Information about American Idol (season 6)
| American Idol (Season 6) | |
|---|---|
American Idol title card | |
| Created by | Simon Fuller |
| Directed by | Bruce Gowers |
| Starring | Ryan Seacrest Paula Abdul Simon Cowell Randy Jackson |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of episodes | 41 |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Nigel Lythgoe Ken Warwick Simon Fuller |
| Running time | Varies |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | FOX, CTV |
| Original run | January 16, 2007 – May 23, 2007 |
| External links | |
| Official website | |
| IMDb profile | |
| TV.com summary | |
Broadcast schedule
Beginning in mid-November 2006, FOX began airing teaser clips of the upcoming sixth season. First a bad contestant was highlighted, with judge Cowell giving his usual horrified grimace, then by early December another began airing, a girl singing "Stormy Weather" as the judges looked on approvingly. Following this, a new commercial began to air, showcasing eventual top 24 contestant Leslie Hunt.The season premiere began as a two-night, four-hour premiere special on January 16 and January 17. Starting the following week, regularly scheduled hours of the program aired at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Tuesdays and 9 p.m. ET/PT on Wednesdays.
The audition shows were spread over eight episodes, each covering one of the seven cities toured as well as a "Best of the Rest" episode. They aired on January 16 (Minneapolis), 17 (Seattle), 23 (Memphis), 24 (East Rutherford), 30 (Birmingham), 31 (Los Angeles), February 6 (San Antonio), and February 7 ("The Best of the Rest"). Guest judges for that leg of the process included Olivia Newton-John, Carole Bayer Sager and Jewel.[1] The Hollywood round episodes aired on February 13 and February 14. The Top 24 was announced on February 14. Voting rounds began on February 20.
TV Guide Channel brought back a second season of Idol Tonight, the live pre-show to American Idol, which aired on Wednesdays starting in March. The show features former Idol runner-up Justin Guarini as a correspondent along with Kimberly Caldwell and Rosanna Tavarez. Additionally American Idol Extra, a behind-the-scenes show, also returned for a second season, corresponding with the start of the finals in March. It aired Thursdays on Fox Reality.
Early process
Regional auditions phase
Locations
The Auditions were held in the following cities:- Pasadena, California (billed as the Los Angeles auditions during the broadcast): Rose Bowl - August 6
- San Antonio, Texas: Alamodome - August 11
- East Rutherford, New Jersey (billed as the New York City auditions during the broadcast): Continental Airlines Arena - August 14
- Birmingham, Alabama: Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex - August 21
- Memphis, Tennessee: FedEx Forum - September 3
- Minneapolis, Minnesota: Target Center - September 8
- Seattle, Washington: KeyArena - September 19
Structure of auditions
Auditions for the show were held in the seven cities shown above. As reported in The Los Angeles Daily News, the 2006 process was especially difficult: the 10,000 or so contestants waited in long lines, then were herded before two young assistant producers and given roughly 15 seconds to perform one song. At that point the large majority of them were summarily rejected.Survivors of the first phase were typically seen then by Idol's executive producers, and only if surviving that cut (because they were especially good and fit what Idol was looking for, or especially bad in some novel way) were seen by Cowell, Abdul, and Jackson. The contestants then had one chance to impress the judges by singing a song of their choice a cappella. Then the judges each gave the contestant either a "Yes" or a "No" to continue to the next round. If the contestant received a majority of yeses, the contestant received a "golden ticket" and qualified for the "Hollywood Rounds". If rejected, the contestant returned home.
Many of the people who auditioned had trouble with the double doors, always going towards the wrong door on their way out; this was spoofed by Idol later in the season with "audition footage" featuring Tony Bennett.
Hollywood phase
The so-called "Hollywood" phase of the audition process were held over four days in mid-November 2006 at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles.The first round consisted of each contestant singing one song a capella of their own choosing in front of the judges and all the other contestants of the same gender. Contestants were then told whether they were moving on or going home, in groups of six. This extended over the first two days, first females, then males.
