title
stringlengths 1
251
| section
stringlengths 0
6.12k
| text
stringlengths 0
716k
|
---|---|---|
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Twoblade
|
[[:Twoblade]]
|
:Twoblade
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Promotional article about something of dubious notability. TheLongTone (talk) 14:52, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Comment agreed this is probably WP:TOOSOON, but if this article is kept, it absolutely needs a hatnote to cover the far more notable 2Blades. Elemimele (talk) 15:08, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete – no references independent of the subject to establish notability. Ira Leviton (talk) 15:38, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Software-related deletion discussions. Shellwood (talk) 15:40, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete, borderline WP:A7 material. no claim to notability. Sohom (talk) 16:09, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete, it's promotion for a non-notable product. --ArdynOfTheAncients (talk) 18:07, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Websites-related deletion discussions. WCQuidditch ☎ ✎ 18:44, 19 May 2025 (UTC)
|
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Twoblade
|
Table of Content
|
[[:Twoblade]]
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
short description
|
Isabel Richardson Molter (born about 1885, died after 1930) was an American soprano singer from Chicago, heard in oratorio, concert, and recital settings in the 1920s.
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
Early life and education
|
Early life and education
Richardson was born in Cincinnati and raised in the Chicago area, the daughter of George Parker Richardson and Isabel Lorena Adams Richardson. Her father was a businessman from New Hampshire. She lived in St. Joseph, Michigan, as a young woman. She trained as a singer with Franz Prochowsky in Germany.
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
Career
|
Career
Molter was a dramatic soprano. She began her career in Chicago in the 1910s, and toured in the United States in the 1920s."Isabel Molter Sings in New York" The Musical Leader 57(20)(November 14, 1929): 8."Engagements for Isabel Molter" The Musical Leader 57(20)(November 14, 1929): 19. She was associated with the David Bispham's Society of American Singers. The New York Times commented that her voice "when unforced, has good quality in its middle register, and her phrasing and enunciation of the texts of her songs revealed true musicianship.""Isabel R. Molter Sings: Soprano is Cordially Received as her Recital in Guild Theatre" The New York Times (January 14, 1929): 33. The Boston Globe found that Molter "showed keen dramatic instinct, and a high degree of musical intelligence."
Molter sang with the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra in 1925, and gave concerts at a church in Kenosha in 1925 and 1926. She sang on a radio concert in 1927. In New York, she sang at Aeolian Hall in 1926, and at Town Hall in 1927, and sang on programs organized by the Washington Heights Musical Club,"Isabel Molter, 'A Singer Who Can Really Sing'" The Musical Leader 56(3)(January 17, 1929): 10.
In 1928, Molter toured in the American South, and sang in at the Texas Music Teachers' Association conference in Waco, and at concerts in Fort Worth and Dallas. In 1929 she performed in Maine and Massachusetts, and was a last-minute substitute in a performance of Handel's Judas Maccabeus in Chicago."Mrs. Molter Substitutes at Last Minute" The Musical Leader 56(22)(May 30, 1929): 22. In 1931, she sang in Chicago at a concert-format demonstration of Manabozo, an opera by Francis Neilson and William Lester, based on Ojibwe legends.
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
Personal life
|
Personal life
Richardson married pianist and educator Harold Molter in 1921."Isabel Molter to Sing at Guild Theatre" The Musical Leader 56(2)(January 10, 1929): 31. They had a son.
