Lee Jung-jae, Adam Scott, Noah Wyle, and the best of our Emmy Drama Actor interviews
Read on for highlights from each interviews and links to watch our full video Q&As.
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Cox started playing lawyer Matt Murdock, aka the blind superhero Daredevil, back in 2015, and he's figured out his two priorities for every action scene, based on the character's superhuman abilities and his emotional primacy.
'One, be clear-minded about how emotionally relevant this scene is to Matt,' Cox explains about the Disney+ character. 'Sometimes we have a scene where he's just trying to garner information, and to get that, he needs to go through people. So make sure that the action is appropriate for that, so that he's not unnecessarily violent or brutal, because it doesn't require huge physical emotion. Then there are scenes where he's fighting someone with whom there's a history, or the person has been in some way involved in something that Matt feels very strongly against. So that fight becomes emotional, and it is more brutal, and probably more unnecessarily violent, and all those things. So to be clear and tell, in the simplest ways, the emotional story of the action.'
Watch our complete interview with Charlie Cox.
Hamm stars as the morally questionable Andy "Coop" Cooper, who turns to stealing from his wealthy neighbors to keep up appearances when he loses his high-paying hedge fund job on the Apple TV+ series.
He says, "What I really liked about his journey in the first season was just how much it settled on him when it was looking very dire in the last few episodes where he was going to have to really kind of come-to-Jesus about what he has gotten himself into and how that not only is going to affect his life, but also the people he really truly cares about, his children, his ex-wife, his sister. The collateral damage of all of this, I think, was something that he was really confronting in the last few episodes. It's a wonderful scene with Amanda Peet, where she says you've got to fight, you can't give up. Are your kids going to be the kids whose dad is in jail for murder? If you didn't do it, figure it out. That was a really lovely, important scene, and I think it really resonated with Coop, and it really hit home. And he really had to double down on figuring this out."
Watch our complete interview with Jon Hamm.
For the Prime Video series, Hodge's performance as Det. Alex Cross is the perfect combination of cerebral and physical, swaggering and sensitive, and tough and gentle that the role requires.
"I think every actor has to maintain independent individuality when they approach any character, right? That's the artist's process," Hodge tells Gold Derby. "So I just thought about the honest foundation of his desires, his wants. What is his current situation as a man? Where can I connect to those things personally with my own life experience? And then it becomes a really easy process from there. When you focus on the nucleus of a character's honesty, it eliminates so many other factors that would serve to only deter your creativity. So really, you come up with your own version by not even trying to come up with your own version. You don't focus on that. You just focus on the character's honesty."
Watch our complete video interview with Aldis Hodge.
The Emmy winner plays Gi-hun, who is seeking revenge in Season 2 after winning the game for the first season. The cast and creator behind the Netflix show joined us for an exclusive interview.
He says, "For Season 1 it was really about the competitive world that we live in. For Season 2, it's more about the democratic voting system. Does it really work? Because are taking sides, grouping together, clashing against one another. So there's that added layer of political message to it. And then Season 3 will come to you with another message. And I think these social and political messages were resonant not just in Korea only, but through the entire global community. It's things that we have to deal with, with all our might together. … And I loved how there's that virtual cycle of us bringing questions to the table, and people would think about it, they would talk about it after watching Squid Game, and then those conversations will circle back to us, the creators and cast, and we can add that to our next season."
Watch our complete video interview with Lee Jung-jae.
The second season of the Disney+ series wasn't merely the completion of Luna's own years-long trek to tell a story of how Rogue One's Cassian Andor became a hero of the Rebellion, it was part of a greater, game-changing transformation of the overall Star Wars universe.
He says, "I'm very pleased. This has been a very long journey for us, but I wouldn't change anything. I think the challenges we went through, the complexity of the production and the executing of this — we went through COVID, we went through strikes, shooting far away from home — all of that paid off because this is a show that represents me as an artist, and as audience too. It's something I would like to see as audience, and I am proud to be part of something that is connecting like the show is connecting with audiences."
Read our complete interview with Diego Luna.
