This week we get the obligatory story from the designers
about how now the game is on, because all it takes is one mistake and you’re
out. Um, designers? The tagline of the show since it began is ‘One day you’re
in, one day you’re out.’ So, why does it take y’all six weeks until you become
surprised that’s how it works?
Ben brags about his success last week and how He\’s back,
baby. But, um, he’s bragging to Richard who actually won last week so someone
needs to remove Benjamin’s Delusional IV Drip STAT.
Now, Michelle, always a bridesmaid never a bride, until last
week when the judges finally talked to her. And she doesn’t get it because she’s
so good and Patricia sucks at just about everything and everyone should know it
but they don’t and Please oh please, God don’t let me get partnered with
Patricia.
So, naturally, the Button Bag makes another appearance and
Michelle is put on Patricia’s team. Show of hands of anyone who didn’t see that
coming a mile away …. Anyone? Just as I thought.
This week is the Real Woman Challenge, with a twist. The
real women are older women; feisty, some, but older. But, Amanda has this you
know, because this is in her wheelhouse; she designs for real old women …. Or
something. That said, let’s rip……
SAFE
LAYANA MICHELLE PATRICIA
I like Michelle; she’s funny, snarly, bitchy ….. She’s me,
with a vagina.
Ooh, I think I threw up a little in my mouth, but anyway …. She’s always been on the Bottom because other designers on
her team have sucked something awful. Last week she sucked, but at least it was
because she sucked herself.
Oh dear, throwing up a little more.
That said, Michelle’s dress was fun and flirty, and Layana’s
dress, while I loathed the color—bruise isn’t a good color on anyone even if
you call it eggplant—was fine, too. Patricia’s was a poncho turned shawl turned
potato sack that became a burlap bag and was so awful it dragged Michelle and
Layana out of the top and into the Middle.
Luckily, I guess, because it could have been worse. But,
again, Michelle, never a bride …..
TOP TWO .... with the winner
STANLEY & RICHARD
I kinda got the worry vibe about Stanley, whom I still
adore, because during Tim’s visit he hadn’t sewn a single thing. And then he
says, 'Oh I can finish' and I flashback to weeks past when he is slipping his
dress on the model as they walk out the door. So, I’m worried, and a bit
annoyed that one of those older real women was able to grab his ass while I sat
here all alone, and jealous, and stuff.
But I think he got lucky, because he got a Model-sized Real
Woman who was, to start with, elegant and classy and sexy, and all she needed
was a little boost from a bolero jacket and a one-piece pantsuit.
His look was so sexy, and his model looked so fabulous, I wanted
to book a flight to NYC, find that dance studio and ask that woman to dance. Now that’s good
design when it makes me wanna ask a woman to dance!
Heidi liked his look, but thought the pants were too short.
Rachel Roy, working my last nerve because she was sitting in for The Adorable Zac
Posen™ and I needed a little TAZP™ this week, said Stanley captured the class
and elegance, and regalness of his client. Guest Judge Joan Rivers said his
model looked like a Second Wife—you know, who gets the good jewelry and clothes—and
was age appropriate sexy. Nina said, even with the faults in the pants—bad length
and the wonky crotch—it was nearly impeccable and he didn’t play it safe like ….
Richard. I didn’t like his look nearly as much as the
judges. It was shapeless, and the front
had some weird detail that looked like the dress was meant to have a drawstring
and it was pulled out at the last minute. It looked like a pool cover-up. Me,
no like. But Heidi did, go figure, since The Girls were entirely covered. Joan
loved the easiness of it, and the fact that the woman had great legs and should
show them off: “You’ve got great knees! So show ‘em, bitch!” Nina liked the
easy silhouette but thought the fabric drowned out the client. Rachel Roy
thought it the most youthful of all on the runway last night.
But, Stanley gets the win, and it was well-deserved. There
was no doubt that his was the best thing walking
TOP TWO
DANIEL & SAMANTHA
Daniel, who was stunned, I tell ya, stunned that he was in
the bottom last week, and was told that his looks were dated, vows that he will
never go bottoming again …. At least not on TV, and thank the goddess for that!
But, he struggled and had all kinds of questions while working.
