We Don’t Want So You Think You Can Dance to End — But It Can’t Go On Like This (2024)

There’s a dance-based competition show currently airing Mondays at 9 pm. New episodes land on Fox. Cat Deeley’s the host.

And yet, despite those familiar trappings, or the title that runs across the screen at the start of each episode, I’m having trouble believing that the show in question is actually So You Think You Can Dance.

The announcement of Season 18 last December — after nearly two years off the air — came as a pleasant surprise, the kind with which fans of this series have become familiar. Even when Fox’s competition shows were at their buzziest in the mid-aughts, SYTYCD was always American Idol’s more niche, lower-rated younger sibling. As the years passed, its annual return to Fox’s lineup has become less and less of a sure thing; amid the COVID-19 pandemic, it seemed unlikely the show would ever come back at all, and Season 18 is only its second cycle to air in the last five years.

Related Stories

The Cleaning Lady Ends Season 3 With Another Devastating Loss — Plus, Grade the Finale

So You Think You Can Dance Finale Recap: Did the Right Dancer Win Season 18?

But what seemed at first like a fresh start for the ever-struggling series now feels like the last gasp of a former summer staple, unrecognizable in its current form — and if this is the So You Think You Can Dance we’re left with, perhaps it’s time for a curtain call.

Full disclosure: Even typing that sentence made me want to scroll down and leave an angry comment on my own piece of writing. So You Think You Can Dance has played a series-regular role in my own life as a TV fanatic: Years before I would ever write about the show professionally, Teen Rebecca would send what she felt were very important “recap” emails to her family members and like-minded Internet friends, who nicely indulged her snarky thoughts on each episode. I’ve spent hours down YouTube rabbit holes, rewatching favorite routines. (Just this week, Wade Robson’s “Ramalama” group number has gotten some play.) And it was one of the many TV series I watched and rewatched with my late mother, a fellow pop culture obsessive whose love of Joshua and Katee’s Season 4 Bollywood routine was unparalleled.

Plus, dance remains woefully underrepresented on mainstream competition series. Outside of Dancing With the Stars — which isn’t exactly an option for non-celebrity contestants — there aren’t many avenues for aspiring dance pros that come with this level of exposure and credibility. Shooing away one of TV’s only prominent dance-centric shows admittedly feels backwards.

But for many seasons now, in the name of creative reinvention and improving ratings, SYTYCD has kept moving away from the original essence that made it a hit. It was a platform for not only the country’s bright-eyed contestants, but for up-and-coming choreographers (Mandy Moore! Sonya Tayeh!) and dance styles that many of us had never heard of before. Asking contestants to perform duets in new and challenging styles each week was a compelling, accessible approach — one that has been replaced, at various times, by a lackluster “Stage vs. Street” theme (Season 12), a kid-centric Next Generation cycle (Season 13) and a heavy reliance on returning vets and All-Star dancers.

Season 18, though, has proven to be the most frustrating departure yet — and not only because it’s the second consecutive season to have a scandal at the judging panel. Rather, SYTYCD has seemed a shell of itself in its current cycle. I mean, the competition is so truncated that the Top 10 (!) had already been determined by the end of the audition rounds. What’s more, the entire season has been pre-taped — a Fox rep confirms for me that there will be zero live episodes, including the finale — and the weekly performances have morphed into complex, showbiz-themed challenges where only the judges decide who gets eliminated each week. (The contestants are also living in a house together, adding a misplaced Real World vibe to the proceedings.)

The reinvention makes sense on at least one level: SYTYCD struggles to notch even a million viewers these days. I can see why Fox is scaling back when so few seem to be watching. But if the network is going to continue bringing this show back, it ought to be done the right way, or not at all. Why continue renewing it, only to speed through the season so quickly, we hardly know who these dancers are? Only to entirely remove viewers’ agency in who stays and who goes? Only to scrap every element that made this show a blast in the first place?

It’s time to meaningfully invest in the show’s success, or free it from this slow, sad deflation.

I know, of course, that I’ll keep watching So You Think You Can Dance until it stops cueing music, whether that’s in a few weeks when Season 18 ends, or years from now. But the question in the show’s title has already been answered time and again: These people can dance, and quite beautifully. If they’re going to prove that to us year after year, they deserve an adequate stage.

We Don’t Want So You Think You Can Dance to End — But It Can’t Go On Like This (2024)

FAQs

Is "So You Think You Can Dance" cancelled? ›

Reality dance competition series “So You Think You Can Dance” has been renewed for Season 18 at Fox. The show will return on March 4, 2024 with an all-new documentary style format along with new judges Alison Holker and Maksim Chmerkovskiy.