The Hunkpapa Lakota actor stars as Navajo Tribal Police Lt. Joe Leaphorn, who in Season 3 is navigating the effects of moral gray areas he entered during Season 2 which have landed him in the investigative crosshairs of an FBI agent.
'Authenticity is very important to us,' McClarnon told Gold Derby. 'The books are written by Tony Hillerman, and we as Native people are just trying to add a little different perspective, kind of recontextualize the books a little bit, and bring these characters to life — real Natives bringing these characters to life.'
Read our complete interview with Zahn McClarnon.
The newly-announced knight and Oscar winner Oldman plays abrasive MI5 boss Jackson Lamb, the rude, crass, and often drunk department head with a bracing panache on the Apple TV+ series.
"As the seasons go on and incrementally more is revealed of Jackson, you as an actor are forming a more complete picture of him. And then of course we have Season 5, and that pulls back another layer of the onion to his character and really why he is the way he is," he says about fleshing out the why behind his grouchy, ill-tempered exterior. "It works in a way as a defense mechanism. He's not gonna let you in. You're not going to really get to know him. And that really is part of his skill also, because by doing that, he has an edge over you. I mean, we've said it before; people around him are playing checkers and Jackson Lamb is playing chess."
Watch our complete interview with Gary Oldman.
Perrineau plays Sheriff Boyd Stevens on the MGM+ horror drama set in a decaying old ghost town in middle America that appears to be under the control of an unknown malevolent force that traps anyone who arrives.
Director Jack Bender goes, 'here's what we're going to do, kiddo, we're going to have her over there and we're gonna put the camera on you, and we're gonna let it go," he explains incredulously. "That's when you have to dig in, and put images in your brain that you know you don't want to be there forever and but you have to," he says. "That's the great part of it, and if I can let it happen, then I've gotten something out of it. And then, therefore, hopefully, the audience did too. I've gone to a new place in my own self where I can allow this to be, and don't have to be scared of it or anything like that. It was pretty wild shooting it," he recalls.
Watch our complete interview with Harold Perrineau.
The Oscar winner plays the title character for the Peacock series. By day, he is a quiet assassin, exacting and economical with his kills, a man of few words and a master of disguises. By night, he returns home to his other life in Spain, as Charles Calthrop, who is married to Nuria (Úrsula Corberó) and father to their son Carlito.
"The thing that I found most challenging was ... there's something that is incredibly kind of refined and economic and ruthless about him, but that economy, weirdly, takes quite a lot of work," he says. "I'm the most flappable person imaginable and this character is deeply unflappable. So it was weird because it meant that I had to prep. I like prep anyway, but I had to prep, like, I would say fivefold to how I would normally, just on silly things. I remember there's a moment in the opening scene [in] the opening episode when I sort of dismantle this suitcase and turn it into a sniper's rifle, and I wanted it to be like a dance. And I wanted it to have that sort of cathartic satisfaction of everything fitting exactly in its right place. It took me weeks. I would just put classical music on I was sitting in the in the bedroom at the hotel I was staying at and just go over and over, trying to make it as fluid as possible. But that economy was the hardest thing."
Watch our complete interview with Eddie Redmayne.
The second season of the Apple TV+ series is about a near-future, retro-tinged dystopia where people could separate their work selves from their personal lives. The team behind the show, including Scott, joined our recent group discussion, where she discussed her approach to playing the innie and outie versions of her character.
On playing both versions in the same scene, he says, "It was something that had been talked about all season and that I was honestly dreading because it sounded hard, and it sounded like something that I could screw up any number of ways. Shooting it was something I was freaked out about. We started really workshopping and going through it and massaging it pretty early on. Dan and the writers were changing it as we went. When we got on the set, we started really going through it with a fine-tooth comb and trying to figure out exactly what the conversation should be. We had to start shooting it on a Monday morning and we were changing it right up until, what, Friday night? And then we had to stop because I had to memorize it at some point."
Watch our complete interview with Adam Scott.
Thornton stars as Tommy Norris, an abrasive straight-shooter petroleum landman who takes charge of the lucrative and often precarious oilfields of West Texas for M-Tex, a giant oil corporation, for the Paramount+ drama.