The second round took place on the second and third day, and consisted of groups of three or four contestants choosing, rehearsing, and then performing one of nine pre-selected songs. Groups were reviewed and contestants were then judged individually as to whether they were moving on or going home.
The third round took place on the fourth day, and consisted of individual contestants performing a song from a pre-selected list, accompanied by a piano and backup singers. Contestants were again informed of whether they had made the cut or not.
Cut down to 24
The final pre-audience voting cut down took place at the Pasadena Civic Center on January 14 or 15, 2007, just before the regional audition shows began airing. Without any further auditioning, but possibly with some audience research having taken place, the 40 remaining contestants were reduced to 24. In a process taking a whole day, contestants wait in a sitting room until one by one, they go up an elevator and take a long walk to the other end of the Center's Gold Room. Then the three judges tell them whether they have made it onto the stage show or are cut.The show capturing this phase was aired February 14, 2007.
Semi-finalists
The semi-finals began on February 20, with the names announced on February 14. There were three shows each week for the three weeks of the semi-finals. The February 20 through May 16 shows originated from CBS Television City in Hollywood.There are no format changes from season 4 and 5. The semi-finals featured the contestants (24 total) divided by gender with the 12 male singers singing on Tuesdays and the 12 female singers on Wednesdays. Each person had the chance to select a song to sing live in front of the judges. Following the show's airing, each U.S. timezone would have two hours to vote by phone or by text-messaging. On Thursday, the two of each group with the lowest amount of votes were eliminated each week until the finals.
The 24 semi-finalists, announced February 14, 2007, were:
| Females | Males |
|---|---|
| Amy Krebs | Paul Kim |
| Nicole Tranquillo | Rudy Cardenas |
| Alaina Alexander | Nicholas Pedro |
| Leslie Hunt | AJ Tabaldo |
| Antonella Barba | Jared Cotter |
| Sabrina Sloan | Sundance Head |
| Stephanie Edwards | Brandon Rogers |
| Gina Glocksen | Chris Sligh |
| Haley Scarnato | Sanjaya Malakar |
| Lakisha Jones | Phil Stacey |
| Melinda Doolittle | Chris Richardson |
| Jordin Sparks | Blake Lewis |
Top 24 semi-finalists
Females
| Sabrina Sloan (born October 31, 1979) is a 27-year-old and is originally from Mission Viejo, California but now calls Studio City, CA her home. Sloan toured the United States as part of the Broadway musical Hairspray under her maiden name, Sabrina Scherff. She earned her Bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University in Musical Theatre and Communication Studies. She was later signed to a recording contract with Universal Music Group, as part of a duet with Sundance Head.[2] |
| Antonella Barba (2123) (born February 8, 1987), age 20, auditioned with her best friend Amanda Coluccio and made it to Hollywood. An undergraduate at The Catholic University of America, she is originally from Point Pleasant, New Jersey. She made it to Round 3 with Coluccio and both passed the group round (although their third member, Baylie Brown, did not). Coluccio was eliminated in the cut for the top 40. While Barba appeared on the show, racy photographs of her emerged, including photographs of Barba topless along with other women on a beach. These pictures received mainstream attention including a February 27, 2007 featured article in USA Today, a full segment concerning the controversy on the February 26, 2007 edition of FOX News' The O'Reilly Factor and also on multiple episodes of MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann (as recent as March 2007).[3] Photos of Barba posing in a wet t-shirt in the fountain of the National World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C. also surfaced;[4] however, Barba's friend Coluccio has stated that the sexually explicit photos were fake.[5] |
Leslie Hunt (73560) (born March 23, 1982), a 25-year-old dog walker from Chicago, Illinois, who was featured in an American Idol commercial before Season 6 started. She is a self-described indie rocker. She suffers from the autoimmune disease lupus.
