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Stanley Cup Finals 2010 Schedule

Chris Pronger #20 and Mike Richards #18 of the Philadelphia Flyers celebrate after defeating the Montreal Canadiens by a score of 4-2. The Philadelphia Flyers, who squeaked into the postseason with a shootout win in the final game of the season, advanced to their first Stanley Cup final in 13 years on Monday. Game 1 Saturday, May 298:00 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago NBC, CBC, RDS Game 2 Monday, May 31 8:00 p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago NBC, CBC, RDS Game 3 Wednesday, June 2 8:00 p.m. C

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Stanley Cup Finals 2010 Schedule

Crystal Bowersox’s Pre-Idol Busking: A Star Pulling Out of the Station?

Tomorrow’s American Idol showdown may have a new frontrunner in the momentum-accruing Lee DeWyze, but no one can claim GrizzLee Bore deserves the win, right? Crystal Bowersox, Lee’s resilient competitor, has given so many great consecutive performances that many voters are just used to her talents. Thus, the brigade to ensure Crystal’s victory begins here, with these two videos of Mama Sox performing next to an open guitar case at a Chicago train station. Unlike Lee, she’s still just as much of a star even when a Metra is passing behind her at 100 MPH.

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Crystal Bowersox’s Pre-Idol Busking: A Star Pulling Out of the Station?

Cam’ron Explains Why He Set Up Shop In Atlanta

‘We’re trying to just get a different vibe,’ he says of recording in ATL for a few months. By Shaheem Reid Cam’ron Photo: MTV News ATLANTA — Harlem rap king Cam’ron has enough bread to set up shop anywhere. He’s had ties to Florida and he’s heavy in the Midwest. Now, Killa has packed his bags and headed down South. Cam has temporarily relocated to Atlanta to record his next few projects. “We got a bunch of stuff going on,” Cam explained recently. “I got my solo album to do. We got ‘Killa Season 2’ soundtrack. ‘Cousin Bang, the Movie’ soundtrack. To keep it 100, down South, they got a lot of hot beats with no samples. We’re trying to just get a different vibe. I did four of my albums in New York, one in Chicago, one in L.A. But I never did an album recording in Atlanta. So me and Vado came down here to get a different vibe. We’re gonna be down here for a few months recording and working.” Killa has already started his next mixtape, a collaboration with DJ Holiday . Cam and Vado also just released their Boss of All Bosses tape with DJ Drama . The set features the new Vado single “Speakin Tongues.” “I don’t know what nobody thought,” Cam told Mixtape Daily of the song. “It’s me. This is what I do for a living. But shout to Vado. It’s his record. He got the beat and all that. I was like, ‘Nah, we gotta put that out immediately.’ “Let me break it down: We’re the U.N. That’s the name of the team,” Cam described. “The U.N. is ‘Us Now.’ We got an album coming out in August that’s gonna be stupid. Vado’s solo joint, look towards December [for that one]. But I want everybody to be focused on that U.N. album, ’cause when that comes out, it’s gonna be bananas. Stupid. This August. [‘Speakin Tongues’], this is the first single off of it.” “The song is about partying, living the Harlem life. Ballin’,” Vado added. “You already know.” What do you think Cam’s Atlanta music will sound like? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists The Diplomats

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Cam’ron Explains Why He Set Up Shop In Atlanta

