Canta Comigo

Canta Comigo (English: Sing with Me) is a Brazilian reality television music competition based on the British television series All Together Now, hosted by Gugu Liberato.[1][2] The series premiered on Wednesday, July 18, 2018 at 10:30 p.m. (BRT / AMT) on RecordTV.

Canta Comigo
GenreTalent show
Based onAll Together Now
Directed byMarcelo Amiky
Presented byGugu Liberato
JudgesSee The 100
Country of originBrazil
Original language(s)Portuguese
No. of seasons2 (completed)
3 (upcoming)
No. of episodes20
Production
Camera setupMultiple-camera
Running time105 minutes
Production company(s)Endemol Shine
Release
Original networkRecordTV
Picture format1080i (HDTV)
Original releaseJuly 18, 2018 (2018-07-18) 
present
External links
Website

The series is known for being Gugu's last show prior to his death in November 22, 2019.[3] As of February 2020, it is unknown if Canta Comigo will be renewed for a third season.

Format

In each episode, a range of singers take to the stage, but waiting to judge each performance is 'The 100' - a unique panel of one hundred music experts and performers from across the Brazil.

The heats

During each heat, performers try and outscore their competitors in order to earn a seat on the top three podium. Whenever a performer scores high enough for a podium place, the act in 3rd place is eliminated as a result.

From each heat, two acts go through to the semifinals. Once all acts have sung, the 1st placed performer with the highest score automatically goes through. The acts in 2nd and 3rd sing off against one another and the winner of that sing off earns the second qualification spot.

If, at any time, someone reaches the maximum score and makes the 100 judges stand up at once ensures a direct place for the grand finale. This can happen at any time in the program, either in the heats or in the semifinal.

The sing-off

For the sing-off at the end of the show, scores are reset to zero and the 2nd and 3rd placed acts perform a new song chosen from a given shortlist. In the event that both acts wish to sing the same song from that shortlist, the performer in 2nd place has priority.

The semifinals, the final and the prize

In the semifinals, the qualified candidates in the heats are resubmitted to the 100 judges in new performances seeking the final spots in the finale.

In the final, the finalists perform again in front of The 100 with a new song. This time, all three acts who finish in the top three podium seats sing again and the act with the most public votes after this final sing off wins the season and with it the R$300.000 cash prize.

Series overview

Season Premiered Ended Winner Runner-up Third place Host
1 July 18, 2018 September 12, 2018 Débora Pinheiro
(48.80%)
Gabriel Camilo
(35.07%)
Naheda Beydoun
(16.13%)
Gugu Liberato
2 September 25, 2019 December 4, 2019 Franson
(72.80%)
Débora Neve
(16.09%)
Threerapia
(11.11%)
3 TBA

The 100

The 100 are a range of music experts and performers from across the Brazil. They were cast to include a diverse mix of ages, backgrounds and a variety of music genres.
Members of the 100 include:

  • Thaíde – Rapper
  • Edu Ribeiro – Singer
  • Sula Miranda – Singer
  • Bruno Sutter – Musician & actor
  • Deise Cipriano – Singer
  • Érika Martins – Singer & guitarist
  • Salgadinho – Singer
  • Felipe Dylon – Singer
  • Regis Danese – Singer
  • Robinson Monteiro – Singer
  • Leandro Scornavacca – Singer
  • Daniel Del Sarto – Singer & actor
  • Pepê – Singer
  • Neném – Singer
  • Carla Cristina – Singer
  • Penélope Nova – TV host
  • Gilliard – Singer
  • Liriel Domiciano – Lyric singer
  • Phellipe Haagensen – Singer
  • Jack Oliveira – Singer
  • Andreia Sorvetão – TV host
  • Conrado – Singer
  • MC Créu – Singer
  • Vida Vlatt – Comedian
  • Vinícius D'Black – Singer
  • Penelopy Jean – Drag queen & Lady Gaga cover
  • Renato Carlini – Elvis Presley cover
  • Rodrigo Tomé – Ozzy Osbourne cover
  • Veca Ned – Nelson Ned daughter
  • Lilian Gonçalves – Nelson Gonçalves daughter
  • Bruna Pazinato – Actress & singer
  • Daya Luz – Singer
  • Juh Leidl – Musician & artist
  • Catiana Gomes – Speech therapist
  • Marilda Teixeira – Music teacher
  • Talita Real – Singer
  • Carol Naine – Singer
  • Laura Visconti – Singer, pianist & actress
  • Stephanie Balek – Lyric singer & music teacher
  • Anny Cee – Music teacher
  • Sol – Singer
  • Rafa Mussolini – Blogger
  • Ana Dutra – Singer
  • Thainá Cardoso – Singer
  • Neila Abrahão – Music teacher & guitarist
  • Lúcia Helena Bismara – Pianist
  • Alexandre Leite – Music teacher & violinist
  • Joe Hirata – Singer & karateka
  • Maurício Monteiro – Historian & musicologist
  • Guilherme Cruz – Samba interpreter
  • William Paiva – Vocal singer, director & trainer
  • Ringo Mendes – Vocal arranger & music producer
  • Léo Rommano – Director & producer
  • Thiago Deejay – Radialist, announcer & DJ
  • Leo Richter – Musical producer
  • Diogo Tornili – Vocalist
  • Cayo Felipe – Musical producer
  • Diego Fragoso – DJ & Musical producer
  • Roberto Maia – Singer
  • Henrique Zárate – Musical producer
  • Roberto Seresteiro – Samba singer
  • Jhonny Faria – Music teacher
  • Gus Lanzetta – Journalist & musical producer
  • Jisa Lima – Singer
  • Corina Sabbas – Actress
  • Renata Martinelli – Music teacher
  • Gilda Bandeira – Singer
  • Sabrina Caldana – Singer
  • Luanna Perez – Vocal coach
  • Reinaldo Yazaki – Otorhinolaryngologist
  • Nic Vila Maior – Music teacher
  • Rafa Perussi – Choralist, vocal arranger & composer
  • Nina Cardoso – Choir regent & music teacher
  • Adriana Naccache – Singer
  • Michele Naglieri – Singer
  • Kelly Silva – Singer
  • Miguel Nador – Lyrical singer & tenor
  • Nalla – Singer & songwriter
  • Carol Rodrigues – Singer
  • Julieta Zaccaro – Singer
  • Margareth Pires – Singer
  • Guilherme Passarello – Singer
  • Talita Dias – Singer
  • Vitor Lemes – Singer & actor
  • Gica – Singer
  • Rafael Guimarães – Singer & actor
  • Robson Moura – Performer & singer
  • Samuell Sabino – Musician & vocal trainer
  • Cris Piza – Singer
  • Nando Machado – Music marketing director
  • Simbas – Singer
  • Julio Pacheco – Musical critic
  • Margreet Nuijten – Singer & circus artist
  • Marquês – Singer
  • Tai Veroto – Singer & announcer
  • Cadu Pelegrini – Singer & guitarist
  • Digo Vianna – Singer
  • Graça Cunha – Singer
  • Manuela Perez – Music teacher
  • Ruy Brissac – Actor

Ratings and reception

Brazilian ratings

All numbers are in points and provided by Kantar Ibope Media.

Season Timeslot (BRT) Premiered Ended TV season SP viewers
(in points)
Source
Date Viewers
(in points)
Date Viewers
(in points)
1 Wednesday 10:30 pm July 18, 2018 8.2 September 12, 2018 7.2 2018–19 7.47 [4]
[5]
2 Wednesday 11:00 pm September 25, 2019 6.4 December 4, 2019 8.6 2019–20 6.17 [6]
[7]

  • Each point represents a specific number of households in 15 market cities in Brazil.

2018: 248.647 households (71.855 in São Paulo)
2019: 254.892 households (73.015 in São Paulo)

gollark: Are there not offsite backups of WE?
gollark: Also, the nginx configuration is incomprehensibly complex.
gollark: In theory osmarks.net itself can just be compiled anywhere and put on any static webserver. In practice it can't because people have come to rely on stuff I arbitrarily scp-ed into the webroot, so I have to back up that folder. And it relies on some dynamic-site logic like the comments.
gollark: In case of an osmarks.net server implosion, I can theoretically run the critical site logic on one of the spare osmarksnode™s.
gollark: Can you instantiate the backups elsewhere?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.