âDancing With the Starsâ recap: Bindi Irwin, Nick Carter, Alek Skarlatos head to finale
Itâs nearly Thanksgiving, so itâs time for us to talk turkey, fellow âDancing With the Starsâ fans. Here goes: Bindi Irwin should and will win this season, unless she faceplants or jumps ship.
At this point, sheâd almost have to commit a murder -- of ballroom darling Derek Hough, no less â to lose this thing.
The judges, notoriously and historically nitpicky of a front-runner like her, have harped on her shoulders and posture and hips (not enough swivel, said an overly critical Julianne Hough recently). But Bindiâs worked on all of that and, after coming in as a complete novice, has blown everyone out of the water, consistently, week to week.
Her final three competitors, on the other hand, have been on performance roller coasters, with ups and down, highs and lows. There have been standout numbers, like Alek Skarlatosâ first perfect-scoring waltz from the semifinals, but these guys are all over the map. Affable, talented and magnetic, each in his own way, but theyâre not as skilled on the dance floor as the perpetually upbeat Team Crikey teenager.
It may be harsh to say, but they are not downright adorable. Nor would most of us want to be stranded on a (critter-filled) desert island with them. And please, they couldnât possibly pull off the following Bindi comment, said with earnest spontaneity amid a shower of confetti last week: âItâs raining happiness!â She didnât just sell that line, she meant it, from the very core of her sunshiny being.
But between here and the title, thereâs more dancing and a lot of filler. Iâll spend considerably less time on the latter. Sorry, devotees of Who is Fancy.
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The two-part finale kicked off Monday night and promised two dances from the celebrities -- judgesâ choice, with Carrie Ann Inaba, Julianne Hough and Bruno Tonioli helping with choreography and creative concepts, and the much-ballyhooed freestyle, with additional dancers and special effects. (Donât look now, here comes The Fog!)
Guests included pop star Meghan Trainor, hot off her on-stage makeout session on Sunday nightâs American Music Awards, opening the program with her event-appropriate tune, âBetter When Iâm Dancinâ.â
But come on, it was all about the contest and the scores. Which three celebs are continuing to battle for the crown? Read on to find out.
Letâs go in chronological order, starting with judgeâs choice.
Carlos PenaVega and Witney Carson
Bruno said during rehearsal that Carlos can win, but he needs to stand out more in his upcoming dance. Witney quoted Will Smith, for some odd reason but ostensibly for motivation. The choreography on their foxtrot was beautiful, the performance emotive. Carlos processed every critique and note from the season, it seemed, and held his posture wonderfully. Julianne called it the âsexiest foxtrot ever,â and a âhuge improvement.â Carrie Ann said he was âso deservingâ to be in the final and âcommanded the stage.â
Score: 30, his first perfect score of the contest
Alek Skarlatos and Lindsay Arnold
Coming off that perfectly scored waltz, Carrie Ann told Alek she needed to see more hip action from him. He protested for the millionth time that heâs not a sexy dude and he especially has trouble sexing it up with Lindsay because he thinks of her as a sister. Bruno said he âput so much commitmentâ into the rumba, but still stopped and started with his hip swivel. There was a gorgeous spin in there, and Carrie Ann saw an itty bitty teeny tiny bit of hip movement. Julianne said it takes a lot of courage to wear silver silk pajamas and ballroom dance in front of millions of viewers, and she admired his continued commitment. The technique? Well that still lags, but this was never a competition about just dancing anyway. Everyone knows that.
Score: 27
Nick Carter and Sharna Burgess
Nick had done the jive earlier in the season, and it didnât go so well (a sad and paltry 21 on the scoreboard). He slipped and fell to the floor and didnât hit his flicks and kicks. So Julianne and the rest of the judges thought it would be a good idea to make him do it again. Sadists! But heâs a different dancer now, as evidenced by his sharp and gutsy routine with the sizzling hot Sharna. He was obviously so much more comfortable with the style this time, and the number was packed with content. âThat was ridiculous,â Carrie Ann said, calling it his âbest performance of the whole contest.â Julianne said he âperformed the crapâ out of that jive.