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
References
|
References
Category:American sopranos
Category:Musicians from Chicago
Category:People from St. Joseph, Michigan
Category:Date of birth missing
Category:Date of death missing
|
Isabel Richardson Molter
|
Table of Content
|
short description, Early life and education, Career, Personal life, References
|
File:Primal2ConceptArtwork.webp
|
Orphaned non-free revisions
| |
File:Primal2ConceptArtwork.webp
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Primal2ConceptArtwork.webp
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Primal2ConceptArtwork.webp
|
Table of Content
|
Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing
|
Draft:1966 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three
|
Results from the 1966
|
Results from the 1966 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three held at Monte Carlo on May 21, 1966, in the Circuit de Monaco
|
Draft:1966 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three
|
Classification
|
Classification
Pos Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired 1 Jean-Pierre Beltoise Matra MS5-Ford 24 39:47.2 2 Chris Irwin Brabham BT18-Ford 24 39:47.7 3 John Cardwell Lotus 41-Ford 24 39:52.6 4 Jonathan Williams De Sanctis 66-Ford 24 39:53.9 5 Kurt Ahrens Brabham BT18-Ford 24 40:01.4 6 Jean-Pierre Jaussaud Matra MS5-Ford 24 40:19.5 7 Roy Pike Lotus 41-Ford 24 40:31.1 8 Philippe Vidal Brabham BT14-Ford 24 40:53.4 9 Picko Troberg Brabham BT18-Ford 24 40:53.9 10 Rob Slotemaker Lotus 41-Ford 24 41:25.1 11 Peter Gethin Brabham BT18-Ford 24 41:33.4 12 Jürg Dubler Brabham BT18-Ford 23 13 Corrado Manfredini Wainer 65-Ford 22 14 Enzo Corti BWA 321-Ford 22 15 Robin Widdows Brabham BT18-Ford 20 16 Bob Bondurant Brabham BT18-Ford 17 DNF Eric Offenstadt Pygmée MDB-Ford 14 DNF Antonio Maglione De Sanctis 66-Ford 14 DNF Oscar Cacho Fangio Brabham BT16-Ford 9 DNF Piers Courage Lotus 41-Ford 3 DNF Mauro Bianchi Alpine A310-Renault 2 DNQ Mike Beckwith Lola T60-Ford 1
|
Draft:1966 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three
|
References
|
References
https://www.formel3guide.com/1948-2024/saison-1961-1970/saison-1966/21-05-1966-monte-carlo.html
https://www.the-fastlane.co.uk/formula2/F366_E25.htm
|
Draft:1966 Monaco Grand Prix Formula Three
|
Table of Content
|
Results from the 1966, Classification, References
|
File:Dhaka to Bombay.jpeg
|
Orphaned non-free revisions
| |
File:Dhaka to Bombay.jpeg
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Dhaka to Bombay.jpeg
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Dhaka to Bombay.jpeg
|
Table of Content
|
Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
AFC submission
|
Autobrains Technologies Ltd. (commonly known as Autobrains) is an Israeli startup company that develops artificial intelligence (AI) software for autonomous vehicles. Headquartered in Tel Aviv, Israel, the company has additional sites in Munich, Germany, the United States and China, and it is actively testing and operating in France, India and Vietnam.
The company was founded in 2019 under the name Cartica AI by current CEO Igal Raichelgauz as a spin-off from the AI powerhouse Cortica Ltd. Cartica AI was later rebranded to Autobrains to better reflect its focus on leveraging cognitive machine learning to develop automotive solutions that learn and react like the human brain does.
Autobrains is backed by partner companies Toyota, BMW, Knorr-Bremse, VinFast, and Continental and other leading players in the automotive market. The chairman of the company is Dr. Karl-Thomas Neumann, former CEO of Continental, Opel and Volkswagen China.
The company’s mission is to develop affordable autonomous-driving technology and advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) based on AI. Autobrains software can receive data from a variety of sensors – including camera, radar and lidar – and categorizes objects into “signatures” based on common elements through its unique selflearning approach; the system can then be trained by automakers to respond and react appropriately to those signatures. Autobrains says that its signature-based, self-learning approach makes the technology scalable and particularly capable of handling unique driving circumstances known as edge cases.