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Alaina Alexander (66442) (born July 21, 1982) auditioned in Los Angeles. She is 24 years old and from West Hollywood, California. Before her American Idol 6 audition, Alexander revealed that after struggling for six years to make it in the music business in Los Angeles she had decided she was not going to sing anymore and had decided to go to college instead. She considered American Idol to be her last chance to pursue a singing career. For her Los Angeles audition, Alexander sang "Feeling Good" by Michael Buble.
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Nicole Tranquillo (60162) (born August 13, 1985) is 21 years old and from Wernersville, Pennsylvania. She gained a vocal major at the University of the Arts. She auditioned in Memphis.
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Amy Krebs (80984) (born May 2, 1984) is 22 years old and is from Federal Way, Washington. She is fluent in German. She auditioned in Seattle.
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Males
Jason "Sundance" Head (53540) (born January 22, 1979) auditioned in Memphis and lives in Porter, Texas. He is a 28-year-old and is the son of Roy Head, who had a number-two single with "Treat Her Right" in 1965; the song was second on the charts to The Beatles, which Jason said made his dad dislike them. He sang the classic hit "Stormy Monday."
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Jared Cotter (8067) (born June 17, 1981) is from Kew Gardens, New York (listed as Long Island on the show). He is 25 years old and auditioned in New York City. Cotter played basketball in college, but quit to start his music career. He currently works at FUSE on the show "The Sauce."[6]
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A.J. Tabaldo (66398) (born January 3, 1985) auditioned in Los Angeles and is from Santa Maria, California. He is 22 years old. Tabaldo is half-Filipino and half-Portuguese, and auditioned for American Idol five times.
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Nicholas Pedro (10377) (born April 24, 1981) is 25 years old. He auditioned in New York and is from Taunton, Massachusetts. Pedro dropped out of the competition last season after forgetting the lyrics of "Buttercup" in Hollywood. This audition, he gave a soulful rendition of "Fly Me To The Moon" which earned him a second chance to fulfill his Idol aspirations.
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Rudy Cardenas (59576) (born April 3, 1978) auditioned in Seattle and is from North Hollywood, California. Originally from Venezuela, the 28-year-old is part of a Los Angeles-based band called M-Pact. In his audition, he sang Journey rock classic "Open Arms". Although Simon was unimpressed with his singing, Rudy made it to Hollywood with the support of the other two judges. In Hollywood, he sang "How Deep Is Your Love" together with Chris Sligh, Blake Lewis, and Tom Lowe in group round. The judges were impressed by their vocals.
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Paul Kim (74201) (born March 26, 1981) auditioned in Los Angeles. He is from Saratoga, California, and attended Monta Vista High School. Kim is 25 years old, and being Korean-American, his motivation for auditioning was to alter the stereotypical Asian image that William Hung gave during the previous seasons. His performance received unanimous praise from the judges as Randy mentioned that Kim has one of the best male vocals he has heard this season. In contrast to their early praise, the judges mentioned when they put him through that Paul made it to the top 24 by "a split decision". He sang barefoot during all of his performances.
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Top 12 finalists
The 12 finalists were announced on March 8, 2007. As in past years, the top 12 will appear on the annual compilation album while the top 10 will be the participants in the American Idol summer concert tour. Also as in past years, one finalist was eliminated every week, with the exception of the April 25 show, when all contestants were declared safe. As a result, two of the participants were eliminated on the May 2, 2007 results program.The following is first in reverse chronological order by elimination date, then in alphabetical order by family name, where applicable.
Jordin Brianna Sparks (80066) (born December 22, 1989) is a 17-year-old from Glendale, Arizona who auditioned in Seattle. She was a contestant on America's Most Talented Kid in 2003 and also appeared on the program's Tournament of Champions, on which she sang the Celine Dion ballad "Because You Loved Me" in her auditions. She is the daughter of former NFL defensive back Philippi Sparks. She also performed in the "Christmastime" Tours in 2005 and 2006 for Contemporary Christian singer Michael W. Smith.
