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So You Think You Can Dance (American TV series) season 16

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So You Think You Can Dance
Season 16
Hosted byCat Deeley
JudgesNigel Lythgoe
Mary Murphy
Laurieann Gibson
Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval
WinnerBailey Muñoz
Runner-upMariah Russell
Release
Original networkFox Broadcasting Company
Original releaseJune 3 (2019-06-03) –
September 16, 2019 (2019-09-16)
Season chronology
← Previous
Season 15
Next →
Season 17

The sixteenth season of So You Think You Can Dance (SYTYCD), an American dance competition reality show on FOX, returned on June 3, 2019.[1] The series has won numerous awards since its debut in 2005, including eleven Emmy Awards for Outstanding Choreography, the most for any show.[2] This panel of judges again features series creator Nigel Lythgoe, as well as the return of ballroom dance champion and expert Mary Murphy. New to the panel are choreographer Laurieann Gibson and B-boy dancer/choreographer Dominic "D-Trix" Sandoval, who serve as the third and fourth judges during auditions and live shows.[3] Cat Deeley continues in her role as host for a fifteenth consecutive season, for which she has earned five Emmy Award nominations.[4] The grand prize is $250,000,[5][a] a cover article in Dance Spirit, and the title of "America's Favorite Dancer".[6]

In the first five episodes, the Judges' Auditions featured about six full performances each along with the judges' critiques, as well as montages of other dancers.[7] From those auditions, a pool of eighty-three contestants,[b] who each earned a Golden Ticket advancing them to The Academy where they face, in the next episodes, six Academy Rounds that winnow down to the Top Ten—five women and five men—for the studio shows.[7]

In episode ten, and for the rest of the season, the Studio Performance Shows showcase the finalists in solos, duets, and group numbers, as they vie to connect with viewers who vote for their favorites. The following week, at the end of the show, the two women and two men with the lowest vote totals will be up for elimination.[8] The judges decide which woman and man will be cut.

On September 16, 2019, Bailey Muñoz was crowned "America's Favorite Dancer" and became the first b-boy to win the title in the show's history. A forty-stop tour featuring the Top Ten contestants and two All-stars started soon after the finale and ran until December 2019.[9]

Judges' Auditions

[edit]

Madison Jordan, an eventual Top Six contestants, shared that she submitted her online video in January and was contacted a month later to in-person auditions.[10] Those auditions, for dancers ages eighteen to thirty, took place with producers in: New York on February 9, 2019; Dallas on February 12; and Los Angeles on February 23.[10][11] From these, approximately 130 dancers were chosen by the producers to audition in Hollywood in March before the panel of judges.[10][12]

In addition to the new judges, the televised auditions have been revamped so instead of remote tryouts, the contestants come to the new SYTYCD Hollywood studio, outfitted with 120 cameras surrounding the stage, allowing the movement to be "frozen" in time, like bullet time.[13] Another change is the addition of a studio audience instead of being just the rest of auditioners and their supporters.[13]

The five episodes of Judges' Auditions each featured about six full-length dance routines; with an introduction package about the contestant, critique, and vote from the judging panel. Only a few of those were excluded from moving to The Academy Rounds; the successful auditioners were given a "Golden Ticket" to the Academy. In addition, montages of auditions were also mixed in with the full ones, showing a mix of some voted through.[1]

Some of the episodes were also themed; episode four featured various couple configurations including identical twin eighteen-year-old contemporary dancers Trent and Colton Edwards.[14]

The Academy

[edit]

The Academy Rounds, filmed in April, started in episode six at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California with the eighty-three contestants who made it through the Judges’ Auditions to get a Golden Ticket by excelling in a dance style of their choice.[10][7][c] Over three days they will go through four Choreography Rounds of The Academy; rehearsing new dance routines, from a professional choreographer, en masse for ninety minutes.[7]

They then face the original four judges, in small groups, who can: pass them through; have them “dance for their lives”; or be cut from the competition.[7] Of those that started: approximately only one in four, or twenty (ten women, and ten men) will make it to the Top Twenty; and they will face The Final Cut, with only half (five women, and five men) going through to the Top Ten studio performance shows.[7]

Choreography Rounds

[edit]

The four Choreography Rounds were:

