Little Mix: The Search

Little Mix: The Search is an upcoming British reality television music competition that is set to begin airing on BBC One in autumn 2020. The series was devised by British girl group Little Mix, with the winning act from the series joining them on their upcoming tour.[1]

Little Mix: The Search
GenreReality competition
Presented byChris Ramsey
Judges
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
No. of series1
Production
Running time60 minutes
Release
Original networkBBC One
Original release2020 (2020)

History

The idea for Little Mix: The Search was announced in October 2019, when applications for the show were opened.[2] It was confirmed that Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Jade Thirlwall, Perrie Edwards and Jesy Nelson would act as judges. Applications were closed on 10 January 2020,[3] and filming commenced later that month.[3][4] In March 2020, it was announced that comedian Chris Ramsey would be presenting The Search.[5]

The premise of The Search is for British girl group Little Mix to form a new band, and the winning act from the first series would have supported the group on their Summer 2020 Tour, which was cancelled due to the COVID–19 pandemic.[6][7] The series was set to begin airing on BBC One in April 2020, but due to the pandemic, the airdate was postponed.[8] When asked about the effect of the pandemic on The Search, Edwards said: "The live shows bit is coming, obviously we don’t know when but everything else before the live shows we’ve already filmed. So everything’s good to go, we’re basically just waiting for lockdown."[9] On 20 July 2020, it was announced that it would premiere in the second half of the year.[10]

gollark: Probably, but at least the logic errors generally lead to "oops that does not work correctly I must now fix it" instead of "oh look, the application is now vulnerable to remote code execution".
gollark: I doubt they can actually pick up on all the exciting variety of memory corruption bugs and such.
gollark: There are assembly linters?
gollark: I would rather my brain not be susceptible to buffer overflows and such.
gollark: Given our tendency to anthropomorphise natural processes and assign everything labels and whatnot, one could argue that our brains are closer to foolish OOP languages than assembly or something, not that either is remotely sensible as a non-bees description.

References

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