Score: 30
Bindi Irwin and Derek Hough
Quickstep is the most difficult dance, so of course, the judges gave it to Bindi. Carrie Ann said during rehearsal that she wanted to see Bindiâs progression from an earlier performance, and Derek doubled over coughing during the pre-taped video. But the five-time Mirrorball champ would never let a thing like a head cold keep him down. Nor would he repeat mistakes from the past â cardinal rule of quickstep: do not break hold â and so he and Bindi did not. They were attached for that entire kicky, jaunty turbo-charged number. The crowd went wild, and Julianne called Bindi the Energizer bunny. Bruno said âevery aspect was gleaming like a brilliant cut diamond,â and Carrie Ann said, âA star is born.â
Score: 30
Filler time, but it was fun to see Who is Fancy in a swingy green sequined jacket, trilling the new song, âBoys Like You,â with Ariana Grande and Trainor. No lip-synching!
Next up: freestyle, which has always been dubbed the âmake or breakâ dance and one of the most important performances of the season. And itâs host Tom Bergeronâs fave.
Carlos and Witney
Carlos and Witney decided to invite his wife, Alexa PenaVega and two other previous contestants, Paula Deen (?) and Hayes Grier (?) to take part in their hip hop and salsa mix. Co-host Erin Andrews missed the email that wouldâve included her, she said with only a little bitterness. Julianne said that kind of collaboration had never been done before, but âit workedâ because it was âgoing for goldâ and âtaking risks.â âHip hop hooray,â said Bruno, noting that it was âloaded with cheeky fun.â Carrie Ann said it was âthe freshest, fly-estâ freestyle sheâd ever seen. I couldnât take my eyes off Witney because she crushed that and should definitely do that style more often. But the whole thing was dope, as the kids say. (Iâll leave Paulaâs legs out of this.)
Score: 30, his second-ever perfect score
Alek and Lindsay
Alek and Lindsay chose to simulate an Army obstacle course as the backdrop for their freestyle, complete with a steep climbing wall. There were rappelling and camouflage, an awesome lift and a trust fall at the end. Bruno complimented the choreography, which was incredibly creative, and Carrie Ann called it a victory from beginning to end. Julianne compared it to Tough Mudder and Spartan races, and said it was âphysically and emotionally powerful.â
Score: 30
Bindi and Derek
Derek broke down in the rehearsal video talking about how much he loves Bindi and how well he wants to do for her. Theyâre both battered and bruised, but they tackled the most emotional subject, the loss of her father, wildlife conservationist Steve âCrocodile Hunterâ Irwin to the tear-jerker tune, âFootprints in the Sand.â That gorgeous dance ended with a massive photo of Bindi and her dad, and not a dry eye in the house. And that, fellow fans, is why Derek is the winningest pro in âDWTSâ history. Carrie Ann trotted out words like âartistry,â âpower,â âcharisma,â âpoignancy.â Julianne wiped away tears and said sheâs âleft an imprint on all our hearts.â Unlike Derek, I was not under the influence of cold meds, and I cried anyway.
Score: 30, their second perfect score of the night
Nick and Sharna
Shocker: they picked a Backstreet Boys song, âLarger Than Life,â for their freestyle. Sharnaâs already admitted to rampant fandom as a teenager, complete with Nickâs poster on her bedroom wall. The synchronized dance really benefitted from all those extra pros â it made a statement. And Nick was obviously in his comfort zone. Julianne thought it was âso far beyondâ and âso tight,â with Nick holding his own next to all those pros. Carrie Ann said it was âincredibly freaking awesome.â
Score: 30, ditto on the perfect 60 tally from two dances
Somebody had to go home, and it was both judges' scores and viewer votes that counted. Competing for the Mirrorball: Alek and and super-surprised Lindsay (check out her incredible non-poker face), Bindi and Derek (to no oneâs surprise), and Nick and Sharna (he surged at just the right time).
Despite his perfectly scored night, Carlos was eliminated, but he kept his great attitude to the end. He called it a âlife changingâ experience that strengthened his marriage.
To tide you over, fans, hereâs a sneak of Tuesday nightâs finale. There will be a â24-Hour Fusion Challenge,â where the competitors have to do a mashup of two dance styles that they had only one day to learn and practice.
And all 13 competitors will be back, including the still-convalescing Tamar Braxton, the hip-swiveling Victor Espinoza and the serial-mooning Paula Deen. âReal Housewives of Atlantaâ alum Kim Zolciak, who suffered a mini-stroke and had to leave the contest, will finally get to do that âI Dream of Jeannieâ samba. Excited? Check back tomorrow.
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