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Blake Colin Lewis (77804) (born July 21, 1981) is a 25-year-old and auditioned in Seattle, and is from Bothell, Washington. He is a former member of the a cappella group KickShaw. Claiming to be the city's beatboxing champion, Lewis sampled a hip hop tune to the judges before rendering Seal's "Crazy". He passed the auditions but Simon commented to him that "you are not as good as you think you are", reminding him not to be cocky and overconfident in the future.
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Melinda Doolittle (57073), (born December 1, 1977) age 29, auditioned in Memphis, and is from Brentwood, Tennessee. Despite being a professional back-up singer, she admitted she was still tense and nervous about competing in the show. She auditioned with "For Once in My Life" popularized by Stevie Wonder, and was met with universal praise from the three judges on her vocal ability. The judges did express concern about her nerves and told her to believe in herself. Her elimination the week before the finale had many critics and viewers in shock, and Simon Cowell looked extremely disappointed, as he felt that she deserved to be in the finale for "week to week consistency". She has sung back up for Aaron Neville, CeCe Winans, and Season 3 finalist George Huff.
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LaKisha Ann Jones (8292), (born January 13, 1980) a 27-year-old bank teller who performed "Think" by Aretha Franklin, and is originally from Flint, Michigan. Viewers were first introduced to Jones during the "Best of the Rest" episode. After her audition in New York, LaKisha celebrated with her family and cried tears of happiness with her daughter. She is also the runner up of the Houston show, KPRC Local 2 Gimme the Mike, in 2005. She listed Fort Meade, Maryland as home on her application, and also has a Houston following.
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Christopher Michael Richardson (8963) (born February 19, 1984) is a 23-year-old. He auditioned in New York and is from Chesapeake, Virginia. During Richardson's audition Randy compared him to Justin Timberlake.
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Joel Phillip Stacey (51815) (born January 25, 1978) is a 29-year-old and serves in the United States Navy. He auditioned in Memphis and is from Jacksonville, Florida. He missed the birth of his daughter, McKayla [7], to audition for Idol. He performed two songs before getting through to Hollywood: My Girl and Let's Get It On.
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Sanjaya Joseph Malakar (80203) (born September 10, 1989) is a 17-year-old. He auditioned in Seattle with his sister Shyamali, singing "Signed, Sealed, Delivered (I'm Yours)." He is from Federal Way, Washington, the same town as Amy Krebs. After Sanjaya's audition, Simon commented that he had a better voice than his sister. Both made it to Hollywood, but Sanjaya was shown tearfully embracing his sister when he made it to the top 40 in Hollywood and she was cut.
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Haley Suzanne Scarnato (50411) (born June 15, 1982) is a 24-year-old former wedding band singer. She sang "I Can't Make You Love Me" by Bonnie Raitt during her audition. She lives in San Antonio, Texas.
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Gina Glocksen (53750) (born July 4, 1984) is a 22-year-old, auditioned in Memphis, and is from Naperville, Illinois. She auditioned in Chicago during Season 5 and made it to Hollywood but was cut before the Top 40.
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| Charles Christopher Sligh (24994) (born April 13, 1978) is a 28-year-old, hails from Greenville, South Carolina, and graduated from North Greenville University. He auditioned in Birmingham and sang "Kiss from a Rose" by Seal, after which Paula gave a standing ovation and stated, "I like you very much." Paula, Simon, and Randy laughed at his ambition "to make David Hasselhoff cry" (a nod to the Season 5 finale where David Hasselhoff did, in fact, cry).
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Stephanie Edwards (52357) (born August 5, 1987) is a 19-year-old and from Savannah, Georgia. She auditioned in Memphis.
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Brandon Rogers (74191) (born January 9, 1978) is a 29-year-old. He auditioned in Los Angeles and is from North Hollywood, California. Rogers has been a backup singer to established artists, performing on Justin Timberlake and Christina Aguilera's 2003 Justified and Stripped Tour and Anastacia's 2005 Encore Tour. After hearing his audition song, the judges (including guest judge Olivia Newton-John) were impressed with his vocals. Simon Cowell later mentioned he was the best auditioner coming from that city.