Lee DeWyze’s Hometown Ecstatic About His ‘American Idol’ Finale Bid

‘I had no doubt Lee would make it to the finale!’ says DeWyze’s former high school teacher Amy Silverman. By Gil Kaufman Lee DeWyze on “American Idol” Photo: FOX Just about anywhere you went in Lee DeWyze’s hometown of Mt. Prospect, Illinois, last week, his fans, friends and supporters weren’t shy about telling you that their guy was going to make it to next week’s “American Idol” finale, and that he’ll probably even win. Well, on Thursday (May 20) morning, they were feeling pretty pumped up now that half of that prophecy has come true. “I had no doubt Lee would make it to the finale!” crowed his good friend and former high school teacher Amy Silverman. “Although we all know anything can happen, Lee not making it to the finale would have been comparable to Chicago being hit by a tsunami! Really, he is the best! And the fact that millions of people … young and old, male and female, love him and his music so much proves that he deserves to be on the big stage next week!” Silverman, who met Lee not long after the once-rebellious teen had just taken up guitar, said she could only imagine the hooting and hollering going on in houses, restaurant and bars in the area when host Ryan Seacrest announced that Lee would be facing off against Crystal Bowersox in next Tuesday night’s final sing-off for the crown. “I know where I was [the Fox and Hound in Arlington Heights ]. The whole building was shaking from the energy of people screaming, yelling, whistling, clapping, and of course, there were tears of joy!” she said. “As far as next week goes, Lee has got it! Although, I think Crystal is very talented too, Lee has the versatility and reaches a much wider range of fans.” Dr. Patricia Tedaldi-Monti, dean of students at Prospect High School , which Lee attended from ninth grade until partway through senior year, could hardly contain her excitement either. “It gives you chills to see him,” she said of the former student who promised her that he’d be a rock star someday before he left her school. “I feel great about any former student who succeeds, but his story … he’s worked so hard and done unbelievable.” Tedaldi-Monti, who also feels confident Lee is going to win, said she doesn’t think the 24-year-old singer has peaked yet and that his best performances are yet to come. Even though he’s been watching Lee perform all around the Chicagoland area for more than six years, friend Brian Friedopfer was still shocked at Wednesday night’s results show. “Going into it, we were pretty confident and felt good about it. But as soon as they made it official, we just jumped out of our seats,” he said Thursday morning. “Once I sat down after the initial excitement, I had one of those moments like Lee did when he came home, and I said,’ Holy crap!’ ” Friedopfer was confident his friend could win from the moment DeWyze tried out for “Idol” almost a year ago, but the reality didn’t really sink in until well after the news was delivered by Seacrest. “I was sitting there real quiet and my friends asked, ‘Are you okay?’ ” he recalled. ” ‘Yeah, I’m just trying to take it in,’ I said. It hit me, like, ‘Holy sh–! He can really win this!’ It was a humbling moment.” Like Tedaldi-Monti, Friedopfer said he thinks DeWyze hasn’t hit his peak yet and might still have some surprises in store. “I’ve seen him goofing off around us and he’s belted out some crazy stuff,” he said. “He hasn’t done that yet. He’s been pretty tame out there. So watch out, America!” Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos Lee DeWyze: From Illinois Boy To ‘American Idol’ Star ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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Lee DeWyze’s Hometown Ecstatic About His ‘American Idol’ Finale Bid

