American Idol meets Big Brother = American Idol 2009
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American Idol meets Big Brother = American Idol 2009
http://www.tmz.com/2008/12/12/americ...reality-check/
Don't know how accurate this is going to be, but I'm sure you Idol watchers will hate this, especially if you do not like Big Brother!
Chris
"American Idol" Reality Check
Posted Dec 12th 2008 9:35AM by TMZ Staff
Our "American Idol" spies tell us Season 8 is going to look more like "Big Brother" than a true singing competition.
We're told producers have decided to show how the contestants interact with each other off the stage. They will show a lot more "behind the scenes" than ever before. But here's the problem -- the show is a cash cow and they've already taken time out of the singing competition for more commercials. Now they're going to take even more time out for the whole "bitch-you-stole-my-blouse" thing.
And we're now told firmly the new, fourth judge is not there to replace Paula. Producers think four is the magic number. The downside -- when one or two judges tell contestants they suck, is it overkill to hear it from four?
And no "Idol Gives Back" this coming season. After all, they gotta pay Simon ...
Posted Dec 12th 2008 9:35AM by TMZ Staff
Our "American Idol" spies tell us Season 8 is going to look more like "Big Brother" than a true singing competition.
We're told producers have decided to show how the contestants interact with each other off the stage. They will show a lot more "behind the scenes" than ever before. But here's the problem -- the show is a cash cow and they've already taken time out of the singing competition for more commercials. Now they're going to take even more time out for the whole "bitch-you-stole-my-blouse" thing.
And we're now told firmly the new, fourth judge is not there to replace Paula. Producers think four is the magic number. The downside -- when one or two judges tell contestants they suck, is it overkill to hear it from four?
And no "Idol Gives Back" this coming season. After all, they gotta pay Simon ...
Chris
#3
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They started something like this in Season 2 (I think?) They had some former contestant "move in" with the current contestants in the "American Idol House". For the first couple of weeks they had segments showing what life was like "inside the house" but then they dropped it completely without explanation.
#4
Yeah. This might put an end to Idol for me. I already skip over all the melodramatic back story crap anyways and just watch the performances. I guess if nothing else, it'll help me to decrease my viewing time. Just more stuff to skip over.
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#10
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I would rather see them interact more together than all the crappy "packages" where they show the contestant's same sob story every week, or have them all answer a stupid question about their most embarrassing moment.
#11
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Well, at least this gives them something else to fill the results show with, which hopefully means we won't have to endure as much of the drawn-out 'revealing the bottom 2/3' nonsense.
#12
But here's the problem -- the show is a cash cow and they've already taken time out of the singing competition for more commercials. Now they're going to take even more time out for the whole "bitch-you-stole-my-blouse" thing.
#14
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I didn't even watch last season. I'll have to check this one out.
Maybe this will get rid of those annoying "Brady Bunch style" group songs. They were painful to watch.
Maybe this will get rid of those annoying "Brady Bunch style" group songs. They were painful to watch.
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081215/..._american_idol
Chris
`American Idol' tweaks hit format for 8th season
47 mins ago
LOS ANGELES – Changes are coming to "American Idol" when it returns in January, including a return to "wild card" finalists picked by the show's judges and less airtime for memorably bad auditions.
But don't expect the show to abandon its affection for untalented contestants, executive producer Ken Warwick said Monday.
Failing to include them would mean, "I would have a pretty boring show on my hands and it wouldn't be honest," Warwick told a telephone news conference. The majority of those who tried out in Puerto Rico, for example, weren't very good, he said.
Fox's hit talent contest will open its eighth season with a two-night, four-hour premiere on Jan. 13-14 from 8-10 p.m. EST, the network said.
"American Idol" will cut the number of weeks featuring nationwide tryouts from four weeks to three and will bring more contestants to Hollywood to compete — 36 men and women compared to the two dozen of past seasons, Fox said.
