Now, for august 3rd, 2016, this is entertainment tonight. A stunt goes horribly wrong on live television, and entertainment tonight was backstage at americas got talent as it all went down. We are with the judges and ryan stock and his fiance in that heartstopping moment when she shot him with a flaming arrow. It was very stressful. We always talk about the danger eleeents but then you accually realize the implications when youre doing Something Like this live. Man, i was just hoping he didnt get punctured. Its an arrow from a crossbow that hit somebody in the nec besides being flaming. It was crazy. I was very worried for this guy. I was kind of scared. It goes to prove this is live and the act is really dangerous. The judges were absolutely st contestant Amber Lynn Walker was eightinch target in her fiances mouth. The arrow was supposed to go down the tube in his esophagus and it actually hoots pyrotechnics out of it. I was watching all this backstage and everyone actually thought it
Wrong. It was actually the it was an equipment malfunction. We reviewed the footage, looked at the equipment. Her laser dot was on the o o target. I hought she missed too but then we looked and the notch on the arrow had broken. So really kind of lucky. It popped the string. Have you ever had a flaming arrow shot at you . I was kind of shocked. In the middle of it all heidi and mel were judging the a forget about the fact he almost was. Now i know why i dont like these things. They can sometimes go wrong why are we judging this act . Amber just shot ryan, and he needs to go to a hospital now. I think its hard to realize what you do in that situation because its so rare, like you mentioned. You just shut up and get them to s i think hes going to get more votes. I love you, kev, but let me just go on record saying there will never be a time i give you a flaming arrow and say sure, shoot it at me. I wont even let you hold a flaming fork near me. Were going to find out if the semifinals to
Tell us a bit about your own AAPI heritage.
My mother is American, and my father was Japanese. I was born and raised in Tokyo as one of six kids in a bi-racial family. We grew up speaking Japanese with our grandparents but English at home and at the international school we attended. Both my parents were consummate volunteers alongside many other accomplishments, my father started an outreach food program for homeless populations, and my mother at 85 still delivers food every week to individuals at 4:30 in the morning! My dad also assisted the Asian Rural Institute, which brings scholars together to learn about sustainable organic farming practices. When I call my mom weekly, she tells me about her daily sweeping of the road in front of her home, (including her neighbor’s areas), and her hobby/mission of taking a bag out to her local park to make sure it stays weed-free. She was a daughter of an amateur rose hybridizer who was a founding member of the Rose Hybridizer’s Associa