988 and Simple Minds
and Rick Astley perform! Join us then to
see if another man might actually leave the show at long last!
6 comments:
If anything, it’s Rinder’s behaviour which should cause outrage rather than Peter Kay’s (or Len’s). He was clearly happy to play his part in a moment where the joke is that gay men can’t keep their hands off straight men. From him, that was surprising.
I don’t think Ore should have got any extra credit for his prolonged fleckl. He’d learnt one move and then made it fill up 20% of his programme, whereas other dancers would have had two or three steps in that time. What next? 30 seconds of somersaults by Claudia?
But the VW on Strictly is presented more as an endurance test than a dance these days, so on that logic...
Yeah, I see your point about Rinder... All somewhat unnecessarily really. Especially when it's Tess who's the real predator ;)
I've never enjoyed komedy kontestants, but I'm not sure why Ed attracts so much criticism and sneer. He's WAY less irritating than other duffers-doing-ok (Robbie Savage, Julien Macdonald and Widdy to name just 3 of many), far less painful to watch than Judy Murray, Nancy dell'Olio and Fiona Phillips (of many more), less unctuous and more authentic than Russell Grant, Gary Rhodes and Pamela Stephenson, and obviously tries hard unlike Jerry Hall, has far more to remember him by than Joe Calzaghe or Gloria Hunniford and he doesn't awkwardly try to be funny like Dave Myers. And he's trying hard without being Craig Kelly levels of deluded, and enjoying it more than Scott Mills.
He's just an inoffensive bloke who shows willing with the jokey character he's required to play, and much against the odds has managed to build up a pretty fair rapport with his professional partner; who -by the way- has managed somehow to walk the tightrope between choreographing the required comedy routines whilst simultaneously showing off as many basic steps as can still be shoe-horned in.
By all means dislike him because purity of dahnce etc, but if you don't mind duffers doing well, I'm not sure why he's up for more criticism than any of the others.
I don't particularly have anything against Ed. I hated his jive but thought his cha cha and Charleston were ok.
How dare you Nancy dell'olio was always glorious to watch <3<3<3
Seminaranalyse, I sat next to her on a flight to Rome this year and she was a delight
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