America's Most Talented Kid

America's Most Talented Kid
Presented by Mario Lopez (Season 1)
Dave Coulier (Season 2-3)
Lance Bass (Season 1)
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 3
Production
Executive producer(s) Mark Cronin
Peter Johansen
Stuart Krasnow
Running time 44 Minutes
Production company(s) NBC Studios
Release
Original network NBC (Season 1)
PAX Network/i (Season 2-3)
Original release March 28, 2003 (2003-03-28) – September 1, 2006 (2006-09-01)

America's Most Talented Kid is an American television series that originally aired on NBC on March 28, 2003. In each round, three age groups (3-7, 8-12, 13-16) of talented children would perform songs, dance numbers, magic, and other forms of entertainment in front of head judge Lance Bass and other guest celebrity judges, such as Sisqo, Maureen McCormick, Jermaine Jackson and Daisy Fuentes. Host Mario Lopez led the highest scorer from each round until only three children were left to compete in the grand finale. In the end, Cheyenne Kimball was crowned the grand champion.[1]

The final NBC episode featured senior citizens competing in a special "America's Most Talented Senior".

A limited-run series on NBC to compete with the growing talent-show trend in reality television, it would later move to the PAX Network (now renamed Ion Television), the title pluralised to "Kids", with Dave Coulier as a host and judged by Daryl Sabara, Scarlett Pomers and Bobb'e J. Thompson. Unlike the NBC version, however, each show would crown a $1,000 winner plus the chance to keep in the finale. The Grand Champion of this season of "America's Most Talented Kids" was then 13-year-old rock violinist/singer/songwriter Antonio Pontarelli.[1]

Film actor Taylor Lautner made a memorable appearance in the show, putting on an exhibition of his Martial Arts skills. In addition, 2004 American Idol runner-up Diana DeGarmo, 2007 American Idol winner Jordin Sparks, plus American Idol season 9 contestant Aaron Kelly appeared on the show. Singer Tori Kelly performed on the show during the PAX run and won, beating out singer and accordionist, Hunter Hayes.

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.