Vietnam's Got Talent

For the first season, see Vietnam's Got Talent (season 1).
Vietnam's Got Talent

Logo used during the current series of Vietnam's Got Talent
Genre Reality talent show
Created by Simon Cowell
Ken Warwick
Cécile Frot-Coutaz
Jason Raff
Presented by Thanh Vân (2014-2015)
Thanh Bach (2012–2013)
Chi Bảo (2011–12)
Quyền Linh (2011–12)
Judges Thành Lộc
Hoài Linh
Thúy Hạnh
Huy Tuấn
Country of origin Vietnam
Original language(s) Vietnamese
No. of seasons 3
No. of episodes 26
Production
Producer(s) VTV
Running time

60 minutes

(including commercials)[1]

Production company(s) BHD Corp.
FremantleMedia
Release
Original network VTV
MTV Vietnam
Original release December 18, 2011 – present
Chronology
Related shows Britain's Got Talent
America's Got Talent
External links
Official website

Tìm kiếm tài năng – Vietnam's Got Talent is a Vietnamese reality television talent show whose first season aired Sunday nights at 9:00PM (UTC+7) between 18 December 2011 and 6 May 2012 on VTV3 and MTV Vietnam. The show was based on the Got Talent series format that originated by Simon Cowell in the United Kingdom. Artist Thành Lộc was the first host to be announced.[2] Shortly thereafter, Thúy Hạnh confirmed her role at the judges' table. Huy Tuấn was given the 3rd spot of the judges' table, while the 4th slot was filled by a new celebrity guest each week. The show was presented by Chi Bảo and Quyền Linh.

The show is primarily produced by Vietnam Television and BHD Corp, now running season 3 which is aired Sunday on VTV3 at 20:00 since 28 Sept 2014.

Seasons overview

Vietnam's Got Talent, also known as Vietnam's Got Talent or Vietnam's Got talent (short for Vietnam's Got Talent), is a talent show that features singers, dancers, magicians, comedians, martial-art players, performers with risky weapons/tools/elements, variety acts and other performers of all ages competing for a grand prize of 400,000,000 VND (approximately $20,000).

The first season ran for 26 episodes. The producers chose the top 360 auditioning acts for taped auditions.[3] These were subsequently cut down to 140 by an additional round of auditions consisting of the traditional "Yes" and "No" vote by a panel of three judges. The judges then chose their favourite 49 acts for advancement into the live semi-final rounds, from which the top two acts of each semi-final advanced to two final rounds consisting of 7 acts each, from which 2 acts per final round, one by televote and one by judges' vote, advanced to a grand finale.

Season Premiere Finale Winner Runner-up Third place Host Judges
1 December 18, 2011 May 6, 2012 Nguyễn Đăng Quân & Trần Bảo Ngọc Nguyễn Hương Thảo Võ Trọng Phúc Chi Bảo
Quyền Linh
Nguyễn Thành Lộc
Thúy Hạnh
Bùi Huy Tuấn
2 December 2, 2012 April 21, 2013 Trần Hữu Kiên Hoa Mẫu Đơn Cao Hà Đức Anh
Nguyễn Kiều Anh
Thanh Bạch
3 September 28, 2014 April 5, 2015 Nguyễn Đức Vĩnh Ngô Phương Bích Ngọc Gia Linh - Gia Bảo
Nhóm Chuồn Chuồn Giấy
Thanh Vân Hugo Nguyễn Thành Lộc
Thúy Hạnh
Võ Nguyễn Hoài Linh
Bùi Huy Tuấn
4 January 1, 2016 13 May 2016 Trọng Nhân Trung Lương Nhóm 218
Quỳnh Anh
Diệp Lâm Anh Trấn Thành
Việt Hương
Huy Tuấn

Season 1 (2011-12)

The first season of Vietnam's Got Talent premiered on 18 December 2011 and ended on 6 May 2012. It was broadcast on VTV3 and MTV Vietnam. The winner of the first season was dancing couple Đăng Quân (12 years old) and Bảo Ngọc (7 years old), with musical theater singer Nguyễn Hương Thảo making first runner-up.

Season 2 (2012-13)

The second season of Vietnam's Got Talent started from 2 December 2012 with higher prize than the season 1 (~$24,000). In this season, the presenters in season 1 (Quyen Linh & Chi Bao) have been replaced by Thanh Bach (the most popular MC in Vietnam nowadays).

Season 3 (2014-15)

The third season of Vietnam's Got Talent started from 28 September 2014 with one more judge Artist Hoài Linh and the new host Thanh Vân or Vân Hugo.

Season 4 (2016)

the forth season started on the 1st January 2016 and will finish late 2016

References

  1. "Cuộc thi Vietnam's Got Talent", Thanh Niên Online, by: Phan Cao Tùng, date: 2011-09-25.
  2. "Thành Lộc làm giám khảo Vietnam's Got Talent", Tuổi Trẻ, by: T.Huệ, date: 2011-10-25.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.