She's baaaaaaack
Disappointingly demure, Paula Abdul teaches TV how to be nice on Live to Dance
Paula’s back and teaching television how to be nice. A year and a half after leaving the judges’ panel on American Idol, Paula Abdul returned to the small screen this week with the premiere of Live to Dance. The former Idol judge was disappointingly demure.
While we’re happy she’s quit the boozing/ pill-popping/ whatever it was that had her slurring through interviews, we miss her crazy antics. The best comment she made all night was: “You can’t teach people what oozes out of you!”
Essentially the show is a dance-only version of America’s Got Talent. Or maybe it’s more of a Dancing With the Stars minus the stars or So You Think You Can Dance with… wait, it's basically a rip of SYTYCD.
Well, there are a few differences; namely there's no Cat Deeley. Instead, Andrew Günsberg (imagine the love child of Deeley and Ryan Secrest with an Australian accent) hosts the show. While Günsberg is nice eye-candy in that complicated-hairstyle sort of way, we’d prefer to see more Paula, the celebrity whose name is plugging the show.
The two-hour premiere kicked off with auditions in Los Angeles and New York. Hopefuls of all ages (no, really— everywhere from 9 to 83-year-olds) showed their best moves.
Abdul said she was looking for an act "willing to break barriers." What kind of barriers she meant remains unclear. We’re hoping not the sound barrier or the Great Barrier Reef, though with Paula you never know.
Early on the crowd favorite was couple Bev and Hap, aged 83 and 68 respectively. The two started out dancing to “Moon River” in the fashion you’d expect from a couple that age. Then, much to the crowd’s surprise, they started locking and popping to James Brown’s “Get Up Offa That Thing.”
The age span of the contestants was about the only aspect differentiating it from similar reality shows, and it wasn’t enough to keep our attention. After about an hour and a half we had difficulty relating to the judges who cooed over the youngsters of the act Chi-Town Finest Breakers, a favorite of the studio audience.
In addition to Abdul, judges included choreographer Travis Payne (best known for working with Michael Jackson) and Pussycat Doll Kimberly Wyatt. While Wyatt is certainly more tolerable than prissy Pussycat Nicole Scherzinger, unfortunately she’s not much smarter.
The trio of Live to Dance judges wasn’t all saccharine sweet, rejecting a hearing-impaired dancer “C-Bunny” and a Paula-obsessed flight attendant.
Despite a few memorable, wacky characters, the procession of contestants dragged on too long, with Paula interrupting with peppy but tame comments like, “You inspire me so much,” and “You live it, you love it, you are it!”
Maybe two hours was overkill, though from the popularity of similar programs it seems America can’t get enough of reality talent shows.
Paula certainly succeeded in emitting "nice" vibes. However, we liked her bubbly, absurd gushing and she seemed to miss that mark.