In November 2021, the company announced it had raised $101 million in Series C funding, and in March 2022 said it had brought in another $19 million, for a total of $120 million. Autobrains has to date raised just under $140 million in total. Its backers include Continental, BMW’s venture capital arm BMW i Ventures, Temasek the sovereign wealth fund of Singapore, Toyota Ventures, Knorr-Bremse and VinFast.
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
Clients
|
Clients
In 2024, Autobrains announced its first design win with a leading Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer. The partnership brings Autobrains’ AI technology into series production, with the first vehicles featuring its Affordable Safety ADAS solution. This marked a significant milestone in the company’s commercial rollout and global expansion.
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
Partnerships
|
Partnerships
In June 2021, Autobrains announced that its AI technology is central to Continental's growth strategy in the ADAS and AV markets. It had previously spent two years as part of Continental’s incubator program, the Startup Programme of Continental. Together, the companies have developed a single optical camera sensor array that costs 30% less than previous systems, can “see” up to 140 meters (459 feet) ahead on the highway, and can handle ADAS functions including automatic emergency braking, lane-keeping assist, adaptive cruise control and more.
In December 2021, Autobrains announced it would partner with Ambarella, a fabless semiconductor design company, to develop ADAS solutions. The companies showcased their first product – an 8-mega pixel front ADAS chip, which features video-based adaptive cruise control (ACC), automatic emergency braking, lane-keep assist, and traffic signal recognition – at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in 2022.
At CES 2023, Autobrains announced a strategic collaboration with Ambarella and Seeing Machines, an Australian company focused on vision-based driver monitoring technology, to offer automakers a single-box, multi-camera solution using a single SoC. This smaller system provides a low-power and low-cost solution for ADAS.
In December 2025, Autobrains announced a strategic collaboration with JOYNEXT, a global automotive Tier-1 supplier, offering a single-box Smart Camera solution, optimized for cost-effective Advanced Driver Assistance Systems.
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
Technology/Products
|
Technology/Products
Autobrains is developing a self-learning AI technology that, rather than relying on manual data labeling techniques commonly used in the deep-learning AI industry, organizes real-world data into indexed and compressed neural responses it names “signatures” in order to identify concepts and scenarios. Signatures categorize objects by commonalities such as physical characteristics and movement patterns; for example, a large, slow-moving construction vehicle does not need to be labeled individually as bulldozer, backhoes, and excavator, and the system is able to recognize rare vehicles in this category as part of the same signature as the other vehicles, rather than failing to perceive or identify the vehicle and reacting inappropriately. This “unsupervised learning” approach dramatically reduces the amount of computing power required to learn, store, and deploy information, which in turn reduces the cost of installing and maintaining the system in vehicles.
Additionally, the company says its signature-based approach requires less recalibration if cameras or other sensors are moved to a different part of the vehicle, whether by a few inches or a more dramatic change such as from the hood to the roof.
The platform, which is backed by more than 250 patents and a decade of R&D, is hardware-agnostic, designed to work with sensors and chipsets from any provider.
Furthermore, in September 2024 Autobrains announced a new technology: Air2Road. Air2Road is a unique localization technology that combines imagery captured from the air with real-time perception data from the ego-vehicle itself. Designed to enhance safety, perception, and localization accuracy, Air2Road supports scalable autonomous driving by reducing reliance on pre-mapped data or constant cloud connectivity. The approach enables robust performance even in challenging environments, marking a step toward more reliable and independent vehicle autonomy.
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
Media Coverage
|
Media Coverage
Autobrains covered in California Business Journal on how Autobrains CEO Igal Raichelgauz Is Reimagining Self-Driving Technology.
Autobrains’ CEO, Igal Raichelgauz, covered in Forbes on 3 Reasons The Automotive Industry Is Poised To Fulfill The Promise Of Autonomous Driving.
Autobrains C-Funding round covered in TechCrunch.
Autobrains’ C-Funding round covered in Handelsblatt.
