The lights dimmed to a hush, and Terry Crews strode center stage like a coliseum herald, voice booming over the roar of 3,000 restless souls. “Quarterfinals Four—RESULTS!” The word detonated like a starting gun.

Phones lit up in a galaxy of blue screens; somewhere in the balcony a teenager clutched a cardboard sign that read “VOTE ALEX & THE DRONES OR WE RIOT.” The stakes weren’t metaphorical tonight—seven acts would walk into the semifinals, four would vanish into the long shadow of “almost.”

AGT 2025 Quarterfinals Round 4: The Results and Eliminations

Crews didn’t waste breath. First name out of the envelope: Alex & The Drone Symphony. The 28-year-old coder from Portland had spent the night turning the auditorium into a planetarium—drones weaving LED constellations while he played a glass harmonica that sounded like whale song in zero gravity. The judges had called it “Interstellar meets Cirque.”

When his name hit the air, Alex dropped to one knee, drones hovering above him like guardian fireflies. His mother, live on the jumbotron from a rainy Oregon porch, screamed so hard the feed crackled. Safe.

Next, the voltage spiked. Crews paused, milking the silence until the bass in the floorboards throbbed. “The act that made Simon Cowell stand up and clap—something he does approximately once every ice age—Rina & The Shadow Puppets!”

The 22-year-old Japanese-American artist had projected her late grandmother’s silhouette onto a 40-foot silk screen, manipulating shadows with nothing but her fingertips and a single candle.

The story: a girl teaching her shadow to dance after the lights go out. Sofia Vergara had wiped mascara with the sleeve of her sequined blazer; Heidi Klum whispered “Oscar-worthy.” Rina’s hands shook as she accepted the golden ticket, shadows flickering across her face like applause.

The third envelope felt heavier. “From the moment she opened her mouth and the room forgot how to breathe—Lila Voss.” The 19-year-old opera-metal soprano from Detroit had detonated a mash-up of Puccini and Pantera, voice cracking stained-glass highs while a live string quartet sawed behind her like chainsaws.

Howie Mandel had joked, “I came for talent, I leave baptized.” Lila’s victory lap was a single, perfect high C that hovered in the rafters long after the lights snapped back. The crowd answered with a wave of phone flashlights—thousands of tiny lighthouses guiding her forward.

Then came the twist no one saw coming. Crews held up a fourth envelope, eyes twinkling. “We have a rare judges’ save—because sometimes democracy needs a monarchy.”

AGT 2025 Quarterfinals Round 4: The Results and Eliminations

The save landed on The Recycled Percussionists, a quartet of ex-cons who’d turned oil drums and prison cafeteria trays into a thunderstorm of rhythm. Their performance had ended with a spark shower that set off the fire alarms—twice.

Simon had growled, “That’s not music, that’s civil unrest—and I’m booking the riot.” The save wasn’t mercy; it was a dare. The drummer, a 6’5″ tattooed poet named Marcus, simply nodded, wiped blood from a split knuckle, and said, “Round two, then.”

The bottom three formed a slow-motion car crash. Crews read the names like a funeral roll call: comedian Joey Vega, the 47-year-old bodega owner whose set about gentrification had the front row wheezing into their $18 cocktails.

The Kinetic Kids, a troupe of 12-year-olds who’d built a human Rube Goldberg machine that ended in a backflip pyramid; and Madame Zephyr, the 63-year-old psychic who’d “read” Howie’s mind and predicted he’d lose his hair by 2027—then handed him a coupon for Rogaine.

Joey took elimination like a punchline: “Guess my rent joke just got evicted.” The Kids hugged in a pile of limbs and glitter, while Madame Zephyr simply smiled, tapped her temple, and whispered, “I knew this was coming—still stings.”

Instant save voting opened like a digital Colosseum. Phones buzzed; the AGT app crashed twice under the tsunami of thumbs. Terry counted down from ten while the remaining acts formed a semicircle, spotlights carving halos and shadows.

At zero, the screen flashed: “KINETIC KIDS—SAVED BY AMERICA.” The children erupted into a cartwheel chain that nearly took out a camera crane.

Madame Zephyr bowed out with grace, slipping Howie a final tarot card: “The Fool—new beginnings.” Joey high-fived the kids on his way off, muttering, “At least I’m not the only one flipping tonight.”

America's Got Talent 2025 Quarterfinals 4 POLLS: Vote for Your Favs

The final three slots were pure adrenaline. “From the act that made gravity file a complaint—Skyline Aerialists!” The married couple had spun 30 feet above the stage on silk ropes, weaving a love story in mid-air inversions.

Their save was sealed when their toddler waved from the front row wearing a tiny harness. Next, “The Voice of the Voiceless—Jamal Thorne.” The blind baritone from Atlanta had sung “A Change Is Gonna Come” a cappella, each note a civil-rights march.

His advancement felt like justice rendered in four-part harmony. Last, “The Comic Who Broke the Algorithm—AI Andy.” The robot stand-up had roasted the judges with machine-learning punchlines—“Sofia, your dress has more sequins than my GPU has flops”—and somehow earned a human laugh track.

As golden confetti blizzard-ed down, the seven survivors formed a ragged line: drone boy, shadow puppeteer, opera shredder, recycled rioters, aerial lovers, soul preacher, and glitch comedian.

Terry’s final words weren’t scripted: “This isn’t a talent show anymore—it’s a revolution in prime time.” The camera pulled back, catching the eliminated acts in the wings, clapping harder than anyone.

Because on AGT, even the exit ramp leads somewhere—Joey already had three Netflix scouts in his DMs, Madame Zephyr booked a Vegas residency reading celebrities’ auras, and the Kinetic Kids were trending on TikTok with 12 million loop-de-loops.

Backstage, the green room smelled like adrenaline and hairspray. Alex’s drones hovered in formation, projecting a tiny “thank you” across the wall. Rina folded her grandmother’s shadow silk into a neat square, eyes shining. Jamal hugged his guide dog, whispering, “We’re not done marching.”

The Recycled Percussionists clanged their trays in a victory riff that rattled the vending machines. Even the eliminated acts lingered—Joey teaching the Kids a knock-knock joke, Madame Zephyr pulling tarot for the lighting crew. The quarterfinal wasn’t a bloodbath; it was a relay race where the baton is hope, and every runner gets a medal made of almost.

How AGT 2025 Works: Season 20 and the Live Shows Explained

Outside, the Los Angeles night swallowed the exiting crowd—teenagers replaying Lila’s high C on loop, grandparents googling “how to buy drone harmonica,” a bodega owner from Queens already writing new material about rejection letters.

The AGT marquee flickered: SEMIFINALS NEXT. Inside the theater, the stage lights cooled to embers, but the echo of seven heartbeats—human, mechanical, shadowy, aerial—lingered like a promise: the revolution wasn’t televised; it was amplified, remixed, and sent straight into America’s living rooms, one golden confetti flake at a time.