"I've had a lot of life experience. I've been around some pretty weird things. So you just kind of draw on those. If you've got a pillowcase over your head and people are dumping gasoline on you, it's not hard to imagine if somebody struck a match, even though it's not gasoline. It's claustrophobic. So the situation itself kind of puts you in the frame of mind," the recent Golden Globe nominee and past Oscar winner explains, referring to scenes in the season premiere and finale where the titular landman is tied to a chair and is being beaten while a pillowcase covers his head.
Listen to our complete interview with Billy Bob Thornton.
Vickers explains that he shot several episodes of the Prime Video Season 1 without knowing that his character, Halbrand, was actually the dark lord Sauron in disguise. And for Season 2, he also plays Sauron's new form called Annatar.
Halbrand feels distinctly human, a 'low man' who works with his hands. By contrast, Annatar is ethereal, regal, and possesses a calm command of any room he enters. 'He's a Maia, which means basically he's a demigod,' explains Vickers, 'So you're going from playing a regular guy to this guy that is larger than life. So I had to learn a whole new way of moving.' Within the actor's physicality is a simmering power that Annatar dare not show. 'He's a lot more still and a lot more controlled and contained,' says Vickers, 'it is quite fun to play with the potential of this energy that is within him.'
Watch our complete interview with Charlie Vickers.
The star, executive producer, writer, and director plays Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch. His team at Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center would go on to have a stressful, chaotic day, capped off with a mass casualty incident.
He says, "The line of demarcation in healthcare can be drawn in 2020 before COVID, and we're living in the A.D. of it all. And I think, in some ways, that reset the clock on what modern healthcare looks like, and that became the focus of the show. How do we do a show that's more practitioner-centric, less patient-centric, and has a fidelity not just to terminology and to procedure but to the emotional truth of the compounding aggregate experiences that practitioners shoulder and don't have a lot of opportunity to offload?"
Read our complete interview with Noah Wyle.
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Kathy Bates, Minha Kim, Elisabeth Moss, and the best of our Emmy Drama Actress interviews
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23 minutes ago
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‘Big Brother 27' recap: The third HOH is crowned and nominates 3 players for eviction
Heading into the third week of Big Brother 27, Amy Bingham had just been evicted by a 13-0 vote over Will Williams. That unanimous decision left 15 players in the game, including outgoing Head of Household Jimmy Heagerty, who was not able to compete for the Week 3 HOH. So, who won the competition and which three people did they nominate for eviction? Read on for our recap of Big Brother Season 27, Episode 9, which aired Sunday, July 27 on CBS. This season's theme is the "Summer of Mystery" and the house has been transformed into the Hotel Mystère, where secrets lurk behind every corner. The 15 players still in the running to win the $750,000 grand prize are: More from Gold Derby 'America's Got Talent 20' recap: Simon declares 'one of the craziest days' of auditions 'Big Brother 27' spoilers: Lauren's HOH reign goes from bad to worse after Veto meeting Adrian Rocha (23): Carpenter from San Antonio, Texas Ashley Hollis (25): Attorney from Chicago Ava Pearl (24): Aura painter from Long Island, N.Y. Jimmy Heagerty (25): AI consultant from Sarasota, Fla. Katherine Woodman (23): Fine dining server from Gwinnett County, Ga. Keanu Soto (33): Dungeon Master from Miami Kelley Jorgensen (29): Web designer from Burbank, S.D. Lauren Domingue (22): Bridal consultant from Lafayette, La. Mickey Lee (35): Event curator from Jacksonville, Fla. Morgan Pope (33): Gamer from Palm Springs, Calif. Rachel Reilly (40): BB12 contestant and BB13 winner from Hoover, Ala. Rylie Jeffries (27): Professional bull rider from Luther, Okla. Vince Panaro (34): Unemployed from West Hills, Calif. Will Williams (50): College sports podcaster from Wallace, S.C. Zach Cornell (27): Marketing manager from Cartersville, Ga. We begin where the last episode left off, with Amy exiting the house following a unanimous eviction. Even her best friend Rachel voted for her to leave, apparently so as not to make herself an outcast with the other