Autobrains’ CEO and Founder, Igal Raichelgauz, was featured in an interview with the Handelsblatt, explaining Autobrains’ unique AI inspired by the human brain and optimized for solving edge cases.
Just Auto features Igal Raichelgauz discussing solutions to the challenges of autonomous driving and how Autobrains’ AI solves them.
Interview with Igal Raichelgauz featured in AutomotiveIT magazine, discussing Autobrains’ unique AI solution and software-defined vehicles.
Automobil Industrie features our CEO discussing the establishment of our Munich office.
Reuters feature on Autbrains’ (former Cartica AI) spinn-off and partnerships with BMW, Toyota and Continental.
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
References
|
References
__INDEX__
|
Draft:Autobrains
|
Table of Content
|
AFC submission, Clients, Partnerships, Technology/Products, Media Coverage, References
|
File:KUYI Hopi Radio logo.png
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:KUYI Hopi Radio logo.png
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:KUYI Hopi Radio logo.png
|
Table of Content
|
Summary, Licensing
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
short description
|
Sebastián Čederle (born 21 February 2000) is a Slovak professional ice hockey forward currently under contract with HK Nitra of the Slovak Extraliga.
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
Biography
|
Biography
Sebastián Čederle was born on 21 February 2000 in Skalica. He never met his biological father. His stepfather introduced him to ice hockey at the age of three.
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
Hockey career
|
Hockey career
Čederle played with the local team HK 36 Skalica in junior categories, where he gradually established himself as one of the more prominent talents in the youth ranks. At the age of 15, he won a silver medal in Boys' individual skills challenge at the 2016 Winter Youth Olympics.
He continued his development in the junior team of Rögle BK, where he played and shared a room with Martin Vitaloš, who would later become his teammate at HK Nitra and in the national team. After the start of COVID-19 pandemic, Čederle worked for a month at a supermarket in Skalica to help finance a professional summer training camp.
In 2020, Čederle signed his first professional contract with the Czech outfit Bílí Tygři Liberec. At Liberec, he failed to make a break through and eventually persuaded the team to let him depart for HK Nitra after two years. In Nitra, Čederle, quickly established himself as a team leader by making a major contribution to league title victory in 2024.
Following excellent performances in the 2025 session, Čederle debuted in the national team at the 2025 IIHF World Championship.
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
Player statistics
|
Player statistics
Regular season Playoffs Season Team League GP G A Pts PIM GP G A Pts PIM 2021–22 Bílí Tygři Liberec Czech Republic 8 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 2022–23 Bílí Tygři Liberec Czech Republic 7 0 0 0 2 — — — — — 2022–23 HK Nitra (Loan) Slovakia 29 5 6 11 4 5 0 0 0 0 2023–24 HK Nitra Slovakia 41 8 12 20 10 21 5 6 11 0 2024–25 HK Nitra Slovakia 34 15 9 24 8 20 9 1 10 2 Czech Republic totals 15 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 Slovakia totals 104 28 27 55 22 46 14 7 21 2
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
Awards and honors
|
Awards and honors
Award Year Slovak Champion 2024
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
References
|
References
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
External links
|
External links
Category:2000 births
Category:Living people
Category:Ice hockey people from Skalica
Category:HK Nitra players
Category:Slovak ice hockey forwards
|
Sebastián Čederle
|
Table of Content
|
short description, Biography, Hockey career, Player statistics, Awards and honors, References, External links
|
Template:Mongol-Empire-stub
|
asbox
|
*
|
Template:Mongol-Empire-stub
|
Table of Content
|
asbox
|
File:Field Gun Factory, Kanpur.svg
|
Valid SVG
| |
File:Field Gun Factory, Kanpur.svg
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Field Gun Factory, Kanpur.svg
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Field Gun Factory, Kanpur.svg
|
Table of Content
|
Valid SVG, Summary, Licensing
|
Yakimaherald.com
|
#
|
redirectYakima Herald-Republic
|
Yakimaherald.com
|
Table of Content
|
#
|
HNLMS Colombia (1930)
|
Short description
|
HNLMS Colombia was originally an ocean liner, registered as MS Colombia. She was the flagship of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Stoomboot-Maatschappij. She would be commandeered and militarized by the Royal Netherlands Navy on 8 November 1940.Mark, Chris (1997). Schepen van de Koninklijke Marine in W.O. II. Alkmaar: De Alk. ISBN 978-90-6013-522-8.