The group will be winnowed down to 12 finalists, with nine chosen by audience voting and three wild-card singers selected by judges Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul, Randy Jackson and a previously announced newcomer, singer-songwriter Kara DioGuardi.
"If something goes horrendously awry, the judges could fix it on the wild card show," Warwick said. The show featured the approach previously.
The changes aren't in response to a ratings dip of 7 percent last season, Warwick said, adding it was less than that posted by TV overall and was to be expected for a veteran series.
"There were no panic changes. ... This show wouldn't be on the TV for eight years if it wasn't doing it right," he said. A further drop could occur this year given that broadcast ratings generally have slipped.
The show's charity effort, "Idol Gives Back," will be absent this season, as reported last week by The Associated Press and others. It likely will return on an every other year basis, Warwick said. He cited both the added production demands the charity special creates and the current economic climate.
Warwick was asked about recent criticism from Abdul that the show exposed her to peril by allowing an alleged stalker, Paula Goodspeed, to audition in a previous season. Goodspeed was found dead of apparent suicide in a car near Abdul's Los Angeles home last month.
"I would definitely not put a dangerous person or person I thought was remotely dangerous in front of the judges," he said. Other than giving "everybody a psych test before they walk in," Warwick said, the show does the best it can to screen contestants.
He dismissed rumors that Abdul's future with the show was cloudy, saying, "There's never been any discussion that we would want to get rid of Paula."
Last year's winner was David Cook, chosen by viewers over runner-up David Archuleta.
47 mins ago
LOS ANGELES – Changes are coming to "American Idol" when it returns in January, including a return to "wild card" finalists picked by the show's judges and less airtime for memorably bad auditions.
But don't expect the show to abandon its affection for untalented contestants, executive producer Ken Warwick said Monday.
Failing to include them would mean, "I would have a pretty boring show on my hands and it wouldn't be honest," Warwick told a telephone news conference. The majority of those who tried out in Puerto Rico, for example, weren't very good, he said.
Fox's hit talent contest will open its eighth season with a two-night, four-hour premiere on Jan. 13-14 from 8-10 p.m. EST, the network said.
"American Idol" will cut the number of weeks featuring nationwide tryouts from four weeks to three and will bring more contestants to Hollywood to compete — 36 men and women compared to the two dozen of past seasons, Fox said.
The group will be winnowed down to 12 finalists, with nine chosen by audience voting and three wild-card singers selected by judges Simon Cowell, Paula Abdul, Randy Jackson and a previously announced newcomer, singer-songwriter Kara DioGuardi.
"If something goes horrendously awry, the judges could fix it on the wild card show," Warwick said. The show featured the approach previously.
The changes aren't in response to a ratings dip of 7 percent last season, Warwick said, adding it was less than that posted by TV overall and was to be expected for a veteran series.
"There were no panic changes. ... This show wouldn't be on the TV for eight years if it wasn't doing it right," he said. A further drop could occur this year given that broadcast ratings generally have slipped.
The show's charity effort, "Idol Gives Back," will be absent this season, as reported last week by The Associated Press and others. It likely will return on an every other year basis, Warwick said. He cited both the added production demands the charity special creates and the current economic climate.
Warwick was asked about recent criticism from Abdul that the show exposed her to peril by allowing an alleged stalker, Paula Goodspeed, to audition in a previous season. Goodspeed was found dead of apparent suicide in a car near Abdul's Los Angeles home last month.
"I would definitely not put a dangerous person or person I thought was remotely dangerous in front of the judges," he said. Other than giving "everybody a psych test before they walk in," Warwick said, the show does the best it can to screen contestants.
He dismissed rumors that Abdul's future with the show was cloudy, saying, "There's never been any discussion that we would want to get rid of Paula."
Last year's winner was David Cook, chosen by viewers over runner-up David Archuleta.
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I want to see wild bitch fighting with scantily clad female idols wrestling and gangster slapping each other while their jiggling body parts threaten to plop out and such!
Yay!
Yay!
#19
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