Four expert bakers aim to win their jaw-dropping cake a spot at a major party or special event. With Jonathan Bennett hosting, each of the bakers will bake one-of-a-kind creations with the hopes of impressing well-known pastry chef Ron Ben-Israel, Fonuts co-owner Waylynn Lucas and some very special guest judges. Each week, only one contestant will take the cake to headline the main event, and take home the sweet grand prize of $10,000. Each of the bakers will compete in two rounds during the competition. In the first, they will be given a surprise ingredient that they must incorporate into the recipe. And in the second, they must make a cake that contains three special features that match the event’s theme. In both rounds, their skills will be tested as they race to get dessert on the table before time runs out. At the end of the second round, they will be judged on taste and presen
Amateur performers of all kinds are rated by studio judges on a talent scale. As the talent level varies, so do the rewards, and once their performance is over, the contestants must swallow their pride and accept the ranking they are given.
The best dancers of the country will once again take to the stage on the TNT TV channel along with the start of the New Dances show. Now there will be no mentors and their teams, but only face-to-face dance fights between participants in four categories: solo, duets, children and teams. More than 400 people or 144 creative units passed the selection in four categories. They will determine the best of the best in a fundamentally new format - in a face-to-face battle: the loser immediately leaves the project, the winner moves on. The prize fund of the project is 10 million rubles. The main persons of the new project will be those with whom the word “dancing” has been associated for the last 7 years: Miguel, Lyaysan Utyasheva, Ulyana Pylaeva and other heroes loved by the audience. Each issue has a new star jury, which includes both professionals from the dance industry and those who do not distinguish between crump and locking.
Factory Girl is the Korean reality version of the movie The Devil Wears Prada, with the nine members of Girls' Generation taking on the role of fashion editors for a magazine aimed at teenagers and young adults. The editor of Elle Girl Korea, Nam Yoon Hee, as well as other faculty, frequently appeared on the show to give the Girls' Generation members assignments and guidance.
Abby Lee Miller is back and it's not about plastic trophies anymore. Inviting a group of young adult dancers to live with her, she looks to test their abilities with challenges, as they compete for a spot on Abby's new team.
“Trot Girls Japan” is an audition program that aims to crown the top diva by having contestants perform classic songs spanning the Showa to Heisei eras, covering genres such as folk tunes, mood songs, enka, group sounds, folk, new music, and city pop.
Derek Bieri takes old cars from non-running derelicts to renovated transformations. He seeks out abandoned cars where they lie dormant and gets them running again. Along the way, Derek shares the cars' history, who they were originally intended for and why they're still relevant, all told with his clever wit and timely humor.