“America’s Got Talent: The Champions” S02.E06 Finals Recap ★★★★☆
10 talented acts compete in the AGT Champions finals. Will one of the international acts come out on top?
WE HAVE REACHED THE AMERICA’S GOT TALENT: THE CHAMPIONS FINALE, and by finale I mean the “finale” before the real finale where we spend two hours waiting for five seconds of news. We started with 40 acts, whittled our way down to 16 semifinalists, and are finally down to just 10 acts remaining in the finals.
Uh oh, did someone leave Terry out in the rain? He looks like he’s trying out for the role of Tin Man in an upcoming Broadway performance. Meanwhile, Alesha appears to have stolen the top half of Heidi’s dress, and you’ll never believe this, but Simon is wearing a V-neck.
Lots of nervous energy tonight, both from the performers and from us watching at home. Terry tells us it’s all in the hands of the superfans now. Normally that would be terrifying, but these judges sent home Duo Destiny and Brian King Joseph the last two times we gave them any power, so maybe American democracy is out best hope.
*gulp*
Ten acts. One winner. A million dollars. Let’s do this.
Our 10 finalists perform
Alexa Lauenburger
Looks like we’ll start our night with America’s favorite German (not much competition there, am I right?). Alexa and her doggos have been cute all season and make sense as an opener to get the crowd going. Unfortunately, they decide to go all Dr. Doolittle in Alexa’s intro and make her dogs talk, and I’m immediately reminded why I’m not typically into animal acts.
Her littlest doggy Anna is ornery tonight, and the act isn’t quite as tight as it has been the last two weeks. As always, Alexa means joy, and it’s nice to start the night with a smile, and we get the doggo Conga line again, but this feels like a missed opportunity. I guess you really can’t teach old dogs new tricks, at least not with only a week of preparation.
Duo Transcend
WOW.
Duo Transcend comes out in blindfolds from the top and you can tell they’re putting everything on the line here. You can see them both sort of feeling each other out, so you know the blindfolds are legit. I hate the mid-act commercial so much, and there’s already way too much editing and slo-mo on this show.
But man, this is an absolutely incredible act. It starts out a bit slow but picks up with the return from commercial, and then they just fire off one amazing act after the other. There are drops and flips and twists and catches, all of them blindfolded. It’s dangerous and sexy and heart-stopping — it’s the best I’ve ever seen these two, and it’s clear they put the right duo in the finals.
They’re overcome with emotion as the act concludes with her suspended from the bar holding her husband in a beautiful final moment. You can tell this was the final exclamation point they’ve dreamed of for years. It was worth the wait. They might win this thing.
Angelina Jordan
It’s been so long since we’ve seen Angelina Jordan. She’s our first returning golden buzzer act, and we haven’t seen her since our first episode which feels years ago at this point. I didn’t like leaving the golden buzzers out of the semis for a number of reasons, but one of them is how much it killed any momentum for these acts. It would just feel weird at this point if Angelina was our winner after only two performances separated by so much time.
And yet… she is magnificent, crushing “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” in a minor key she’s arranged. Angelina is so good. I can’t help but think she would’ve been an absolute superstar on a show like American Idol or The Voice where we got to hear her perform week after week. How is this girl 13?!
The best thing about Angelina is how unique everything about her is. Her version of Yellow Brick Road is melancholy and haunting in the most beautiful way. She’s absolutely captivating with a style all her own and complete stylistic and vocal control.
This finale is shaping up to be a doozy. Two potential winners already in just three acts.
Boogie Storm
And then… Boogie Storm. They’re the argument for not bothering with the golden buzzer acts until the finales.
These dudes do some flips and that’s pretty much it. No choreography whatsoever, just dudes in costumes with fun music. They’re basically a high school basketball halftime show.
The crowd and Simon lap up every second of it. Howie buzzes, because all of us at home can’t. As we head to commercial, Simon asks him where else he’d be able to see an act like this. “Hopefully nowhere,” says Howie.
Amen, brother. What a waste of a spot in the finals.
Silhouettes
I have to give Silhouettes props.
Like, actual physical props, because apparently they can’t do their silhouette act without them. The OGs of silhouetting, what I loved about this team in their initial act was how they made their silhouettes with just body parts rather than all the subsequent acts that used a ton of props.
Tonight’s Silhouettes are Prop City. I’m not particularly moved by the message of homelessness because I’m mostly annoyed that they keep using literal subtitles to explain the story. If you have to use silhouette words, it’s probably a hint that your storytelling isn’t good enough on its own. Simon needs subtitles on the final moment as the team spells out “Kindness, but in Comic Sans font.
I’m bummed. I liked Silhouettes, but they made some mistakes both in performance and choreography here. A big step down.
Hans
Oh good, I needed a phone break to check my social media.
Simon hits his buzzer on Hans. I only wish he’d have done it before he even walked out on stage. Or instead of voting him through last time.
Ugh.
Tyler Butler-Figueroa
TBF is just another frustrating reminder that we’re watching a cute kid play violin instead of a world-class talent like Brian King Joseph. Honestly, I like Tyler. I’d just like him a lot more if there wasn’t an exact replica of his act in the same competition that’s at least 10 times as talented and entertaining.
It’s just Tyler on stage, and it’s another slow start. Tyler’s a nice violin player, but his thing is energy and dancing and joy. I keep waiting for the beat to drop, for Tyler to start jumping around and get the crowd into it, but it never happens. Instead, we’re at a child’s violin recital. And truly, he’s good, but like, is he finals good?
As always, I will sweat Tyler out until he’s officially eliminated, but I disagree with the judges here. I just don’t see a path to victory.
V. Unbeatable
Not gonna lie, I’m at least a little devastated that V. Unbeatable doesn’t get to go last tonight. I thought AGT would let them drop the hammer.
My disappointment is fleeting though, because OMG THIS IS AWESOME.
You can’t even blink when you watch this team. V. Unbeatable is the greatest dance act I’ve ever seen, and I’m not sure it’s even close. And they somehow manage to get better every single time they’re on a stage.
The verticality and creativity here is just astounding. V. Unbeatable begin the act flipping a kid about 15 feet from the judges to a dude on stage atop another guy’s shoulders. There are bicycles involved and I don’t even know how to describe the things they’re doing with them but they are incredible.
At one point, I’m pretty sure we got five people stacked on top of one another, each of them thrown on top of the other. This is just one giant jaw drop from beginning to end. Howie leaves his chair to give them a standing bow-down-ovation, and he’s right.
Cue up the Vince Carter GIF. It’s over! Everyone, go home!
V. Unbeatable remind me of how I feel when I watch Steph Curry or Patrick Mahomes, like they’re doing something on a stage I’ve never seen before and I’m absolutely mesmerized. They expand the stage horizontally and vertically. I would pay a lot of money to watch this act in person. I had to watch three times just to remember to take a few notes.
Game over, y’all. Game over.
Honestly, just stop reading and watch the act.