Song themesJust as was done in season 5, the performers whose themes are performed do not appear as judges. Instead, they "mentor" the contestants on the theme.
Performers on results shows
Elimination songThis year, the song played during the flashback to an eliminated contestant's journey is Daughtry's "Home," replacing "Bad Day" by Daniel Powter. The only exception was Phil Stacey, on May 2, 2007, whose exit song was "I'll Stand by You," performed by Carrie Underwood.Semi-finals and finals elimination chartNote: Bottom 2 indicates that the contestant was 'saved' last. This may or may not indicate his or her actual vote rank. Sometimes, Seacrest will announce that the contestant is in the bottom 2, sometimes he will not. On the March 21 show, only the bottom 2 were announced.* During the week of April 25, there was no eliminated contestant. That week's votes were added to the votes for the week of May 1, and the bottom two were then eliminated on the May 2 show. It was never noted who received the lowest number of votes, although Stacey was announced as the first to leave, and Richardson second. Contestants are in reverse chronological order of elimination.
"The crying girl"Ashley Ferl, shown crying during Sanjaya Malakar's performance Ferl started to cry not long after Malakar began his performance of "You Really Got Me," and was invited to hug him on stage immediately following his performance. She was also shown crying for several more contestants. At the end of the show, she went on stage a second time, and got a chance to hug and get autographs[10] from of all of the contestants and was introduced to the judges. Television vans from E!, Access Hollywood, and Fox were waiting outside of her house the next day, and, that evening, NBC paid for Ferl's entire family to fly to the taping of the Today Show. She subsequently gave several other radio and news interviews to sources such as MSNBC, Fox News Channel, and Entertainment Tonight.[11] Saturday Night Live spoofed both Malakar and Ferl following the former's elimination. Kristen Wiig portrayed Ferl in the sketches. Ferl has also been spoofed on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Live with Regis and Kelly, and Family Guy, as well as mentioned on Best Week Ever. Ashley Ferl returned during Malakar's performance in the finale, crying. Idol Gives BackBetween contestant performances, video vignettes showing the judges and Seacrest visiting and observing squalid conditions in Africa and the United States were aired. Similar vignettes were aired during the results show. For this special, the voting period was doubled to four hours following the show, rather than the usual two. In response to the anticipated call volume, each contestant was assigned two toll free numbers. Over 70 million votes were cast. The results show was broadcast from two locations—the regular American Idol stage and Walt Disney Concert Hall—and included many celebrity actors and personalities. The show also included numerous performers; for a full list of performances, see the the main article. Ellen DeGeneres co-hosted the event from the Disney Hall stage. Proceeds from ticket sales benefited the fund. Videos of the results show's performances are available for purchase on iTunes, with proceeds going to charity. Due to the "charity" theme of the show, no contestant was eliminated on the April 25 results show. This was a surprise both to viewers, to whom Seacrest promised the "most shocking elimination ever," and to the contestants. All of the votes from that week were added to the next week's votes, and the bottom two contestants were eliminated. American Idol songwriter contestOn the April 3, 2007 show, Ryan Seacrest announced the first American Idol Songwriter: a songwriting contest. Following an open online submission process where over 25,000 submissions were received, twenty songs were selected for competition by Simon Fuller and A&R representatives of his 19 Entertainment. Beginning May 2, 2007 and ending May 8, 2007, the American public rated each song on a scale from 1 (lowest) to 10 (highest) on the American Idol Songwriter website. On the May 22, 2007 show, the two finalists performed the winning song, "This Is My Now." The song was released as a single by Jordin Sparks, the winner of American Idol Season 6.[14]The titles of the twenty songs are:[15]