He kept asking Samantha what he should do, and then would tell her what he was
gonna do, and what it was gonna look like; I was waiting for her, begging for
her, to use that mustache hair, thread a needle and sew his mouth shut. Please.
Daniel’s client wanted sexy cruise wear and something in
black-and-white, and he gave her what, to me, looked safe and dull and not
black-and-white. Sure, he went all twisty and gave her just one color, and a
sleeve detail and a waist detail, but it was a black suit she could have gotten
just about anywhere. I’m guessing the judges hated Patricia’s outfit so
violently that Daniel owes her a muffin basket because his look, and Samantha’s,
would have gone middle ground if Patricia was exed out of Team MichLay.
Heidi praised him for pleasing the client, and being true to
his own aesthetic. Nina simply said ‘Welcome back’ though I did notice she had
taken off her shoe just in case she had to throw it at him again. Joan Rivers
said she looked great, but she looked like a First Wife—the one you have until
you make a little money and then dump her and get a younger model on whom you can
shower jewels and great clothes. Rachel Roy loved the neck, the waist and the
sleeves, but, if that’s all you like, you have a half-nekkid elderly woman and
that can’t be good. Melissa Rivers—who guested because she’s always Joan’s Plus
One—thought it could have used more pop.
As for Samantha, her client said she loved leopard and that
was all Samantha needed to hear. Leopard. Leopard skirt, with a chartreuse top
and a big black bow.
Yes, she did. Her client has tattoos and anklets and just
lost 30+ pounds and wanted to rock an outfit. I wanted to throw a rock at it. I
found it looked a little too much like mash-up of Carol Burnett as Mrs. Wiggins
and Cher as Laverne.
Joan Rivers called her a ‘menopausal kitten’ and said it had
an 'I’m-not-dead-yet' vibe; I think those are compliments. Heidi loved the
model’s sassy attitude but actually hated the outfit, while Nina thought that
the tattooed woman should have been given princess sleeves and a bow.
But, they got a second place, and, like I said, should thank
Patricia for bringing down that other team.
BOTTOM TWO
KATE & TU
They’re a cute, nonsexual, non-threatening team, though they
have their issues. Tu’s English is as undecipherable as his sewing skills and
Kate’s an elderly woman living on a fixed income trapped inside a
twenty-something’s body.
Tu’s dress was a good idea, but he couldn’t execute it;
well, he did execute it, but not in the way we’d like to think; he killed it,
and not in the way you think. He murdered it and not …. It was bad, y’all. It
was a great color, but he was far too ambitious in his design. When Tim asked
him if he wasn’t being too ambitious, Tu said, Thank you.
Not how he meant it, Tu.
There were pleats left unsewn and hemlines that wobbled and,
well, thanks to Kate, a slight, badly executed rescue of the whole mess by
employing that age-old fix-it tip: put a belt on it.
Yes, rather than sew the dress, or maybe add buttons, Tu’s
client was belted into her dress. And I use the term ‘dress’ loosely—almost as
loosely as the dress fit the model—because it looked like a green horseblanket
thrown over a woman with a belt on it.
My six-year-old ….. cat ….. could do better.
Nina praised the color, but thought it was way too much
fabric; Tu explained that he should have used a twin-bed blanket but all they
had at Mood, Bath and Beyond was the King-sized blanket. Heidi was the first to
call out the fact that the dress didn’t look like it was even together, while
the Immortal—because she’s like a thousand years old—Joan Rivers said, You’ve
got no f**king idea in h*ll who you’re designing for.”
And Tu smiled. I think he thought it was a compliment.
Kate, on the other hand, even after Tim was worried about
the black fabric and the white print, made a really classy dress for her
client. Had she not been paired with Tu,
I think she would have gone Top Three.
Nina loved the fabrics and thought the print was both joyful
and age appropriate, and Joan said the client was as happy as John Travolta in
a massage parlor, though, because of Tu there was no Happy Ending. And Heidi
said that; Tu’s bad dress dragged Kate into the bottom.
BOTTOM TWO .... with the Aufee
AMANDA & BENJAMIN
Amanda was a mess this week. She’d wanted to do something structured
and then picked out a flimsy fabric with no structure at all; and I don’t care
what anyone says, that was one awful print. So, she meandered and twirled and
pouted and nearly came to tears because she just couldn’t do this, though it’s what
she says she always does, dress the normal woman.