Lee DeWyze’s Friends Reveal ‘American Idol’ Finalist’s Improv Skills

‘He’ll look at the pool table and sing a song about it,’ Brian Friedopfer tells MTV News. By Gil Kaufman Brian Friedopfer, Lee DeWyze’s Friend Photo: MTV News We’ve gotten to know Lee DeWyze, 24, a bit on “American Idol” this season. We’ve learned that he struggled a bit in high school, used to work at a paint store and that he can make even an old “Idol” chestnut like “Hallelujah” feel brand-new again . But the one thing nobody has talked about, that his friends and family say is actually one of Lee’s strongest skills, is his ability to improvise lyrics on the spot. There’s not really room on the show to freestyle, but if you believe his karaoke pal Brian Friedopfer, 27, Lee can throw down off the top of the dome with the best of them. “He always had [his guitar] in his car or if we were at a bar during the summer … he’ll bust it out [and] we’ll have sing-a-longs. Everybody would be doing harmonies. He’ll make up lyrics on the spot,” Friedopfer recalled. “It’s crazy. He’ll sing a song about a bottle of beer, about anything. He’ll look at the pool table and sing a song about it. … I don’t think you’re going to have the ability to see it on the show, unfortunately.” DeWyze’s sister, Sarah DeWyze-Salas, 26, said Lee would show off his on-the-spot skills during family vacations as well. “Every year, we used to go on vacation, [and] we would sit around the campfire, and he would go, one-by-one, just making up something about us,” she recalled during a viewing party in support of the onetime high school hell-raiser in his hometown last week. “He’s always been really, really good at making things up and having fun with us.” His old boss at Mt. Prospect Paint, Bill Lagattolla, told a similar tale, recalling that on slow Sundays, Lee would bring in his guitar and jam, making up new words to old songs or riffing off of customers and co-workers in the store and making up lyrics to improvised jams to pass the time. During his senior year at Forest View Alternative school, assistant dean Dave Winsauer said Lee used his unique skills to make a long class trip down to Atlanta much more bearable. “I brought my guitar and … Lee played the guitar in the van most of the way down there, and … he would just start playing a blues riff or something like that and start making up songs about the different kids in the van or me,” Winsauer laughed. “He was great. He was hilarious.” In fact, DeWyze was so good at making up songs on the spot, Winsauer tried to get the teenager to try out for the famous Second City comedy troupe in Chicago to see if he could motivate the budding singer/songwriter to pursue a career in stand-up comedy. Another friend, Mike Corsi, 27, who met DeWyze in high school detention more than nine years ago, said in addition to being a decent beatboxer (watch out, Blake Lewis ), Lee could riff a song off anything he saw. “You would talk to him, and you would start telling a story, and then he’d cut you off and sing a song about yourself,” Corsi said. “I’m a deli manager for Jewel-Osco food stores, and I would be talking to him, and then all of a sudden he’d be like, ‘In the deli!’ ” before taking off and singing a few free-association verses about his friend’s supermarket gig. That talent also came in handy when the perpetually broke twosome would go hang out at a local Denny’s and not even have enough change to buy coffee. “Lee would be in the back booth playing his songs, and they just kind of let it go,” he said, alluding to an unspoken free-coffee-for-fresh-tunes quid pro quo. Would you like Lee to show off his improv skills on “Idol”? Let us know in the comments! Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Top 3 Visit Their Hometowns ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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Lee DeWyze’s Early Albums: A Boy And His Guitar Grow Up