|
HNLMS Colombia (1930)
|
Service history
|
Service history
Serving as a troopship during the first year of her career with the Royal Netherlands Navy, Colombia was converted at Dundee into a submarine tender with the conversion work lasting from 1 May to 18 September 1941. She served in her role as submarine tender until she was torpedoed by the , off the coast of Simonstown, Union of South Africa (), on 27 February 1943. Eight of the 326 crew died during her sinking, with remaining survivors rescued by and a Royal Air Force launch.
|
HNLMS Colombia (1930)
|
References
|
References
Category:World War II naval ships of the Netherlands
Category:1930 ships
Category:February 1943 in Africa
Category:1943 in South Africa
Category:1943 endings
Category:Maritime incidents in February 1943
|
HNLMS Colombia (1930)
|
Table of Content
|
Short description, Service history, References
|
File:Premik Number One.jpeg
|
Orphaned non-free revisions
| |
File:Premik Number One.jpeg
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Premik Number One.jpeg
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Premik Number One.jpeg
|
Table of Content
|
Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Use Scottish English
|
The Scottish Languages Bill (, ) is a proposed law in the Scottish Parliament relating to the promotion of Scottish Gaelic and Scots in Scotland.
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Background
|
Background
There had never been legislation relating to the promotion of Scots, and the existing legislation relating Scottish Gaelic had been the Gaelic Language (Scotland) Act 2005.
Scottish Gaelic was recorded as a minority language in Na h-Eileanan Siar at the 2022 Scottish census for the first time. The census also found that the number of people who had any level of proficiency in Gaelic had increased from 1.7% to 2.5%.
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Provisions
|
Provisions
The bill would improve access to Gaelic medium education by amending the . The bill would also enable the use of Scots in the school curriculum.
The bill gives both Gaelic and Scots "official status" but this is essentially symbolic with no "enforceable" rights.
The bill would establish certain areas as "areas of linguistic significance" in order for the promotion of Gaelic and Scots in those specific areas, but the process for the establishment of these areas is not clear in the text.
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Reception
|
Reception
The bill has been criticised by Conchúr Ó Giollagáin, a professor at the University of the Highlands and Islands, for focusing on the requirements to meet "official" status as a second language rather than on Gaelic as a living language as the mother tongue for some people.
A report by the Scottish Parliament Education, Children and Young People Committee was sceptical that the legislation would increase the number of people who speak Gaelic and Scots.
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Other developments
|
Other developments
During the passage of the bill, the government pledged to spend on Gaelic separately to the provisions of the bill.
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
References
|
References
Category:Language legislation in the United Kingdom
Category:Proposed laws of Scotland
|
Scottish Languages Bill
|
Table of Content
|
Use Scottish English, Background, Provisions, Reception, Other developments, References
|
Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/Spacecowboy420
|
SPIarchive notice
| |
Wikipedia:Sockpuppet investigations/Spacecowboy420
|
Table of Content
|
SPIarchive notice
|
Category:Danish expatriate sportspeople in Singapore
|
Fooian expatriate sportspeople in Bar cat
| |
Category:Danish expatriate sportspeople in Singapore
|
Table of Content
|
Fooian expatriate sportspeople in Bar cat
|
Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/June 2025 Backlog Drive/Participants
|
<noinclude>
To join the drive, you must be an AFC reviewer, New Page Patroller, or administrator. If you are not, you can apply to become an AFC reviewer. Please check that you [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Participants
|
To join the drive, you must be an AFC reviewer, New Page Patroller, or administrator. If you are not, you can apply to become an AFC reviewer. Please check that you meet the criteria, and then submit an application. Once you have the permission, you must enable the helper script in your gadget preferences.