Not this time.
It went from being structured to being a vintage housecoat
to being one hot mess from the front and one ginormous disaster from the back.
Flouncy sleeves and a kicky skirt, with a loop-de-loop neckline, and then the
back panels seemed to be glued together to make them more, I dunno, all I could
think was ugly.
Rachel Roy loved the print—but she was wrong, I tell ya—but from
the neck down it was one mistake after another. Joan was disgusted by the bad
hemline and the bad sleeves and the fact that it was all kinds of wrong. Heidi
thought it was too flowy and also wondered about the glued back; did she sit in
something? Eeew. Nina called it undignified, and said it looked like a dress
for a child.
That said, as I watched the episode back, when Amanda had her
client meeting, the client looked like she was wearing almost the same dress—though
not as hideous. Did Amanda not notice that her print was strikingly similar to
the client’s original outfit; and the style, while awful, was close, too?
Amanda really should have gone home because this was awful
from head to toe and back to front and upside down.
Benjamin got the fun spunky model and then put her in a Silk
Turquoise Straightjacket Dress. He did himself in because he spent most of the episode
thinking about how good he was last week—he’d also forgotten the One Day You’re
In, One Day You’re Out mantra—and just couldn’t recover.
Of course, that hideous, puckering fabric didn’t help
because rather than hiding flaws, it shone a light on them. Rippled, puckered
turquoise tourniquets were what I got from the dress. And I hated that he sort
of blamed his client for the ill-fitting mess, telling us that it fit fine
yesterday, but today it’s too tight.
Don’t blame the spunky lady.
Heidi said it looked like a party dress that can’t wait for
the party to be over. Rachel Roy said the construction was bad, and when Nina
agreed, Benjamin pointed out some skirt details and Nina was like, ‘That’s bad,
too.’ Joan Rivers summed up the tightness and the stiffness by asking if the
model was hiding the Liberty Bell under her skirt.
Because that’s what it looked like.
So, while Amanda’s dress was all bad and Tu can sew for sh*t—Thanks
Michelle—it was Benjamin’s turn to be sent packing. And, of course, he told us it wasn’t fair and he’s really
good and it wasn’t his time and ….
I turned the TV off.
MY TAKE
Next week ducks, and duct tape, and prom. Oh my.
Now, about this team business. This is the second, maybe third
time, that a team could have won, but they had one god awful look that brought
them down. And this is the second, maybe third time, Heidi has mentioned that
the teams are missing the point; they don’t have to design as teams, but they
have to work together as teams, and help each.
Perhaps had Michelle stopped her
confessional box rant at Patricia and actually told Patricia that her design was
fug, maybe she might have had a win under her belt.
There is no I in Teams, Michelle, but there is an I in
Middle.
What did YOU think?
There was only ONE button in that button bag.
ReplyDeleteSpot on recap, as always. Amanda should hear the bus coming soon.
Insert standard disclaimer - I hate the *real* woman challenge - but this one would have been okay if they had LEFT Joan Rivers out of it. She was a mean girl all grown up.
Interestingly Joan is being raked over the coals for her comment 'praising' HeidiK's dress for an Oscar after party.
Forgot to clicky the email box.
ReplyDeleteI hated this challenge. It felt, to me, like a bad episode of "Drag U" where they whip a Plain Jane into a fabulous diva. (The drag queens do a better job.)
ReplyDeleteI want Michelle to stop whining and start winning. She is, by far, my favorite.
As soon as the coat tail riding ends, we should see the last of Tu. His stuff is awful. I think he should have gone home this week. Ben's ugly thing didn't fit but at least it wasn't held together with a belt, right?
Tu's design was not only awful but unoriginal. The friars that founded missions in California wore those in brown in the 1600s.
ReplyDeletePatricia's dress was dreadful. It look like she picked out random frayed scraps and sewed them together.
I've seen Richard's look before. It was on sale for $29.99 during one of HSN's late night fashion clearance events.
Benjamin's dress was an epic fail. I can't find anything to like about it.