Back in June of last year, downtown Orlando went "man bad" crazy when New Kids on the Block, 98 Degrees and Boyz II Men rocked every woman's world at the Amway Center.

Fast-forward a year and a half, and one of those guys — NKOTB's Jordan Knight — found his vocal partner in the leader of yet another boy band, the Backstreet Boys. Nick Carter and Jordan Knight are — wait for it — "Nick & Knight." They hope to satisfy every '80s baby's dreams when they take the stage at The Plaza Live at 8 p.m. Tuesday.

My guess is that women — primarily in their 30s — will be all kinds of dolled up, hoping for a looksee from the man on their Trapper Keeper and on the inside of their school locker door.

We met up with Nick and Jordan on Tuesday morning after their media blitz with local radio stations. (Check out our raw, unedited interview in the section on the right.) We talked about sexy dancing, a '90s medley, "I Heart Nick Carter," and why not playing huge arenas is the coolest thing ever.

ALLISON WALKER: So guys, we know that the "Magic Mike" sequel isn't out until next summer. But it's OK, because all we need to do is to go to your show and we'll be satisfied. You've got a lil' "Pony" by Ginuwine going on.

NICK CARTER: I see you've been researching. You've heard about it, right?

AW: Yeah, I've clicked on it. Maybe more than once.

JORDAN KNIGHT: We have a little "Magic Mike" moment in the show. We do a little segment of the show that's an ode to the '90s, and we do a lot of '90s music in the show, obviously. And one of the songs is "Pony." And, in one show, we spontaneously got on the ground and kind of dry-humped the stage.

NC: We just keep doing it.

JK: We can't stop.

NC: In that '90s section, I'm rapping. I do the entire Mase verse from "Feel So Good."

AW: (To Jordan) How is he as a rapper?

JK: He's great. I think a lot of fans — they don't know him as a rapper, and this show gets to showcase his rapping skills. And he's got skills.

NC: We just put it all out there and do whatever we want and people are really loving it.

AW: There's less dancing among boy bands these days. What's up with your dancing in "Nick & Knight?"

JK: There is a lot of choreography in the show, but there's just a lot of us just kinda freestyling on stage and doing our own thing and interacting with the crowd.

AW: What I love is that you're able to do the House of Blues-style shows now when you're used to 18,000 people in an arena screaming at you. Do you dig the intimacy of being right up in their grill?

NC: It's great. The last tours that we just did, which was just a couple of months ago, we were in arenas. We did this on purpose to be able to give our fans an opportunity to see us up close — to not be up in the nose bleeds. To be able to touch us, to be able to hear everything. It's just a great experience.

AW: In your new album, some tracks are Pharrell-ish and Maroon 5-ish. You kept your ideas and your songwriting pretty private, huh?

JK: We did. Intentionally. We wanted to keep it quiet and just kind of really surprise people. We were talking about how Beyonce kept her album quiet when she was making the whole thing and then she just announced it one night. There was this kind of explosion. We wanted to take our time, really, and just do really good music and not feel the pressure of, 'When's it coming out?! When's it coming out?!

Nick goes on to explain what's "heartbreaking" about his brother, Aaron. And guess who can squat his weight? Check out our entire couch-chat in the VIDEO section up top.