remaining contestants. With Keanu and Kelley both using their secret powers last week, that left just two still in play: Zach's $10,000 prize that he can use to buy his way off the block, and Mickey's advantage that lets her overthrow a Head of Household. Will either power be activated this week? Let's go! The Snake and a Liar On Amy's way out of the house she warned the houseguests to go after Jimmy next because "he's a snake and a liar," not that it's something he hasn't heard before. But some thought that the fact that Amy's closest friends, Ashley and Rachel, could vote against her just to stay in positive light with the rest of the house was a hint that there might be more than just one snake in the den. Still, the women of the house rallied around an emotional Rachel to support her loss despite knowing that they orchestrated Amy's removal as a way of striking a subtle blow to Rachel's game. With Amy out of the picture, Rachel approached the other fashion icon of the season Ava with a final two deal. Rachel's perspective was that they'd bond over being eccentric, but that ultimately she'd be able to beat Ava at the end of the game. Mickey and Morgan, as original allies of Jimmy, also retained bad blood over his decision to put Amy up in the first place and were unclear on how they'd go about dealing with him in the future. Head of Household In the "Twin Witness News" comp, the houseguests had to answer true or false questions about confusing eye witness interview segments from alumni Liz Nolan and Julia Nolan until only one of them remained as the winner. Vince, Katherine, Kelley, Will, Keanu and Ashley were all eliminated after the first question, Ava was eliminated after the second question, and Morgan, Rylie, Zach, Adrian and Rachel were all eliminated after the third question, leaving only Mickey and Lauren in the competition. It took only one question after a second interview segment for Mickey to get a question wrong and for Lauren to earn much-needed screen time for herself and Katherine this week as the next Head of Household. After following along with what the majority of the house wanted to happen in the first two weeks, Lauren looked forward to engineering her own path from the HOH room this week. The concern for the rest of the house was that Katherine would have a good amount of sway over Lauren and she could easily convince her to put any one of them up as a nominee. For Mickey that concern meant checking in with Lauren immediately to get a feeling for whether or not she'd need to activate her mystery power to overthrow her nominations. Impress the Impressionable Vince was one of the first to score alone time with the new HOH -- something he thought was important for him because she's such an "impressionable" person and so he wanted to get ahead of everyone else. She told him that she "has no idea" what she's going to do and Vince warned her against letting Katherine in her ear and to stick to doing what she wants to do. At the tail end of their convo, Jimmy entered and Lauren told them both that her first thought is to nominate Keanu and Kelley. This was a slight relief for Jimmy who immediately ran to Mickey to assuage the anxiety she was feeling about being a possible nom. In Keanu's chat with Lauren he hoped to make her feel like they could work together, openly challenging her to not do what he knows the house wants her to do, but all Lauren could do was stare at the TV screen in her room to avoid contact with him and avoid engaging with "public enemy number one" whatsoever. Still, she received his point that it could "make a splash" to put other big targets like Jimmy, Ashley or Rachel up next to him. Lauren struggled just as much through her conversation with Ashley, relieved only by Mickey entering the room who suggested that she "honor the previous HOH's nominations because they didn't go through." The Third Nom Despite wanting to possible "shake things up," Lauren was pressured from almost everyone she spoke with, including Kelley (shocker!), to at least nominate both Keanu and Kelley. This was a safe move for Lauren to avoid becoming a target next week, but left up in the air who her third nom would be. She was hoping that Adrian would nominate himself as a pawn, too, but he didn't. Considering that the entire house voted in Will's favor last week, he felt like the safest bet for her to use as a pawn without the threat of him going home. A "highly upset" Will argued against this to Lauren because he thought that bigger threats -- other people that have won HOH, a former winner, and a player that already won $10,000 -- should be