  1. Hip-hop dance taught by Luther Brown: he was looking for the dancers to have precision in the moves, energy, and star quality.[7] They performed to the dancehall song “Boasty” by rappers Wiley and Stefflon Don with Jamaican singer Sean Paul featuring Idris Elba;
  2. Ballroom dance taught by Emma Slater, and Sasha Farber: they taught a “sassy, intricate” cha-cha-cha with “lots of tricks” to the song “Free, Free, Free” by Pitbull featuring Theron Theron.[7] The choreographers looked for fun, and a noticeable “connection with [the] partner”;[7]
  3. Contemporary dance taught by Talia Favia: she taught her “fast, and challenging” routine that is “athletic, but with an emotional part [one] must feel”.[7] It's performed to “Moments Passed” by Dermot Kennedy.
  4. The Group Round with Mandy Moore,[7] assisted by All-Star Robert Roldan from season 7: Moore, for a first in the show's history, reworked the three previous rounds’ choreography into a new group number; to a different song, a breakdown remix of “Dance to the Music” by Sly and the Family Stone.[15] Moore looks for the same quality needed to compete in the Studio Shows, the ability to “push” even when injured, exhausted, or mentally drained.[15]

The Academy's first three rounds were shown in episode six.[7] Day One started with the Hip-hop Round, after which ten of the eighty-three dancers who started are cut, including Trent, one of the identical twins.[7] Day Two, the Ballroom Round cuts another fifteen people including: Colton, the other identical twin; and Sarah “Smac” McCreanor, a jazz dancer who wowed the judges as a comedic performer, but whose dancing was not at a high enough standard for the season.[7][16]

Episode seven picks up in the middle of the Contemporary Round, where fifty-four dancers faced more cuts: including Jay Jackson, a contemporary dancer, and drag queen, who competed in drag last year but opted not to this time;[7][16] and Jarrod Tyler Paulson, who is in a romantic relationship with fellow contestant Madison Jordan, who advanced to the Top Twenty.[15] Day Three sees the forty-three remaining dancers take on The Group Round: the judges do their cuts by seeing the contestants grouped by their dance genres; eleven are cut, leaving thirty-three.[15]

The Final Cuts

[edit]

The Academy Week finishes with the last two Academy Rounds: The Solo Round features each of the remaining thirty-three contestants dancing a solo in their own genre, thirteen are cut, and the Top Twenty are revealed; while The Final Cut pares the dancers down to ten contestants.[15]

In episode eight and nine, we will see The Final Cut coverage.[15] Each contestant will be paired with a SYTYCD All-Star, and choreographer, to rehearse a duet outside the contestant's genre.[15] In episode eight the Top Ten girls compete, the Top Ten boys compete the following week in episode nine.[17] The five contestants going through will be announced each night.[17]

Top Ten Girls

[edit]

In order of appearance in episode eight:[d]

Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s) Result
Mariah Russell
Jonathan Platero
Salsa "La Malanga" — Mercadonegro Oksana Platero Advanced
Melany Mercedes
Fik-Shun
Hip Hop "Get Silly" — V.I.C. Randi & Hef Eliminated
Ashley Sanchez
Lex Ishimoto
Contemporary "lovely" — Billie Eilish & Khalid Jaci Royal Eliminated
Anna Linstruth
Marko Germar
Jazz "Backwardz" — Junglebae Ray Leeper Advanced
Madison Jordan
Kiki Nyemchek
Cha Cha "Bola Rebola" — Tropkillaz, J Balvin & Anitta feat. Mc Zaac Sasha Farber & Emma Slater Advanced
Sofia Ghavami
Marko Germar
Jazz "Rinse & Repeat" — Riton feat. Kah-Lo Spencer Liff Eliminated
Sumi Oshima
Lex Ishimoto
Contemporary "Angels" — The xx Talia Favia Eliminated
Nazz Sldryan
Fik-Shun
Hip Hop "Overseas" — Desiigner feat. Lil Pump Luther Brown Eliminated
Sophie Pittman
Kiki Nyemchek
Cha Cha "Burnin' Up" — Jessie J feat. 2 Chainz Sharna Burgess Advanced
Stephanie Sosa
Robert Roldan
Contemporary "You Say" — Lauren Daigle Mandy Moore Advanced

