Présenté par Dave Navarro et jugé par les icônes du monde du tatouage, Chris Nunez et Oliver Peck, 10 des descendants des artistes tatoueurs les plus créatifs et qualifiés du pays pour gagne... Tout lirePrésenté par Dave Navarro et jugé par les icônes du monde du tatouage, Chris Nunez et Oliver Peck, 10 des descendants des artistes tatoueurs les plus créatifs et qualifiés du pays pour gagner cent mille dollars et le titre de "INK MASTER".Présenté par Dave Navarro et jugé par les icônes du monde du tatouage, Chris Nunez et Oliver Peck, 10 des descendants des artistes tatoueurs les plus créatifs et qualifiés du pays pour gagner cent mille dollars et le titre de "INK MASTER".
- Récompenses
- 2 nominations au total
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What I like in this show: some of the tattoos (flowers, realistic photos mostly-- I hate skulls, black and white, pin ups, old and new school tattoos) and the artistic and technical explanations from the contestants. I ONLY watch it because of these two aspects.
What I don't like: the drama scenes, the insults, fights, strategies to win, and Mr Nunez's behavior. Whereas Oliver Peck and Dave Navarro are rather fair judges (although sometimes a little politeness would be most appreciated), Chris Nunez is obviously only here to humiliate the contestants instead of purely sticking to his role as a judge.
As a conclusion: this show could be a really great one if Chris Nunez wasn't there and if the contestants were chosen differently. Some of them don't care a d**n about their 'art', they're just here to fight and make a fuss.
Unfortunately, things began to go down hill in the second season. One of the judges, Chris Nunez, became snarkier and snarkier. He seemed to be trying to humiliate and put down the contestants who didn't measure up rather than pull them up to do even better.
Each season, there was a jerk added to the mix. They were someone who would try to "play the game strategically" to get ahead. It became very annoying to watch the petty politics and insults.
The show completely jumped the shark when they announced in the fourth season finale that everyone on the show would have a rival, someone brought in to fight with. Great, pre-made arguing. What a joke! That was the death moment of the show. As soon as they announced that contestants are going to be chosen not on the basis of their art work but on the quality of their enemies I knew the show was dead.
Well, the contestants are good, a bunch of retreads we have seen before- each of them interesting and irritating in their own way, but it's the judges that are hurting this season.
Ryan Ashley is so meek, I thought she would be a stronger personality, but she seems to eager to please.
Ami James is simple a mute. He has about a 15 word vocabulary and says very little during each episode. Nikko Hurtado is the best addition to the show- he appreciates the art, but is not afraid to get into the technical details- he is the closest this version of the show comes to the previous. Joel Madden does a decent job as host, and Navarro's video visits feel like those videos you see while you're on line for a ride at an amusement park. The fake interaction with the judges is obvious- we know he is not live, people, so please stop trying to fool us.
This show REALLY misses Chris Nunez. He was so good with his critiques, he didn't miss a single detail, and he didn't need to drop an F-bomb ever other word to get his point across. Even Oliver is very much missed here.
Finally, since this is on the streaming service, the curses aren't bleeped out. The old show's bleeps could get annoying, but this is way, way, worse. Every other word is an F-bomb and it's almost like they have been told to say it as often as possible in an effort to appear edgier than the old show. It's not edgy, it sounds uneducated and childish.
However, I hope the show comes back for more, and I sincerely hope at least Nunez returns (he could replace Ami and the show would be hugely upgraded). This is still a fun show to watch and seeing the artists at work is always the best part of it.
1. The time given to actually show the pieces is very short. F*ck, it is supposed to be a tattoo show! Show the goddamn tattoos!
2. The majority of the episodes focus on little stupid quarrels among the competitors. It's just like watching some grown-up people acting like children in the kindergarten. Sometimes it is very hard to avoid the thinking that it is planned. It is just annoying and embarrassing to watch.
3. The judging is ridiculous. Needless to say, it is unacceptable for a competition show. Here, it is clear that it is not only the tattoo that is being judged. There's usually a favorite of the judges, and this person will magically stay among the best of the day repeatedly. It does not matter if the tattoo doesn't meet the criteria of the challenge or if it plainly sucks.
I always had complaints about this show, but kept on watching it for the tattoos... But now I realize it is not worthy. Just go for it if you enjoy watching some bizarre human behavior and twist endings.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOliver Peck was a frequent guest on Chris Nunez's tattoo show Miami Ink. Married to Kat Von D, Oliver would accompany his then wife while she helped fill in for injured tattoo artist Darren Brass.
- Citations
[repeating line at the final seconds of every elimination tattoo]
Dave Navarro - Judge: Five, four, three, two, one. That's it! Machines down. Time is up. No more ink/tattooing.
- ConnexionsAlternate-language version of Ink Master: Meesters van de Lage Landen (2017)
Meilleurs choix
- How many seasons does Ink Master have?Alimenté par Alexa