Pre-‘American Idol’ work displays singer/songwriter’s progress, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery Lee DeWyze Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Fox Late last week, I received a package from something called Wuli Records, a vaguely mysterious-sounding Chicago label with a fancy dragon logo. Intrigued — since, you know, I love dragons — I opened it, and out fell a pair of CDs from a singer/songwriter named Lee DeWyze. I have never heard of him, but I decided to give them a listen, since he looked like a nice guy in the press photo. I guess I had a few hours to kill or something. Of course, the second-half of that paragraph isn’t exactly true (since, you know, DeWyze is probably going to win “American Idol,” a show watched by some 20 million people every week, myself included), but I decided to pretend like it was, for one day at least. Erasing everything I know about him from my memory (which isn’t all that much — didn’t he work in a paint store or something?), I sat down and listened to DeWyze’s first two albums. After all, before he was a front-runner on America’s favorite singing competition, he was just another kid with an acoustic guitar, a batch of songs and a dream of making it big. I suppose it was my way of trying to get to know him better or at least trying to latch on to this fairly nebulous thing his fans keep e-mailing me about. What can I say? I guess I had a few hours to kill or something. So, ignore everything I just wrote. Let’s talk about this DeWyze kid — he could be big someday, or at least have a song or two on adult-contemporary radio, provided he works hard enough. His first album — which, conveniently enough, came bundled with a huge sticker declaring it “The Debut Album From Lee DeWyze” — is called So I’m Told, and it’s very much a first album. Released in 2007 and produced by Ryan T. McGuire (who, Wikipedia tells me, is/was a member of the Virginia Gentlemen, “the oldest a cappella group at the University of Virginia”), it’s basically 11 gently strummed acoustic numbers, with DeWyze singing like a mushier-mouthed Dave Matthews (particularly on the song “Love and Misery”). None of it is particularly grabbing, though it bears mention that the silly wah-wah guitar frippery on “Red Rover” manages to get a rise (it also sounds a whole lot like Edie Brickell & New Bohemians’ “What I Am”), and DeWyze’s duet with an unnamed female singer (looking at the back of the album for a name, perhaps it’s “Erin McGuire,” who’s credited as an “Additional Recording Engineer”) on “The Problem Is You” is genuinely pretty. The problem here is, DeWyze doesn’t show anything special. Sure, his voice is nice enough, and he’s a perfectly serviceable player, but he doesn’t do much to distance himself from the 10 bazillion dudes who do this same kind of thing every Tuesday at open-mic night. Oh, and the album artwork is kind of boring too. It’s on DeWyze’s second album — or, as the sticker on the front puts it, “The New Album” — Slumberland where he really shows signs of distancing himself from the pack. Released in 2009, it’s proof that DeWyze has been practicing and growing as a musician and songwriter. Opening with “So What Now” — a hushed, dreamlike number featuring a humming, backtracked guitar bit, rattling tabla and a sitar (!) — the album rolls right into the strummy, feedback-laced “All Fall Down” and then a roiling slide-guitar tune called “Annabelle,” each showcasing his newfound sorta-growl and swampy, sweaty phrasing techniques. There’s a cocksure swagger here, and yes, DeWyze still sounds a lot like Matthews, but he’s also coming into his own. I could see him winning a televised singing competition someday. Thematically, as the title implies, Slumberland seems to be loosely based on the concept of sleep, or at least dreams. “Princess” opens with the line “Do you remember sleeping on the floor?” “Where You Lie” begins with “Under your bed, where you lie your head.” And, shoot, there’s a tune called “Another Sleep Song” on here too. Sonically, there’s plenty of opaque, treated guitars, wooshing, windswept slide guitar, winsome strings and even some electronic beats. I’ll go ahead and call it a concept album, because, hey, it’s not like anyone is ever gonna hear it. The point is, I would probably actually buy Slumberland, or at least download it off some torrent site. There’s an admirable level of growth on display here, in just about every conceivable way — not to mention the level of ambition he shows by releasing what amounts to a conceptual piece. Even the artwork — a drawing of a tree — is much improved this time out. I don’t know what the future holds for DeWyze, but if the leap he made from one album to the next is any indication, things look bright indeed. Sure, he’s still just a singer/songwriter (a genus I will freely admit to loathing), but there’s something here, to be certain. Now, if only he could find some way to raise his profile. Then the sky would really be the limit. Questions? Comments? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com . Related Photos Lee DeWyze: From Illinois Boy To ‘American Idol’ Star

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Lee DeWyze’s Early Albums: A Boy And His Guitar Grow Up

Nas, Damian Marley Bring Political Distant Relatives Tour To NYC

Duo joined by Evil Genius Green Lantern for socially conscious show. By Shaheem Reid Lyrically, Nas has been at a higher altitude than his peers since the beginning of his career. His verbal achievements have become legendary. While admittedly, Nas sometimes has questionable beat selections, the Queensbridge native’s words have been so piercing that the guy can frankly get away with rapping over anything. And he has. Last year when Esco announced that he would be following up his album Untitled with a duet LP with a star outside of genre, Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley , some of his fans didn’t know what to think. But if there is anyone who could actually pull it off, it’s Nas. Certainly there would be way more public pushback if, say, a Jay-Z, Eminem, T.I. or Young Jeezy would have set out on such an audacious musical venture. But with Nas, you know his spirit is free, and even in his mid-30s, the timeless mic king is almost as rebellious as when he was a 20-year-old kid fresh out of the Queensbridge projects. Last night, Nas and Jr. Gong touched down at New York’s Highline Ballroom for the second show of their Distant Relatives tour (the trek started this weekend in Chicago). The messages in the music steer clear of materialistic jargon and partying — the duo pushed thought provocation on worldwide subjects. Nas brought one of the great DJs in hip-hop, the Evil Genius Green Lantern. Marley came with his band, including backup singers, as well as a flag bearer who proudly and tirelessly waved the colors of Jamaica throughout the show. “What happened to us?” Nas rapped with force on “Tribes at War,” performed at the top of their set. “Geographically they moved us, from Africa/ We was once happiness pursuers/ Now we backstabbin’/ Combative and abusive/ African and Arab go at it, they most Muslim/ We should be movin’ in unison.” “Ancient People” came next, with Nas checking his BlackBerry while on the mic. Either he had an urgent text message or he couldn’t remember his lines, but nevertheless, Esco kept going. “Nah Mean” followed, with the Distant Relatives duo asking President Obama what he could do for them. From there, it was vintage Nas. The supreme MC went into some vintage material, including “Nas Is Like,” “Represent” and “Hip-Hop Is Dead.” “I hate the radio!” Nas yelled on the latter. “F— the radio.” Nas shouted out the Jamaican forefather of hip-hop, Kool Herc, and at the end of “If I Ruled the World” gave love to Guru. “My man Guru, he walks,” Nas said as his background singers sang, “we’ll walk right up to the sun. Hand in hand.” “This one’s about leaders,” Marley sang, from one of the album’s highlights, “Leaders.” “Let’s all change the world.” “The odds stacked against him/ He fights back Mac and Benzes/ Never puts cash or ass before a friendship/ He laughs last/ As some die young, he is still existing/ Somehow he got around the pitfalls of the system/ When he walks, we watch/ When we talks, we listen/ Leaders.”