Top Ten Boys

[edit]

In order of appearance in episode nine:[e]

Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s) Result
Bailey Muñoz
Lauren Froderman
Contemporary "Fire on Fire" — Sam Smith Jaci Royal Advanced
Ezra Sosa
Comfort Fedoke
Hip Hop "We Outta Here!" — Lil Yachty feat. Young Nudy Luther Brown Advanced
Vlad Kvartin
Melanie Moore
Contemporary "You Are the Reason" — Calum Scott Mandy Moore Eliminated
Aleksandr Ostanin
Lindsay Arnold
Cha Cha "Sax" — Fleur East Sharna Burgess Eliminated
Benjamin Castro
Koine Iwasaki
Salsa "Papi chulo... Te traigo el Mmm 2k16-Bombaton" — Lorna Oksana Platero Advanced
Bryan "Clocks" Volozanin
Jasmine Harper
Jazz "Take It" — Dom Dolla Spencer Liff Eliminated
Brandon Talbot
Lindsay Arnold
Cha Cha "Vivir Mi Vida (Yo Fred Remix)" — Marc Anthony Sasha Farber & Emma Slater Eliminated
Nathan Cherry
Melanie Moore
Contemporary "Weightless" —Adam French Talia Favia Eliminated
Gino Cosculluela
Lauren Froderman
Jazz "That's It (I'm Crazy)" — Sofi Tukker Ray Leeper Advanced
Eddie Hoyt
Comfort Fedoke
Hip Hop "Treadmill" — LightSkinKeisha Randi & Hef Advanced

Top Ten contestants

[edit]

The Top Ten contestants are:[f]

Female contestants

[edit]
Contestant Age Home Town Dance Style Elimination date Placement
Mariah Russell 19 Nashville, Tennessee Contemporary September 16, 2019 Runner-Up
Sophie Pittman 18 Collierville, Tennessee Contemporary September 16, 2019 4th Place
Madison Jordan 21 Lake Elmo, Minnesota Contemporary September 2, 2019 Top 6
Anna Linstruth 19 Las Vegas, Nevada Hip-Hop August 26, 2019 Top 8
Stephanie Sosa 19 Salt Lake City, Utah Ballroom August 19, 2019 Top 10

Male contestants

[edit]
Contestant Age Home Town Dance Style Elimination date Placement
Bailey Muñoz 18 Las Vegas, Nevada B-Boy September 16, 2019 Winner
Gino Cosculluela 18 Miami, Florida Contemporary September 16, 2019 3rd Place
Ezra Sosa 18 Provo, Utah Ballroom September 2, 2019 Top 6
Benjamin Castro 18 Miami, Florida Contemporary August 26, 2019 Top 8
Eddie Hoyt 19 Boscawen, New Hampshire Tap August 19, 2019 Top 10

Elimination chart

[edit]

Contestants are listed in chronological order of elimination.

Legend
Female Male Bottom 4 contestants Eliminated
Result show date: 8/19 8/26 9/2 9/16
Contestant Results
Bailey Muñoz Winner
Mariah Russell Runner-Up
Gino Cosculluela 3rd Place
Sophie Pittman 4th Place
Madison Jordan Btm 4 Elim
Ezra Sosa Btm 4 Btm 4
Benjamin Castro Elim
Anna Linstruth Btm 4
Eddie Hoyt Elim
Stephanie Sosa

Studio shows

[edit]

The Academy Rounds took place in April, the contestants had a few months off to practice as the live shows did not begin filming until August.[10] The rest of the season consists of the studio shows—taped in front of a live audience on Saturdays, then aired the following Monday; with the exception of the finale, which was broadcast live—eliminating finalists based on viewer votes to determine "America's favorite dancer".[47] Finalist Sophie Pittman shared the experience can be "kind of nerve-racking because we don't know what to expect".[8] According to Barbara Muñoz, mother of another finalist, Bailey, contestants "draw from a hat what genre and choreographer they're paired with".[39] The dancers are in rehearsal Tuesday through Saturday, "more than eight hours a day with professional choreographers", with new styles each week and usually one or more partners.[8]

Top Ten Perform: Round 1 (August 12, 2019)

