Please send me you dancing reel or demo links ASAP. Introducing Hip Hop and it’s culture to Latin America.
This particular reality tv show will require 8 to 10 Younger Spanish speaking Hip Hop Dancers to form 2 crews to battle it out in our studio like the movie “You Got Served or Stomp the Yard”. Due to the success of the Telemundo's original show Caso Cerrado in Chile, Caso Cerrado Chile began production with Polo as host and has aired on MEGA since September 18, 2009.Īfter Caso Cerrado, many other television court shows have been created in Chile, including Tribunal Oral on Canal 13, Veredicto on Mega, and La Jueza on Chilevisión from the former production company of Caso Cerrado, Promofilm.Caso Cerrado - TelemundoLos Angeles Krump & hip hop dancing auditions: Would you like to be a part of Telemundo’s top Spanish Reality TV show “Caso Cerrado”? They have planned to shoot 25 programs in the Los Angeles area and are searching for good Spanish speaking, energetic, open minded, outspoken, camera friendly people to re-enact certain cases that deals with every day life’s struggles. In 2009, Ana María Polo visited Chile to attend several MEGA shows. In addition to Telemundo, the show is also broadcast by several other television networks in Latin America, Spain and Equatorial Guinea.
39% of the viewers of Caso Cerrado are aged among 18 - 34. According to, 1,455,000 people tune the show daily, and it's the number one Spanish-spoken show at the 4PM time slot.
In the United States, where the show is produced, Caso Cerrado is broadcast exclusively by Telemundo. They are people who simply have something to tell and who reflect their realities, even if the story is not completely as it happened to them." Broadcast
Polo also maintained that the cases were real but not precise, saying "Those participants are not actors. On a separate 2018 interview with the Sun-Sentinel, Ana María Polo stated that the show was created to entertain but that the participants were not actors. It's the message that we send to the audience that really counts." She added that every case is real, however, sometimes actors are used in cases where participants in the dispute do not want to appear on the show. On January 4, 2009, Ana María Polo stated during an interview with the Chilean newspaper La Tercera, "Most of the cases have to be arranged and modified. In the end credits, a disclaimer is presented stating that most of the cases are dramatized. Criticism Ĭaso Cerrado has been criticized over the veracity of the cases and situations introduced in the show.
Ana María Polo was nominated for an episode of the series that covered a family's special case in which a horse was purchased under false pretenses. In 2010, Caso Cerrado made history by becoming the first show on a Spanish-spoken broadcasting company to be nominated for an Emmy award. The network does provide alternate English language closed captioning for the program on the CC3 caption channel. Until 2006 the show was produced by Promofilm Estados Unidos. Before participating, guests are required to sign contracts agreeing to recognize and comply with Polo's decision. Polo does not function as a judge, but as an arbitrator to settle differences between litigants. On each show, Polo usually takes up to two cases (three cases prior to 2008) with conflicting guests and attempts to solve them through arbitration.
Caso Cerrado, the second and current show title, refers to the phrase Polo says at the end of every case, which is usually accompanied by the strike of a gavel. Along with the show's new format and new content added, production decided it was necessary to rename it. The show was originally called Sala de parejas (Couple's Court) until April 2005, when it was expanded to include other disputes not related to marital issues, such as violence and child abuse, and occasional segments where Polo seeks to educate the audience about issues related to the law. The show began running on Apand originally dealt with the arbitration of marital problems between litigants.