The judges liked Pizzi and put him through to Vegas. It also didn’t help that he had blond tips a la ‘N Sync-era Justin Timberlake. His jokes were solely about sexual tension between the judges, which wasn’t funny, ’cause there isn’t any. But all Pizzi’s act revolved around was bad ventriloquism and an iPad-operated digital screen with moving pictures of each judges’ face. John Pizzi, comedian/ventriloquist: When a guy tells you he’s worked every gig from “bar mitzvahs to opening for strippers” you want to like him, if for nothing else than the obvious fact that he’s got some serious drive. Regardless, there’s no denying dude’s talent.ġ. There was some debate as to whether his talents could support an entire arena-size show. Thanks to his innate ability to contort his body in ungodly ways and shuffle around the stage in that super slow-mo mode on your old VCR, this 22-year-old wowed the judges. Tyrese Green, a.k.a Stepz, dancer: A native of Peterson, New Jersey, Stepz claims to “bring everything around him to life” when he dances. Yeah, their daughter’s name was Arlene.” Stern and Mandel loved him, and Cotter, after being put through to Vegas, said he felt “birth-of-my-children” excited.ģ. Sample material: “I used to go over and bounce on my neighbor’s tramp-arlene. His jokes were effortlessly witty, his timing was exact and, above all, he looked completely at ease. But after learning about this father of three, a longtime comedy club rat who claims to have been working on his craft for 23 years, we couldn’t help but root for him. Tom Cotter, standup comic: We try not to let those intro montages for any contestant color us. Of course, as is the case with any talent competition, there were also some winners. What would be the show’s strategy on Day Two in the Big Apple? It didn’t take long to find out: right out of the gate we were bludgeoned with the strange, brutal and bizarre. Without the downright despicable acts, the decent ones could no longer shine bright. In our eyes, this move only further emphasized the mediocrity of the show’s talent. Was it a smart move to showcase only the top-tier acts? No, it was not. Monday night’s America’s Got Talent, the first of two days of auditions in New York, broke an unspoken code of conduct for reality-based talent competitions: the obscenely bad acts were largely ignored.
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