[edit]
Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s)
Mariah Russell
Bailey Muñoz
Jazz "Love Shack" — The B-52's Mandy Moore
Stephanie Sosa
Gino Cosculluela
Hip Hop "Ice Me Out" — Kash Doll Luther Brown
Anna Linstruth
Benjamin Castro
Cha Cha "We Run the Night" — Havana Brown Sasha Farber & Emma Slater
Madison Jordan
Ezra Sosa
Contemporary "Lost" — Dermot Kennedy Talia Favia
Sophie Pittman
Eddie Hoyt
Jazz Funk "Sushi" — Merk & Kremont Brian Friedman
Madison Jordan
Anna Linstruth
Sophie Pittman
Mariah Russell
Stephanie Sosa
Contemporary "Saint Honesty" — Sara Bareilles Travis Wall
Benjamin Castro
Gino Cosculluela
Eddie Hoyt
Bailey Muñoz
Ezra Sosa
Hip Hop "Drop" — Smokepurpp Luther Brown

Top Ten Perform: Round 2 (August 19, 2019)

[edit]
Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s) Result
Stephanie Sosa Jive "Long Tall Sally (The Thing)" — Little Richard Sasha Farber & Emma Slater Eliminated
Gino Cosculluela Safe
Sophie Pittman Contemporary "when the party's over" — Billie Eilish Travis Wall Safe
Eddie Hoyt Eliminated
Anna Linstruth Hip Hop "Lottery" —K Camp Randi & Hef Bottom 4
Benjamin Castro Safe
Madison Jordan Jazz "You Can Leave Your Hat On" — Joe Cocker Ray Leeper Bottom 4
Ezra Sosa Safe
Mariah Russell Hip Hop "Tempo" — Lizzo feat. Missy Elliot Luther Brown Safe
Bailey Muñoz

Top Eight

[edit]

The Top Eight show marks a format change to a two-hour show. Each contestant will dance five times: a solo; two duets; and two group numbers including the opening; before the elimination at the end.[48]

Top Eight group number:

Choreographed by Jonathan and Oksana Platero, the number is a mash-up of Latin/Rhythm dances to "Himno del Carnaval", by District 78 featuring Agina.[48] Afterwards host Cat Deeley alluded to this episode going "around the world", with later numbers presenting dance styles from Africa, Polynesia, and South America.[48] Dance Spirit's Alison Feller noted the series has gone "above and beyond" to "bring worldly dance forms to the small screen".[48]

Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s) Result
Anna Linstruth
Benjamin Castro
Tahitian "Maua Taki" — Te Vaka Tiana Liufau Eliminated
Broadway "I'll Be Seeing You" — Tank and the Bangas Al Blackstone
Madison Jordan
Ezra Sosa
Hip Hop "Space" — Dizzee Rascal Randi & Hef Bottom 4
Argentine Tango "Despues Que Te Fuiste (A Daniel Berard)" — Pepe Motta Miriam Larici & Leonardo Barrionuevo
Mariah Russell
Bailey Muñoz
Cha Cha "Ce Soir (Hugel remix)" — El Profesor feat. Laura White Dmitry Chaplin Safe
Contemporary "Slide" — James Bay Mandy Korpinen & Elizabeth Petrin
Sophie Pittman
Gino Cosculluela
Contemporary "You Will Be Found" — Dear Evan Hansen KC Monnie Safe
Jazz "T-R-O-U-B-L-E" — Elvis Presley Jonathon Redavid
Benjamin Castro
Gino Cosculluela
Madison Jordan
Mariah Russell
Contemporary "bad guy" — Billie Eilish Talia Favia
Anna Linstruth
Bailey Muñoz
Sophie Pittman
Ezra Sosa
African Jazz "Rebirth" — Lord KraVen Sean Cheesman
Solos performed in their own style
Dancers Style Music
Sophie Pittman Contemporary "Skin" — Jamie Woon
Gino Cosculluela "Burn" — Andra Day
Madison Jordan "Celophane" — FKA Twigs
Ezra Sosa Latin Ballroom "Conga" — Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine
Mariah Russell Contemporary "Somebody" — Emeli Sandé
Bejamin Castro "Run Boy Run" — Woodkid
Anna Linstruth Hip Hop "bellyache (Marian Hill Remix)" — Billie Eilish
Bailey Muñoz Breakdancing "Let's Shut Up & Dance" — Jason Derulo, LAY & NCT 127