Once all of that is squared away, please add # {{user|Your username}} to the bottom of the list below to officially sign up for the drive.
|
Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/June 2025 Backlog Drive/Participants
|
Table of Content
|
<noinclude>
To join the drive, you must be an AFC reviewer, New Page Patroller, or administrator. If you are not, you can apply to become an AFC reviewer. Please check that you [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Participants
|
File:Blitz Kids (2025) book cover.jpg
|
Orphaned non-free revisions
| |
File:Blitz Kids (2025) book cover.jpg
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Blitz Kids (2025) book cover.jpg
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Blitz Kids (2025) book cover.jpg
|
Table of Content
|
Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
Short description
|
The Battle of Chebrolu was a battle fought between the Western Chalukyas under Emperor Satyashraya and the Cholas under Prince Rajendra Chola. In the end, the Western Chalukyas were victorious, and the Cholas were forced to retreat from Vengi
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
Background
|
Background
During the early 11th century, the Chola dynasty of Thanjavur were on the ascendant. The Chola influence in the eastern Deccan ruled by the Chalukyas of Vengi (the Eastern Chalukyas) was on the rise. With the help of the Cholas, Saktivarman had defeated Jata-Choda Bhima and gained control of the Vengi kingdom. The rise of Chola influence in the east was unacceptable to the Western Chalukyas. Around c.1006 - 1007, a general of Satyashraya named Bayalnambi burnt the forts at Dhanyakataka (or Dharanikota) and Yanamandala. With these victories, Satyashraya was able to establish himself temporarily at Chebrolu in the modern Guntur district.Sastri (1955), p.165
But these early victories were temporary. The Chola King Rajaraja I mounted a two pronged counter-attack. A large Chola army led by prince Rajendra Chola invaded and captured Donur in the Bijapur region, Banavasi, parts of the Raichur Doab (called Iditurainnadu), Unkal near modern Hubli, and Kudalasangama in modern Bagalkot district.
After hearing of this, emperor Satyashraya along with his general Bayalnambi and his younger brother Dasavarman marched to face prince Rajendra.
After marching to Vengi, the two armies would meet at Chebrolu
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
Battle
|
Battle
At the battle of Chebrolu, Emperor Satyashraya would defeat Rajendra Chola and at last reconquered these territories after defeating Rajendra Chola according to Hottur inscriptions which have also been noted by historians Suryanath Kamath and R.C. Mujamdar. Emperor Satyashraya defeated Rajendra Chola in Chebrolu and captured it.
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
Aftermath
|
Aftermath
After Satyashraya's victory, the Western Chalukyas would continue their battles against Rajaraja I and Rajendra, and in the end the Chalukyas would drive out the Cholas,Sen (1999), p.383Chopra, Ravindran and Subrahmanian (2003), p.103 but suffer heavy losses, including Satyashraya's younger brother, Dasavarman.
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
References
|
References
|
Battle of Chebrolu
|
Table of Content
|
Short description, Background, Battle, Aftermath, References
|
File:Aleksandr Evgenyevich Nepomnyashchiy.png
|
Orphaned non-free revisions
| |
File:Aleksandr Evgenyevich Nepomnyashchiy.png
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Aleksandr Evgenyevich Nepomnyashchiy.png
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Aleksandr Evgenyevich Nepomnyashchiy.png
|
Table of Content
|
Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
refimprove
|
The tenth series of Spanish talent competition programme Got Talent España began airing on Telecinco on 7 September 2024 and concluded on 21 December 2024. The series was presented by Santi Millán, with Risto Mejide, Tamara Falcó, Paula Echevarría and Florentino Fernandez as judges.
