America's Got Talent - Contestants Who Have Competed On Other Talent Shows

Contestants Who Have Competed On Other Talent Shows

Many acts which have competed on America's Got Talent, but were ultimately eliminated before the final round, have either previously competed on or went on to compete in a number of other talent shows, most notably American Idol and America's Best Dance Crew.

American Idol
  • Jessica Sanchez from season one is the runner-up of season eleven of American Idol.
  • Thia Megia from season four finished in the Top 11 of season ten of American Idol.
America's Best Dance Crew
  • Jabbawockeez from season two were the season one champions of America's Best Dance Crew
  • Extreme Dance FX, from season three competed on season five of America's Best Dance Crew as the crew Blended Projekt.
  • Members of the dance crew SQ Entertainment from season three and season four were runner-ups of the first season of America's Best Dance Crew.
  • BreakSk8 from season four finished in fourth place on America's Best Dance Crew season one.
  • FootworKINGz, from season four competed on season six of America's Best Dance Crew.
  • Rated Next Generation (RNG), from season five finished in the Top Four on season seven of America's Best Dance Crew.
  • Strikers All-Stars, from season five, finished in the Top Four on season three of America's Best Dance Crew.
  • 787 Crew, from season seven competed on season six of America's Best Dance Crew.
Other shows
  • Alice Tan Ridley from season five won the pilot episode of 30 Seconds to Fame on Fox.
  • Dani Shay from season six appeared on The Glee Project on Oxygen.
  • Horse from season seven competed on season 4 of American Ninja Warrior.

Read more about this topic:  America's Got Talent

Famous quotes containing the words talent and/or shows:

    Sometimes I wonder why God ever trusts talent in the hands of women, they usually make such an infernal mess of it. I think He must do it as a sort of ghastly joke.
    Willa Cather (1873–1947)

    One who shows signs of mental aberration is, inevitably, perhaps, but cruelly, shut off from familiar, thoughtless intercourse, partly excommunicated; his isolation is unwittingly proclaimed to him on every countenance by curiosity, indifference, aversion, or pity, and in so far as he is human enough to need free and equal communication and feel the lack of it, he suffers pain and loss of a kind and degree which others can only faintly imagine, and for the most part ignore.
    Charles Horton Cooley (1864–1929)