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Nas, Damian Marley Bring Political Distant Relatives Tour To NYC

Nas Says Working With Damian Marley Helped Him Through Personal Drama

‘I kept my head clear and focused on what we was doing,’ he says of recording Distant Relatives. By Shaheem Reid Nas Photo: Def Jam Nas shared a brotherly bond with Damian “Jr. Gong” Marley while recording their Distant Relatives LP , which was part of the reason he has been able to get through his much-publicized personal turmoil over the past year. In April of last year, Kelis filed for divorce from Nas . Since then, the two have been embroiled in a court battle over child support. Still, despite whatever drama the MC found himself, it didn’t blur his focus on his new project. “Personal life is what it is,” he said Monday (May 17). “Everybody goes through it. Working on this record got me through it. Rockin’ with D got me through it. His whole squad, his whole team, the way he rides, his whole culture. He didn’t have to push anything on me. He didn’t have to say anything particular. Just, I know this is my brother right here. Rockin’ with him, I kept my head clear and focused on what we was doing, so it was all good.” Their joint effort hits stores Tuesday. The two started a tour in support of the project, touching the stage in Chicago over the weekend, and they hit New York on Monday night. “People don’t know what to expect still,” Nas said of their live shows. “It’s a good thing the album is out. You can enjoy it, come through, anticipate certain songs. We’re doing an album for the first time, so we’re still getting the kinks out, but each show we do, it’s just growing.” Nas promised that the duo will get “heavily” into the album at their concerts. The guest stars on Distant Relatives include K’Naan, Josh Stone, Lil Wayne and Jr. Gong’s brother Stephen Marley. “He’s on two tracks, his vocals, which is on ‘Leaders’ and ‘In His Own Words,’ ” Damian said. “He also produced those two tracks and a track called ‘Patience’ on the album. For me, it’s a natural thing. All of my albums prior to this was produced by my brother and myself. That’s how we do music. It’s another natural step for us to do music on this album also.” “It’s mind-blowing, man,” Nas added about being in the lab with the Marley family. “Anytime you see family, you’re always taken aback and see the similarities between people. When you see Stephen, you see Julian — all the brothers. It’s an amazing thing. Sometimes I think, ‘What if their father was here to see all of them, how well they’re doing now?’ He’s gotta be proud — even now. It’s a beautiful thing. [My brother] Jungle definitely came through. We made it a big family affair; the Marleys and Joneses: We chillin’.” The current single from Distant Relatives is “As We Enter.” “Great fun shooting that music video,” Jr. Gong said. “It’s almost like, in some way, a version of the live show. We get up there, performing for the camera. It reminded me of the ‘Road to Zion’ video. The look of it.” Would you like to be a fly on the wall in the recording studio with Nas and the Marleys? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Nas Damian Marley

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Nas Says Working With Damian Marley Helped Him Through Personal Drama