Top Six

[edit]

The Top Six sees the introduction of the All-stars (AS) into the opening group number, and as duet partners for the first round.[49] Choreographer Mandy Moore noted that using the AS forces the finalists to quickly develop a connection with a new partner.[34] Each finalist will perform: a solo; two duets, one with an AS, and one with their finalist partner; and two group numbers, the opening number, and a trio.[49]

Host Cat Deeley shared that last week's vote was the biggest of the season.[34] The judges know the results and will base their elimination decisions on the Top Six performances.[34]

Top Six group number:

Choreographed by Christopher "Pharside" Jennings & Krystal "Phoenix" Meraz the opening group included the six finalists as well as six All-stars doing a contemporary piece to "Down" by District 78 featuring Alexandra Senior.[49]

Duets
Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s) Result
Bailey Muñoz
Koine Iwasaki
Broadway "Mambo Italiano" — Dean Martin Al Blackstone Top 4
Gino Cosculluela
Comfort Fedoke
Hip Hop "Get Up" — Ciara feat. Chamillionaire Luther Brown
Madison Jordan
Lex Ishimoto
Jazz "Can't Rely on You" —Paloma Faith Mandy Moore Eliminated
Sophie Pittman
Kiki Nyemchek
Samba "Shape of You" — Ed Sheeran Pasha Kovalev Top 4
Mariah Russell
Fik-Shun
Hip Hop "We Gonna Win" — Miri Ben-Ari & Styles P. Misha Gabriel
Ezra Sosa
Gaby Diaz
Contemporary "Ne me quitte pas" — Jacques Brel Robert Roldan Eliminated
Sophie Pittman
Gino Cosculluela
Broadway "Down With Love" — Holly Palmer & Michael Bublé Warren Carlyle
Mariah Russell
Bailey Muñoz
Jazz "Need You Tonight" — INXS Ray Leeper
Madison Jordan
Ezra Sosa
Disco "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" — Sylvester Doriana Sanchez
Madison Jordan
Sophie Pittman
Mariah Russell
Jazz "I Can't Stand the Rain (2015 Remastered Version)" — Tina Turner Ray Leeper
Gino Cosculluela
Bailey Muñoz
Ezra Sosa
Contemporary "Amen (LVC Choir)" — Amber Run Talia Favia
Solos
Dancer Style Music
Mariah Russell Contemporary "Loved by You" — KIRBY
Ezra Sosa Jive "Runaway Baby" — Bruno Mars
Bailey Muñoz Breakdancing "Writing's on the Wall" — Sam Smith
Madison Jordan Contemporary "Lost" — Anouk
Sophie Pittman "Ain't No Way" — Shoshana Bean
Gino Cosculluela "Missing You" — Blake McGrath

Top Four

[edit]

The Top Four is the last night of the competition, and sees the continuation of the All-stars (AS) in the opening group number, and as duet partners.[50] Next week's finale showcases the Top Ten in favorite performances from the season.[50] Each finalist will perform: a solo; four duets, one with an AS, and one with each of the other finalists; and the opening number.[51] The votes from this week will be combined with last week's to reveal the winner in the finale.[52]

Top Four group number:

Choreographed by Mandy Moore the opening group included the finalists as well as AS doing a contemporary piece inspired by Cats, the movie based on the musical of the same name, premiering in December 2019; the performance used a medley inspired by the movie's music.[37]