seeing the block instead of the same players every week. At the nomination ceremony, Lauren nominated Keanu, Kelley and Will. She gave the reason that she "felt like this was the best decision moving forward," heavily insinuating that she was ultimately impressed upon by the same majority of the house that orchestrated the first two weeks of nominations. Hilariously, Kelley took full ownership over the nominations for herself, believing that she was looking forward to a third straight week of removing herself from the block before the final vote. Good luck! Best of Gold Derby From 'Housewives' overload to the 'shadiest queens' alliance: The dish on 'The Traitors' Season 4 lineup The 25 best 'Survivor' villains of the past 25 years 'Survivor' winners list: All seasons Click here to read the full article. Solve the daily Crossword
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‘Jimmy is a liar' and ‘I wish Rachel never came in': Amy slams ‘Big Brother 27' houseguests following eviction
The following interview contains spoilers. Read at your own risk! Amy Bingham's Big Brother journey ended earlier than she had anticipated. The 43-year-old insurance agent from Stockton, Calif., was unanimously evicted on Thursday following Jimmy Heagerty's reign as Head of Household. While disappointed, Amy has come to terms with her fate and is ready to move forward — but not before calling out Jimmy. More from Gold Derby 'Big Brother 27' spoilers: Lauren's HOH reign goes from bad to worse after Veto meeting 'Big Brother 27' spoilers: Here's who wins the Week 3 Veto competition during Lauren's yawn-inducing HOH reign "He's a snake and a liar!" Amy exclaimed during her exit interview with Gold Derby. "He lies constantly, and I was dying to call him out! I couldn't do it in the house — as much as I wanted to — but he was literally lying all the time. I don't know if that's part of his gameplay or if that's just who he really is. I hope it's not who he really is! I will say, he's very charismatic, funny, and fun to be around — but he lies all the time. He's a manipulator. I guess manipulation is part of the game, but I personally can't stand being around lying manipulators." Like many fans tuning in, Amy was left baffled by Jimmy's motivations this week. Despite initially nominating Keanu Soto, Kelley Jorgensen, and Adrian Rocha, all three managed to escape the chopping block, leaving Amy and Cliffton "Will" Williams as the final two nominees for eviction. "I knew if I was up next to Will, I was going home," Amy admits. "When I didn't win the BB Block Buster, I thought, 'That's it. I'm going home.' I couldn't bring myself to campaign against Will — I love him; he's so sweet." "Getting me out? Good for you. I can't win a comp," Amy says sarcastically. "You don't have a better chance without me." When asked who she thinks Jimmy is truly loyal to, Amy admits that she's unsure. "I don't know if he's loyal to anybody," she says. "But the people he seems to be playing the game with so far are Vinny [Panaro], Mickey [Lee], Morgan [Pope], and, to some extent, Zach [Cornell]." Read on for our full Q&A with Amy, where she opens up about her friendship with Rachel Reilly, her experience entering the house as the Accomplice, her predictions for Lauren Domingue's reign as Head of Household, plus her thoughts on who she believes will win — and who she hopes will take home the crown. Gold Derby: What were your thoughts when Rachel walked in the door — and how do you think your game could have been different if she never had? Amy: At this point, I wish she never came in. I love you, Rachel! I wish you were just hosting. I actually thought she was coming in as a host. No, she came to play! I couldn't not be friends with her once I became friends with her. We're about the same age — Mom Squad! I love her. I am a fan of hers, so it was fun to meet her and it was exciting to play with her. It just sucks because I knew it was going to put a target on my back, but I couldn't help it! I'm loyal in the real world and I'm loyal in this game. I didn't know what to do. You entered the game as the Accomplice. What was that first night like, knowing you hadn't officially secured your spot as a permanent player yet? I had so many nerves. You're meeting people and it's the first time ever getting in the house. Then, I had to do these tasks. So I was nervous about all of it. My nerves were high. I'm just glad I did it. I'm glad they pinned it on Rylie [Jeffries] and Zae [Frederich], not me. Sorry, guys, love you. But better them than me. After your eviction, Lauren won HOH. How do you think that will play out? I