Wednesday, July 9, 2008
NextNC.com
Northern Colorado Entertainment
 home  life  get out  stay in  sidetrax  contact us 
'Idol' flashiness leaves contestants in the shadow PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by Jonathan Storm, McClatchy-Tribune   
Tuesday, 08 May 2007

This site requires Flash 8. Download for free here.
Has "American Idol" gotten too glitzy for its own good?

Hauling in old-time superstars like Diana Ross and Tony Bennett each week, juggling formats with an all-star telethon and a surprise, but exploitive, elimination reprieve; padding the schedule with extended broadcasts and packing the audience with celebs and overwrought tearful fans, the show isn't the amateur hour we fell in love with.

"When I did it, they had two modes: play and stop," said Justin Guarini, the original "Idol" runner-up in 2002, in a telephone interview. "Now they have a huge orchestra, and a beautiful stage. They get to show a lot of what the contestants can do. I think it's great."

Grateful Guarini, who still has ties to the "Idol" machine with a commentary show on the TV Guide Network, is in the minority. There's malaise in the audience. Things aren't quite right.

"With the star power, it's just not as much of a contest," said Chuck Haas, an "Idol" addict from Havertown, Pa. "The show got a little flashy this year, and it was overkill. It didn't stay focused on the contestants and their individual talents. It lost the appeal of the girl or boy next door."

"Fox has been outfoxed," said Janet Poore, a marketing executive from Plymouth Meeting, Pa., who checks in with TV's most popular show to stay abreast of the consumer culture, and who cited a different deficiency in Season 6.

"They turned it into such a freak show at the beginning. The auditions set the tone for the whole year. They were a lot meaner, and that, in turn, gave life to outside efforts by people like Howard Stern to basically destroy the show."

The ratings, which were down 10 to 15 percent during the hair-raising reign of Sanjaya Malakar ("He never should have been a finalist," Poore said), bounced back with last week's results show, when two of the last three remaining men in this year's ragged crop got the hook.

"We're headed for a big finish," said media maven Stacey Schulman, chief executive officer of Hi: Human Interaction, a consulting firm. "There are four good ones left, and we're still going to have our `Ohmigod, how-can-we-ever-choose?' moment, but the show this year has been somewhat contrary to its essence as America's contest."

Schulman has studied "Idol" extensively and determined that fans developed special ties to its three main sponsors, Coca-Cola, Ford and AT&T. But she thinks it may have lost its corporate and artistic identity with the big April 25 two-hour telethon, staged from different venues and featuring entertainers from Miss Piggy to Elvis. Through the wonders of modern technology, the King came to us from beyond the grave to sing a duet with Celine Dion.

It's hard to say if a living Elvis would have even crossed the street for that gig.
"Reaching out to the stars and major corporate donors, the commerciality just seems much more obvious," Schulman said. "It's almost as if it's an amateur contest in a professional world."

Poore said the telethon was a marketing success. It raised almost $70 million, according to President Bush, who, with his wife, Laura, gave a videotaped thank you to fans last week. Even the putative leader of the free world has hitched his horse to the "Idol" bandwagon.

"Raising so much to help children in Africa and here helps to redeem the show's image," Poore said, "because it had seemed so shallow this season, taking advantage of people in auditions."

But then she got to the core of what's bothering many "Idol" fans. "As a TV show, it didn't thrill me."

Poore and Schulman may watch primarily for professional reasons, but Haas says he's an unabashed fan. "I may be a little older than the average music buff (he's in his 60s), but I've only missed one episode," he said.

Like the others interviewed for this article, he's satisfied with the final four — Melinda Doolittle, LaKisha Jones, Blake Lewis and Jordin Sparks — though Guarini and Schulman both admitted a partiality for bald-headed Phil Stacey, who got the ax last week. "He had a wonderful, warm voice," Guarini said.

The "Idol" runner-up stood alone in his overall judgment of this year's talent: "The men weren't weak," he said, disagreeing with everyone with functioning ears. "Instead, the women were very strong."

Haas scoffed. "We've had second-, third — or fourth-place finishers who were better than anybody in the last 12 this year."