Duets
Dancers Style Music Choreographer(s)
Sophie Pittman
Gino Cosculluela
Jazz "All Nite (Don't Stop) [Sander Kleinberg's Everybody Club Mix]" — Janet Jackson Ray Leeper
Mariah Russell
Bailey Muñoz
Smooth Jazz "16 Tons" — LeAnn Rimes Jonathon Redavid
Sophie Pittman
Marko Germar
Contemporary "90 Days" — P!nk feat. Wrabel Talia Favia
Bailey Muñoz
Comfort Fedoke
Hip Hop "Tell Me When To Go" — E-40 feat. Keak da Sneak Luther Brown
Mariah Russell
Gino Cosculluela
Quickstep "Bad Boy, Good Man" — Tape Five feat. Henrik Wager Sharna Burgess & Artem Chigvintsev
Sophie Pittman
Bailey Muñoz
Bollywood "Butterfly" —Pritam (from Jab Harry Met Sejal) Nakul dev Mahajan
Gino Cosculluela
Melanie Moore
Contemporary "Someone You Loved" — Lewis Capaldi Jaci Royal
Mariah Russell
Robert Roldan
Contemporary "Grey" — Ani DiFranco Mandy Moore
Gino Cosculluela
Bailey Muñoz
Broadway "The Girl from Ipanema" —Nat King Cole & Gregory Porter Al Blackstone
Sophie Pittman
Mariah Russell
Hip Hop "Sally Walker" — Iggy Azalea Luther Brown
Solos
Dancer Style Music Result
Gino Cosculluela Contemporary "I Don't Know My Own Strength" — Andrea Faustini 3rd Place
Sophie Pittman Contemporary "Try a Little Tenderness" — Otis Redding 4th Place
Mariah Russell Contemporary "If You Let Me" — Sinéad Harnett feat. GRADES Runner-Up
Bailey Muñoz Breakdancing "Don't Touch Me (Throw da Water on 'Em)" — Busta Rhymes Winner

Ratings

[edit]

U.S. Nielsen ratings

[edit]
Show Episode First Air Date Rating
(18–49)
Share
(18–49)
Viewers
(millions)
Rank
(timeslot)
Rank
(night)
1 Auditions #1 June 3, 2019 (2019-06-03) 0.7 4 2.70[53] 1 3 (tied)
2 Auditions #2 June 10, 2019 (2019-06-10) 0.6 3 2.48[54] 2 4 (tied)
3 Auditions #3 June 17, 2019 (2019-06-17) 0.5 3 2.06[55] 1 7 (tied)
4 Auditions #4 June 24, 2019 (2019-06-24) 0.5 3 2.09[56] 1 4 (tied)
5 Auditions #5 July 8, 2019 (2019-07-08) 0.5 3 2.14[57] 1 5 (tied)
6 Academy #1 July 15, 2019 (2019-07-15) 0.5 3 1.91[58] 1 5 (tied)
7 Academy #2 July 22, 2019 (2019-07-22) 0.4 2 1.92[59] 1 5 (tied)
8 Final Cut - The Top Ten Girls July 29, 2019 (2019-07-29) 0.4 2 1.91[60][h] 1 5 (tied)
9 Final Cut - The Top Ten Guys August 5, 2019 (2019-08-05) 0.4 3 1.95[62] 2 5 (tied)
10 Top 10 Perform, Round 1 August 12, 2019 (2019-08-12) 0.5 3 2.25[63] 1 5 (tied)
11 Top 10 Perform, Round 2 August 19, 2019 (2019-08-19) 0.5 3 2.30[64] 2 4 (tied)
12 Top 8 Perform August 26, 2019 (2019-08-26) 0.4 2 2.08[65] 4 5 (tied)
13 Top 6 Perform September 2, 2019 (2019-09-02) 0.4 2 1.83[66] 4 4 (tied)
14 Top 4 Perform September 9, 2019 (2019-09-09) 0.4 2 1.93[67] 4 4 (tied)
15 Season Finale September 16, 2019 (2019-09-16) 0.4 2 1.93[68] 4 5 (tied)

So You Think You Can Dance Live! 2019 tour

[edit]

In July 2019, the So You Think You Can Dance Live! 2019 tour was announced.[69] The forty-stop tour starts October 12 in Atlantic City, New Jersey—covering the U.S., with two Canadian stops—and ends December 6, 2019, in Reno, Nevada.[9]

The Top Ten contestants will be among the performers, which will also include two SYTYCD All-Stars: Lauren Froderman, season seven winner; and Cyrus "Glitch" Spencer, season nine finalist.[70][6] The concert will feature some of the current season's most popular routines and also include original works created for the tour.[70]

National Dance Day

[edit]