could not have seen that coming. I would've thought she would've not wanted to win at all yet. I really saw her just floating through until midpoint. She was safe enough. I don't know what she's going to do. Is she going to make a safe move? Put Kelley up? She's already been up. Put Will up? He's already been up. No new blood. Keanu? I don't know. I don't know who her real target would be. I've never really talked game to her. I love her. We talked about girls sticking together and stuff a little bit. But I don't know, it'll be interesting to see. I'm excited to see who she puts up. Why does the house want Keanu out so badly? He lies, too! It's not just Jimmy — Keanu's a liar as well. Honestly, I don't really care because when he talks to me, we don't discuss game. So he doesn't lie to me directly since we don't have anything game-related to talk about. But he lies to other people about the game, especially to Rachel. Rachel was really upset with Keanu most of the time because they had become friends, and she had his back. She even tried to save him a few times, and then he turned on her. That whole situation was crazy. So yeah, she absolutely had a reason to have issues with him. I didn't, personally, because he never lied to my face about anything. Jimmy, on the other hand, definitely did. At this stage, who do you think is in the best position to make it to the end of the game? Mickey and Morgan. They have really aligned themselves to be cushioned by people. They're not targets. They're not really on anyone's radar. They're just smooth, but they're not floating either. They're playing the game. They're not floating. They're pulling some strings and making things happen. I definitely feel like they're in the best spot. Who would you like to see win the game? I hope Ashley [Hollis] wins. I really do. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 'Big Brother 27' cast: Meet the 16 new houseguests and the 1 mystery player View Gallery17 Images Best of Gold Derby From 'Housewives' overload to the 'shadiest queens' alliance: The dish on 'The Traitors' Season 4 lineup The 25 best 'Survivor' villains of the past 25 years 'Survivor' winners list: All seasons Click here to read the full article. 🧠 Need a quick break?
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‘America's Got Talent 20' recap: Simon declares ‘one of the craziest days' of auditions
America's Got Talent Season 20 continued Tuesday night with the eighth two-hour edition of its auditions episodes. This week features gym bros throwing weights over Mel B and Sofia Vergara's heads, a 13-year-old that defies gravity, a rapping comedian, a truly "unreal" Golden Buzzer moment from Howie Mandel, and a declaration from Simon Cowell that this set of auditions makes "one of the craziest days" in a long time. This season's competition follows the same format that AGT fans are used to. In the auditions phase, an act needs at least three "yes" votes from the judges to advance. If a judge or Terry Crews believes an act is exceptional they can hit the Golden Buzzer to award them an automatic bid to the final rounds. More from Gold Derby 'Big Brother 27' spoilers: Lauren's HOH reign goes from bad to worse after Veto meeting 'Big Brother 27' spoilers: Here's who wins the Week 3 Veto competition during Lauren's yawn-inducing HOH reign Read on for our "Auditions 8" recap of the contestants who performed on America's Got Talent Season 20, Episode 8, which aired July 29 at 8 p.m. on NBC. Darien Johnson & Scott MathisonAct: Stunt fitnessVotes Yes/No: Yes — Howie, Mel, Sofia, SimonMel's comments: "What you do is proper fit and hot."Sofia's comments: "This is very interesting ... it looks really hard."Howie's comments: "I think it's entertaining, it's a strength act, it's an agility act ... you checked a lot of boxes."Simon's comments: "It was surprising and very, very difficult." Sunny SaucedaAct: BandVotes Yes/No: No — Howie, Sofia, MelHowie's comments: "I don't get it. It'd be fun in a bar. It didn't do it for me, but I didn't know what I was watching. Silas Luke JonesAct: GuitaristHometown: AlaskaVotes Yes/No: Yes — Sofia, Mel, Howie, SimonSofia's comments: "What an audition. That was insane and so surprising. You became a rock star in front of our eyes."Howie's comments: "You're kind of like an Alaska techno-Hendrix."Mel's comments: "You're one of a kind, you really are."Simon's comments: "You're a very nice guy, very humble, and then you turn into that. ... That's what I love about the show — moments like that." UnrealAct: Dance crewHometown: IndiaBuzzers: Howie's Golden BuzzerSimon's comments: "Slightly