As Blake Lewis showed this week, chivalry is not dead. But it may well have killed his hopes of winning “
After last week’s results show, a coin toss decided the performing order for the finale.
Blake won the toss, then asked Jordin Sparks if she wanted to go first. The teenager, wise beyond her years, said no.
It was a gracious, honorable gesture … but it was also really dumb.
On a stage as big as this one, where popular votes decide the outcome, getting the last word before the audience is a tremendous advantage. The fact that Jordin had it would prove decisive.
Each contestant sang three times in the finale: an encore performance of a song they’d previously performed on the show, something new and the songwriting winner.
Blake had the slight edge after the first two numbers, but each finalist had to finish with “This is My Now,” the winning entry in the show’s songwriting competition. He must have looked the lyrics and music and said to himself, What could possibly have come in second? It didn’t suit his style at all, and he looked as if he knew it as he slogged through the vocals.
Jordin, however, found it right in her wheelhouse. She belted out an impressive vocal performance, even as she broke down at the finish.
The real star of the night, however, was Seattle.
Simon Cowell at one point called the city’s auditions “the worst we’ve ever seen.” But both Blake and Jordin made it all the way from there to the finale, not to mention that Sanjaya Malakar tried out there as well.
At the end of Blake’s final number, Simon said, “I always said there was talent in Seattle and I was right.
” Good call, Nostradamus.
Blake opened the night with a repeat of “You Give Love a Bad Name” from Bon Jovi week. It’s easy to see why he chose it; it gave him the chance to start in with the beatboxing and race across the stage like a full-fledged rock star.
The judges were each impressed to varying degrees, with Randy giving him a 10 for beatboxing, and Paula a 10-plus on general principles. Simon said, “You’re not the best singer in the competition, but you are the best performer.”
S'up dawg?
Think this guy looks like Randy Jackson? Check out the best of our reader submissions.