Marketers and fans alike agreed that it was much too soon to start bowing down to a new TV idol, not a hard call when "Idol," twice a week, still gets 30 or 40 percent more viewers than anything else in prime time.

"I don't think the show is a lost cause," Haas said. "They can easily get it back. I'll tune in to see what's there next year."

"'A.I.' is nowhere near the end," Schulman said, "though this is probably the first season where we're really contemplating that question. The ratings are a little different. The stunting and the all-star appearances, packing the audiences with Hollywood types, these are signs that they're trying artificially to pump up the volume.

"It may be that we should start looking at artists and bands launching themselves on MySpace, coming up through the underground — the People's Choice in non-corporate-assisted methods."

___

Jonathan Storm: This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

Comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

 


City:
Event Type:
Venue:
Date:
 Show me:
 Located In:
 Named:
City/Zip:
Powered by Fandango
 Search:

Enter name or type of business
 Location:

Enter city & state, or zip code


FullMetal Alchemist (48)

FullMetal Alchemist"Humankind cannot gain anything without first giving something in return. To obtain, something of equal value must be lost. That is Alchemy's first law of Equivalent Exchange. In those days, we really believed that to be the world's one, and only truth."
FullMetal Alchemistread more >>

3 Wise-asses (15)

3wiseassesWe're not that bright, even though in our own little world, we're geniuses. We like 80s hair bands and one-hit wonders, but among us we have respectable tastes, too. Metallica, Iron Maiden, U2. Pursuit of all things trivial is a lifestyle, not just a game. We like some sports, love other sports, and can find something to say about anything. We watch TV and movies and we've read a book or two, even a few classics (Yes, Classic Comics count!) We call it insight, you call it what you will.
3wiseassesread more >>

A Breath of Fresh Air (60)

felixFelix Wong is an outdoor enthusiast living in Fort Collins. A mechanical engineer by day, he is especially passionate about bicycling, running, and backpacking.
felixread more >>

I go 70, 30. (43)

PikachuHola Amigos! I'm Sandra. I like to believe that people are 70 percent good and 30 percent dumb. I'm stickin to that story. Reading this blog might make you want to be good, but probably just dumb.
Pikachuread more >>

jwood38 (26)

jwood38
jwood38read more >>

Dono (15)

DonoDonovan Henderson is editor of NEXTnc.
Donoread more >>

Fun with Nextnc (34)

twitch232

Here at Nextnc we have some characters. Get a sneak peak behind the curtain and find out what amusing antics our staffers get themselves into on a weekly basis.

twitch232read more >>

Ravings, rantings, and gibberish. (36)

DrewWhat is up FoCo? I am a recent college graduate of Minnesota State University Moorhead. After recieving my B.A. in English and Mass Communications this past August I moved down to Colorado. I enjoy long walks on the beach, candlelight dinners, and heavy metal. My hobbies include reading and writing, music, movies, and getting drunk. Some of my favorite contemporary authors include Bret Easton Ellis, Chuck Palahniuk, and Kurt Vonnegut. My top movies are anything directed by Kubrick. I enjoy listening to anything that rocks. Right now I am just trying to get to know Colorado and FoCo better. Mostly in order to find the best drink specials on each day that ends in Y. So if you know where I can get a cheap drunk on, let me know! --Drew
Drewread more >>

A Frustaci Thing (24)

ErinLife's little morsels of inspiration, observation and encouragement seen through the eyes of the Nextnc reporter.
Erinread more >>

All Growed Up (24)

Is Everybody In?

Ms. Giles currently lives in Colorado where she stars in her own private reality show. She writes aphoristic accounts of her life, taken completely out of context, and embellished with characters and situations disguised to resemble something close to interesting.

Is Everybody In?read more >>

Cody Futures (2)

Cody

over and out

Codyread more >>

Good Ole Turlet... (4)

fullboat101My name is Michelle Turley and I'm 28 years old.  I live in Severance with my hubbie, Brandon.  We have 2 dogs and a cat.  We enjoy camping, four-wheeling, and just being in the mountains.  I like to cook, clean (go figure), flea market, and play poker. I have so much to say about poker... 
fullboat101read more >>

the king (2)

the king
the kingread more >>



talk to usterms & conditionsclassifiedsRSS 2.0

(C) 2008 NextNC.com