The 10th anniversary of National Dance Day (September 21), an event started by SYTYCD creator and lead judge Nigel Lythgoe's American Dance Movement (formerly the Dizzy Feet Foundation) was announced for several weeks.[71] The official routine choreography is by Matt Steffanina to “Electricity” by Dua Lipa.[71]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This amount has remained unchanged since season three in 2007: Benji Schwimmer won $100,000 in season two in 2006, plus a hybrid SUV; in the series' debut in 2005, winner Nick Lazzarini received $100,000, and the use of a Manhattan penthouse apartment for a year which he exchanged for the cash equivalent.
  2. ^ originally reported in episode six as seventy-nine contestants
  3. ^ originally reported in episode six as seventy-nine contestants
  4. ^ age as of air date, as noted by SYTYCD.
  5. ^ age as of air date, as noted by SYTYCD.
  6. ^ Ages as of July 2019, as noted by SYTYCD.
  7. ^ He has made appearances on: Dancing with the Stars;[39] and Disney's Shake It Up and Austin and Ally.[36][39]
  8. ^ Although TV by the Numbers reported the number of viewers as 1.19 million, it is clearly a typo with the final two digits switched: the preliminary results were 1.91 million, with Fox's average for the night being 2.10 million (the other Fox show, Beat Shazam, was at 2.30 million),[61] while with the final results the Fox average for the night remained 2.10 million, with Beat Shazam at 2.29 million, so 1.91 is the missing number for the average to work; the average would have dropped to 1.74 million if 1.19 was the correct figure.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Wloszczyna, Susan (May 20, 2019). "So you think you have to wait until June 10 for the premiere of the 16th season of SYTYCD? Think again! [VIDEO]". GoldDerby. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  2. ^ Montgomery, Daniel (August 12, 2019). "Will Travis Wall's groundbreaking So You Think You Can Dance routine help him make Emmy history? [WATCH]". GoldDerby. Retrieved August 19, 2019.
  3. ^ Amanda Garrity (June 4, 2019). "Why Vanessa Hudgens Isn't a Judge on So You Think You Can Dance This Season". Good Housekeeping. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  4. ^ "Video: So You Think You Can Dance host Cat Deeley on what she would do for an Emmy win after five nominations". Los Angeles Times. April 1, 2019. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  5. ^ Castro, Danilo (June 3, 2019). "SYTYCD 2019 Contestants: Who Made It Through Tonight LIVE". Heavy.com. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Top Ten: Round 1". So You Think You Can Dance. Season 16. Episode 10. August 13, 2019. FOX.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Montgomery, Daniel (July 16, 2019). "'So You Think You Can Dance' recap: 'Academy Part 1' started the journey to the top 10 of season 16". GoldDerby. Retrieved July 16, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d Spencer, Alexa Imani (September 2, 2019). "'Dance is my voice': Collierville's Sophie Pittman shares her journey on So You Think You Can Dance". The Commercial Appeal. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  9. ^ a b c "So You Think You Can Dance Live! 2019". DanceLiveTour.com. June 23, 2019. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Schneider, Kim (September 13, 2019). "Lake Elmo native top contestant on 'So You Think You Can Dance'". The Gazette. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  11. ^ "So You Think You Can Dance Renewed for Season 16 at Fox". TVLine. January 14, 2019. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  12. ^ Busch, Monica (July 27, 2019). "Leominster dancer shows her moves". Sentinel & Enterprise. Retrieved July 28, 2019.
  13. ^ a b "So You Think You Can Dance returned with a thrilling new addition: a bullet time stage". reality blurred. June 4, 2019. Retrieved June 9, 2019.
  14. ^ Wloszczyna, Susan (June 25, 2019). "So You Think You Can Dance 16, episode 4: Which audition sparked the most joy for you? [POLL]". GoldDerby. Retrieved July 3, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Montgomery, Daniel (July 23, 2019). "'So You Think You Can Dance' recap: 'Academy Part 2' cut the competition to the top 20". GoldDerby. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  16. ^ a b Wloszczyna, Susan (July 16, 2017). "'So You Think You Can Dance' 16: Which Academy cuts hurt the worst? And what saves had you smiling?". GoldDerby. Retrieved July 18, 2019.
  17. ^ a b Nunez, Franky (July 23, 2019). "SYTYCD 2019 Academy 2 Recap - Season 16 Live Blog". MJ's Big Blog. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
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