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Series overview
|
Series overview
Following the conclusion of the previous series, it was announced that the show would return for a tenth series. It was also confirmed that Édurne would we replaced with Tamara Falcó, who would be judging alongside Risto Mejide, Paula Echevarría and Florentino Fernandez.
This season was won by opera singer Nataliya Stepanska, with dance group Chibi Unity in second and beatboxing champions Sarukani in third.
20px Wildcard
20px Golden Buzzer
20px Platinum Buzzer
20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Live Golden Buzzer
ParticipantAge(s)GenreActSemi-finalFinishedAmbrosio Cantu22Singing/MusicSinger/Guitarist3FinalistAndrea Chiarini36MusicGuitarist3EliminatedCarla Richter18SingingSinger4EliminatedCasto Dominiguez40Singing/MusicSinger/Pianist3Eliminated Chibi Unity 16-27 Dance Dance Group 4 Runner-UpChildren’s Dreams 15px9-14DanceDance GroupN/AFinalistChirag Lukha34DangerDanger Act1EliminatedCity of the Air Choir10-18SingingChoir4EliminatedDaliana & José20AcrobaticsBalancing Duo4EliminatedDaniele & Naimana42 & 43Singing/ComedyVentriloquist Duo3EliminatedDaria Ponomarenko11AcrobaticsPole Dancer1FinalistDavid Burlet53VarietyPlate Spinner4EliminatedDavid “Record Breaker” Rush39VarietyRecord Breaker2EliminatedDuo Just Two MenAcrobaticsAerial Duo2EliminatedDuo Parshyns25 & 44AcrobaticsAerial Duo2EliminatedEcho Man39VarietyVocalist4EliminatedEkaterina Shelehova 15px28SingingSinger4EliminatedEldiamante Negro 15x15px35Acrobatics Acrobat 3FinalistGuilleproff 15px29SingingChoir2EliminatedGuille & Roy Moreno13 & 41Singing/MusicSinging/Music Duo1EliminatedHermanas Segura19 & 20AcrobaticsBalancing Duo2EliminatedI Am Naughty18-30DanceDance Group3EliminatedJoan Natzari30ComedyComedian2EliminatedKarim44Comedy/MagicComedy Magician4FinalistKimberly Winter 15px34VarietyBurperN/AWithdrewKrystal & Melissa3 & 23AnimalsDog Act2EliminatedLady5 monthsAnimalsPig Act1EliminatedM++23-32DanceLED Dance Group1EliminatedMagicianoMagicMagician3EliminatedMagic Jano37MagicMagician3EliminatedMagic JoséMagicMagician1EliminatedMarcos WaldemarMagicMagician1EliminatedMiss Vicky 15px21AcrobaticsPole Dancer3EliminatedMK 15x15px25Magic Magician2FinalistMohamed BrothersAcrobaticsBalancing Duo3EliminatedMusicals Junior 15px 15x15px15-23SingingChoir1Finalist Nataliya Stepanska 36 Singing Opera Singer 2 WinnerOrthemis Orchestra27-63Comedy/MusicComedy Orchestra4EliminatedPaul Henry 15x15px31Magic Magician4FinalistPhilipe Mateos28ComedyComedian3EliminatedPipe & Kathe18 & 25DanceSalsa Duo1EliminatedRoman Garcia47MagicMagician2Eliminated Sarukani 22-24 Singing Beatboxing Group 2 Third place TatakiDanceDance Group1EliminatedTK34VarietySand Artist1FinalistTrinh Tra My30DangerDanger Act3EliminatedVilas Nayak40VarietySpeed Artist4EliminatedWannabes33-49VarietyNovelty Act1EliminatedXtreme Flying35 & 37AcrobaticsAerial Duo4EliminatedYuiYui29DanceDancer2Eliminated
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Semi-finals summary
|
Semi-finals summary
20x20px Buzzed out20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Golden Buzzer
Prior to the beginning of the live shows, the semi-finalists were decided following a deliberation stage.