Who won "So You Think You Can Dance" in 2024? ›

Nineteen-year-old Anthony Curley from Phoenix, AZ, took home the trophy and $100,000 prize tonight for Season 18 of Fox's So You Think You Can Dance. Curley prevailed in a face-off among the final three dancers.

Why did "So You Think You Can Dance" change? ›

(Siwa replaced Nigel Lythgoe on the panel after the executive producer stepped back from the show following allegations of sexual assault that were filed by Paula Abdul and others.)

Will "So You Think You Can Dance" return in 2024? ›

After a two-year hiatus, So You Think You Can Dance returned for Season 18 on March 4, 2024, featuring an all-new judging panel and a new format. The panel for auditions included former Dancing With the Stars pro Maks Chmerkovskiy, SYTYCD alum Allison Holker and SYTYCD All-Star Comfort Fedoke as a guest judge.

Why did Alex leave So You Think You Can Dance? ›

After being automatically placed in the bottom 3 with Billy Bell and Ashley Galvan, Wong learned he would require surgery and at least 3 months of recovery time. Because of this, he was forced to withdraw from the competition on the July 8 results show, thus sparing both Bell and Galvan from possible elimination.

What happened to the judges of So You Think You Can Dance? ›

Siwa, who was previously a judge on the show's Season 17 in 2022, replaces Nigel Lythgoe — who stepped down earlier this month in the wake of two lawsuits accusing him of sexual assault. Siwa will now join choreographer Allison Holker and pro dancer Maksim Chmerkovskiy on the show's judging panel.

Who was the first person to win So You Think You Can Dance? ›

Nick Lazzarini (born August 4, 1984) is an American dancer. He is best known as the first season winner on the Fox reality show So You Think You Can Dance. He is a trained dancer in jazz, lyrical, hip hop, ballet and modern dance styles.

Is comfort judging So You Think You Can Dance? ›

As mentioned before, Comfort took the coveted judge's seat during the audition round on the 18th season of So You Think You Can Dance.

Why did Comfort leave Sytycd? ›

After her appearance in the dance competition, she moved to Los Angeles to capitalize on her newfound exposure. While getting her feet wet in Hollywood, Fedoke was brought back as an all-star on Season 7.

Who are the judges on So You Can dance 2024? ›

Overview of format and presentation by season
SeasonDatesPermanent judges
17Summer 2022 (May–August)Stephen "tWitch" Boss JoJo Siwa Matthew Morrison Leah Remini
18Spring 2024 (March–May)Allison Holker JoJo Siwa Maksim Chmerkovskiy
16 more rows

Did JoJo Siwa replace Comfort on Sytycd? ›

original sound - CodeDeb. Nigel Lithgow has finally spoken out about JoJo Siwa. replacing him as a judge on so You Think You Can Dance. and what he said might surprise you.

Will they ever bring back So You Think You Can Dance? ›

"So You Think You Can Dance" returns to FOX 13 on Monday, March 4, 2024 at 7:00 p.m. It will be better than ever and will infuse a new format reflecting the authentic experience of building a successful career in dance, as so many alums have.

Where is So You Think You Can Dance 2024 filmed? ›

The Emmy Award-winning FOX competition series returns tonight for its 18th season — and for the first time, the show is being filmed here in Atlanta.

Who won Sytycd in 2024? ›

In his last competitive dance, Curley delivered a stunning solo that left him with bleeding feet, but Wilson's back-bending solo was also breathtaking. And the winner of Season 18 was … Curley.

What happened to the producer of So You Think You Can Dance? ›

Nigel Lythgoe is leaving his on-camera and behind the scenes roles on Fox's So You Think You Can Dance in the wake of a sexual assault lawsuit filed by former SYTYCD and American Idol judge Paula Abdul.

Will there be an 18th season of So You Think You Can Dance? ›

An eighteenth season of So You Think You Can Dance was announced on December 5, 2023, with a judging panel composed of series creator Nigel Lythgoe (which would have been his seventeenth season as judge), season 2 contestant and season 7–11 and 14 All-Star Allison Holker, and former Dancing with the Stars pro dancer ...

Is tonight the finale of So You Think You Can Dance? ›

“a dream can really come true & couldn't be more grateful to dance/ learn/ grow/ and share it all with these incredible humans + to start my @danceonfox journey is beyond wild to me,” she wrote. The finale is Monday, May 20 at 9 p.m.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Dong Thiel

Last Updated:

Views: 5813

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dong Thiel

Birthday: 2001-07-14

Address: 2865 Kasha Unions, West Corrinne, AK 05708-1071

Phone: +3512198379449

Job: Design Planner

Hobby: Graffiti, Foreign language learning, Gambling, Metalworking, Rowing, Sculling, Sewing

Introduction: My name is Dong Thiel, I am a brainy, happy, tasty, lively, splendid, talented, cooperative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.