speechless if I'm being honest with you. I just thought it was so creative, brilliant, scary. I can tell how much work you must have put into this ... that's what I call the business."Sofia's comments: "Perfect audition. Your personalities, the effort you put into your clothing ... it was one of the best shows we've seen this season."Howie's comments: "We've seen dance moves, we've seen contortions, but to put it all together and to show us something in a way we've never seen before. ... You deserve everything. You deserve to be taken all the way!" Evelyn ErranteAct: SingerHometown: PhoenixVotes Yes/No: No — Howie; yes — Mel, Sofia, SimonSofia's comments: "You are perfect for what you want to do."Howie's comments: "What you want to do is not something I really respond to."Mel's comments: "You can sing like that at 13, by the time you get to 18 your voice is gonna be amazing. I've done Broadway twice and it's so hard work. ... It wasn't perfect and you've got a lot of work to do, but I'm gonna say yes."Simon's comments: "You've got so much ambition, we should encourage someone like that on this show." Tej, Ibhan & LarsAct: VarietyHometown: Brooklyn, Yes/No: Yes — Mel, Simon, Howie; No — SofiaBuzzers: Red X - Howie, Sofia, MelSofia's comments: "That was disgusting."Mel's comments: "It was too long. ... You made me belly laugh so I'm gonna say yes."Simon's comments: "It was inventive, it was silly, but it kind of worked ... people are gonna like them."Howie's comments: "I didn't love this, but the fact that you said there's a human piñata — that's what I wanna see so you can take back my X." The Jet BoysAct: Boy bandVotes Yes/No: Yes — Mel, Sofia, Simon; no — HowieHowie's comments: "You guys put on an amazing show and you're amazing dancers ... once you started singing? I think you guys are amazing dancers. They're not good singers."Mel's comments: "Your energy you could just feel it coming off the stage ... I was not expecting any of that. It was brilliant."Sofia's comments: "It was surprising because I thought you guys were just gonna dance."Simon's comments: "I'm glad that you actually sung for us. You've got so much potential ... it was very difficult to hear if one of you has a really good lead vocal. I'm slightly on the fence." Dewayne JacksonAct: Stand-up comedianHometown: Stockton, Yes/No: Yes — Simon, Sofia, Howie, MelHowie's comments: "You are amazing. You are memorable. You are likable. You are real."Simon's comments: "That was one of the best auditions we've had today, genuinely. Partly because you're just naturally funny."Mel's comments: "You made me belly laugh all the way." Brandon RaffoAct: JugglerVotes Yes/No: Yes — Howie, Mel, Simon, SofiaHowie's comments: "That's faster than I've ever seen."Mel's comments: "You're the first person ever to make juggling hot."Simon's comments: "You might be the fastest juggler in the world." Rich and CarleneAct: Competitive eatingVotes Yes/No: No — Howie, Mel, Sofia, SimonBuzzers: Red X — MelSimon's comments: "I don't know what we're judging — that's the problem."Mel's comments: "It looked quite savage, I didn't really get it."Sofia's comments: "It's difficult to decide if this is really an AGT act." Chris TurnerAct: Rapping comedianHometown: Manchester, EnglandVotes Yes/No: Yes — Sofia, Simon, Mel, HowieSofia's comments: "That was one of the most fun things we've had all day."Howie's comments: "I'm fascinated by what you just did and I think the audience was."Mel's comments: "For you to be so articulate and creative, that is such a talent."Simon's comments: "It was so clever ... it was original and that's what we love on this show." Ksenia AngelAct: SingerBuzzers: Red X — Simon, Mel, SofiaSimon's comments: "I will pay not to [sing with you]." Campus University CascadesAct: Stunt fightingHometown:Votes Yes/No: Yes — SimonSimon's comments: "This is one of the craziest days — that's a good thing — we've had for a long time. However, I love this act." Andy Wigman YuAct: Quick-changeVotes Yes/No: No — Sofia, Mel, SimonBuzzers: Red X — MelSimon's comments: "Who has anything to say? Nope." Alexa MoralesAct: Singer-songwriterHometown: OaklandVotes Yes/No: No — Howie, Simon, Sofia, MelBuzzers: Red X — Simon, Mel, Howie, SofiaSimon's comments: "Werefoxes can't sing." Goldie HenAct: Comedic hula-hoopingHometown: New EnglandVotes Yes/No: Yes — Howie, Mel, Simon; no — SofiaHowie's comments: "You do have a talent, the question is what goes beyond this."Simon's comments: "I loved it. Seriously. It was like one of those crazy nightmares when you drank tequila and you can't stop it." 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