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Semi-final 1
|
Semi-final 1
Semi-Finalist OrderBuzzesFinished M++ 1 Eliminated Lady 2 Eliminated Guille & Roy Moreno 3 Eliminated Daria Ponomarenko 4 Advanced TK 5 Advanced Chirag Lukha 6 Eliminated Magic José 7 Eliminated Tataki8 Eliminated Wannabes9 20x20px Eliminated Musicals Junior 10 20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Advanced - Paula’s GB Pipe & Kathe11 Eliminated Marcos Waldemar12 Eliminated
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Semi-final 2
|
Semi-final 2
Semi-Finalist OrderBuzzesFinished David “Record Breaker” Rush 1 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px Eliminated Hermanas Segura 2 Eliminated MK 3 20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Advanced - Risto’s GB YuiYui 4 20x20px Eliminated Nataliya Stepanska 5 Advanced Joan Natzari 6 Eliminated Duo Just Two Men 7 Eliminated Guilleproff 8 Eliminated Roman Garcia 9 Eliminated Krystal & Melissa 10 Eliminated Sarukani 11 Advanced Duo Parshyns 12 Eliminated
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Semi-final 3
|
Semi-final 3
Semi-Finalist OrderBuzzesFinished Mohamed Brothers 1 20x20px Eliminated Andrea Chiarini 2 20x20px Eliminated Magiciano 3 Eliminated Eldiamante Negro 4 20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Advanced - Tamara’s GB Casto Dominiguez 5 Eliminated Philipe Mateos 6 Eliminated Trinh Tra My 7 Eliminated Ambrosio Cantu 8 Advanced I Am Naughty 9 Eliminated Magic Jano 10 Eliminated Daniele & Naimana 11 Eliminated Miss Vicky 12 Eliminated
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Semi-final 4
|
Semi-final 4
Semi-Finalist OrderBuzzesFinished Chibi Unity 1 Advanced David Burlet 2 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px Eliminated City of the Air Choir 3 Eliminated Paul Henry 4 20px|alt=Live Golden Buzzer Advanced - Florentino’s GB Echo Man 5 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px 20x20px Eliminated Carla Richter 6 Eliminated Daliana & José 7 Eliminated Orthemis Orchestra 8 Eliminated Vilas Nayak 9 Eliminated Karim 10 Advanced Xtreme Flying 11 Eliminated Ekaterina Shelehova 12 Eliminated
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Finals Summary
|
Finals Summary
Semi-Finalist OrderBuzzesFinished Eldiamante Negro 1 Eliminated Musicals Junior 2 Eliminated MK 3 Eliminated TK 4 Eliminated Chibi Unity 5 Runner-Up Ambrosio Cantu 6 Eliminated Paul Henry 7 Eliminated Children’s Dreams 8 Eliminated Sarukani 9 Third Place Karim 10 Eliminated Daria Ponomarenko 11 Eliminated Nataliya Stepanska 12 Winner
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Ratings
|
Ratings
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
References
|
References
|
Got Talent España season 10
|
Table of Content
|
refimprove, Series overview, Semi-finals summary, Semi-final 1, Semi-final 2, Semi-final 3, Semi-final 4, Finals Summary, Ratings, References
|
File:Kothin Protishodh.jpg
|
Summary
|
Summary
|
File:Kothin Protishodh.jpg
|
Licensing
|
Licensing
|
File:Kothin Protishodh.jpg
|
Table of Content
|
Summary, Licensing
|
Draft:Why gibberish is not gibberish.
|
AfC submission
| |
Draft:Why gibberish is not gibberish.
|
References
|
References
|
Draft:Why gibberish is not gibberish.
|
Table of Content
|
AfC submission, References
|
Electrolysis cell
|
#
|
redirect Electrolysis
|
Electrolysis cell
|
Table of Content
|
#
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.