My Chemical Romance Offer LeBron James ‘Free Tix For Life’ If He Signs With Knicks

MCR guitarist Frank Iero posts offer on Twitter. By James Montgomery My Chemical Romance’s Frank Iero Photo: Gary Miller/ FilmMagic Sure, his good pal Jay-Z may be a part-owner of the New Jersey Nets, and teams like the Chicago Bulls, Miami Heat and Los Angeles Clippers can also offer him pretty sweet deals. But if LeBron James signs with the New York Knicks, he’ll get free My Chemical Romance tickets for life. Yes, in a move sure to anger Cleveland Cavaliers fans — and lift the deflated hopes of Knicks supporters everywhere — MCR guitarist (and Knicks superfan) Frank Iero took to his Twitter account Sunday in an attempt to lure James, who can opt out of his deal with the Cavs this summer, to Madison Square Garden, where he will presumable resurrect the once-proud Knickerbocker franchise and bring them their first championship in nearly 40 years. “I would like to sweeten the deal & offer LeBron free MCR tix for life if he decides to play for the Knicks next year,” , before adding the hashtag

‘American Idol’ Top Three Get Warm Homecoming During Whirlwind Visits

Lee DeWyze, Crystal Bowersox and Casey James greeted their hometown fans on Friday. By Gil Kaufman Crystal Bowersox visits her hometown of Toledo, Ohio, on Friday Photo: Getty Images Winning “American Idol” is the goal, but for the top three finalists of every season, going home is always the sweetest trip. The remaining trio — Lee DeWyze, Crystal Bowersox and Casey James — all took trips back to their respective hometowns on Friday and were greeted with parades, huge crowds and the first sight of their adoring hometown crowds since the finals began. People magazine tagged along with all three and reported that Bowersox visited all her old haunts when she returned to the Toledo, Ohio, area, spending time with bassist Frankie May and dropping in at one of the bars she played in as a young teenager, Papa’s Tavern . After flying into a private airstrip on Thursday night, the 24-year-old singer popped in to the local Fox TV station, hit a few radio stations and then waved to the crowd during a parade in downtown Toledo, where she got a glass key to the city from Mayor Michael Bell. She celebrated by performing her original ode to the city, “Holy Toledo,” which has become a minor local radio hit, to a crowd of 5,000. Then she moved to the cozy confines of Papa’s, where she performed a mix of covers and originals for a crowd made up mostly of regulars. There was a lunch at her dad’s house, some downtime with son Tony and then a show for 4,000 at the Ottawa County Fairgrounds, where she urged fans to vote. The day ended with the tossing of the first pitch and the singing of the national anthem at Fifth Third Field, the home of the minor league baseball team the Toledo Mud Hens. Lee DeWyze , 24, couldn’t keep his emotions in check during his tearful trip back to Chicago, where he dropped in on teachers at his old high school, hung out with his family and played a nine-song acoustic show for more than 41,000 at the Arlington Park Racetrack, according to People. His day began with the reading of the local weather on Fox Chicago News, some radio-station drop-ins, a first pitch at a Chicago Cubs game, a parade and a check-in with his old boss at Mt. Prospect Paint. It was a similarly hectic routine for Casey James, 27, who made 10 stops during his visit to Texas, the magazine reported. After visiting his alma mater, Milsap High School, which set out a red carpet surrounded by screaming fans, James spent some quality time with his mother, brother and two dogs, Daisy and Buster. He also paid an emotional visit to Texas Health Harris Methodist Fort Worth Hospital, where doctors treated him six years ago after a serious motorcycle crash. He played his guitar and sang a few songs at one of his old haunts, the packed Fort Worth club Keys Lounge. He also reunited with his family for a picnic at the home he built himself and popped in to the Fort Worth Stockyard, where he got a key to the city. James was the only finalist to have a two-day home visit, which also included a show on Saturday at the tiny community center in his hometown of Cool, Texas, and a bigger gig in front of 4,000 at day’s end at his high school stadium. The final three will sing two songs each on Tuesday night: one of their own choosing and one chosen by the producers. The next night’s elimination will pave the way for the May 26 finale.