UK editionFor the UK back-to-back repeat of the performance and results shows on the following Friday night on ITV2, Cat Deeley presents additional sections preceding and following each commercial break, and follows the end of the show with a short interview with that week's eliminated contestant.[16]ReleasesMajor releasesUnlike previous seasons the top 12 compilation album did not come out while the show was airing. The top 12 recorded studio versions of each of the songs they sang on the show. The songs were available for purchase on AmericanIdol.com as digital downloads through the night of the finale. Sparks' and Lewis' songs (except Sparks' "Livin' on a Prayer") remain available on the website through June 20, 2007,[17] and are on sale in the iTunes Store as well.Originally, a collage of the finalists' head shots from the top 24 photo shoot was used as album art on AmericanIdol.com, with the title American Idol 6: Greatest Moments; at present, the covers of Sparks' and Lewis' EPs are used instead. The American Idol Season 6 Greatest Hits was eventually released on June 12, 2007 on iTunes/Americanidol.com. This is the only season that the season's collection is not distributed by Sony BMG/RCA Records. Singles"This Is My Now" as performed by Jordin Sparks was released as a radio single. It debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 chart at number 15.iTunes/AmericanIdol.com EPsOn May 24, 2007, the winner Jordin Sparks and runner-up Blake Lewis released five-song EPs on iTunes Store; though only iTunes calls them "EPs", they are also available as "bundles" for the same price on AmericanIdol.com through June 20, 2007.Sparks' EP contained the winner's single, "This Is My Now", as well as four songs she performed on Idol: "I (Who Have Nothing)", "A Broken Wing", "To Love Somebody", and "Wishing on a Star". Lewis' EP did not contain "This Is My Now"; all of the tracks were songs he performed on the show: "You Give Love a Bad Name", "Time of the Season", "I Need to Know", "Love Song", and "When the Stars Go Blue". On June 12, 2007, Apple released five song EPs for the rest of the top 12 finalists (Melinda Doolittle, LaKisha Jones, Chris Richardson, Phil Stacey, Sanjaya Malakar, Haley Scarnato, Gina Glocksen, Chris Sligh, Stephanie Edwards and Brandon Rogers) along with the compilation album as a collector's edition of the season's songs. Each of the songs are also available for individual purchase.[18] Minor or independent releasesNote: this does not include pre-Idol releases
References1. ^ ''Randy Jackson] confirms guest judges.] (audio). Retrieved on 2006-11-28. 2. ^ 'Sloan Rangers' 3. ^ Countdown with Keith Olbermann - February 26, 2007 4. ^ 'Antonella Barba Nude Photos Online: American Idol Sex Scandal' 5. ^ 'Antonella Barba Nude: Topless Photos Real, Fellatio Pics Fake' 6. ^ Jared Cotter's Official Myspace Page 7. ^ 'Phil Stacey Gets Navy's OK for Idol Tour' 8. ^ Singin' a happy teen - will Jordin heed Simon's words? 9. ^ LA Times - requires sign-up 10. ^ MSNBC 11. ^ Topix.net 12. ^ American Idol News Blog, "$60 Million and Counting!" 13. ^ Idol Gives Back at MySpace 14. ^ American Idol Songwriter 15. ^ [1] 16. ^ Digital Spy: "Cat Deeley to front UK Edition of American Idol" 17. ^ American Idol Download Store 18. ^ [2] 19. ^ [3] Idolsmusic.com 20. ^ [4] 21. ^ [5] 22. ^ [6] External links
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American Idol | |
|---|---|
| Seasons: | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 |
| Hosts: | Ryan Seacrest Brian Dunkleman |
| Judges: | Randy Jackson Paula Abdul Simon Cowell |
| Winners: | Kelly Clarkson Ruben Studdard Fantasia Barrino Carrie Underwood Taylor Hicks Jordin Sparks |
| Runners-up: | Justin Guarini Clay Aiken Diana DeGarmo Bo Bice Katharine McPhee Blake Lewis |
| Other alumni: | Tamyra Gray Kimberley Locke William Hung Jennifer Hudson Kellie Pickler Chris Daughtry Elliott Yamin |
| Spin-offs: | From Justin to Kelly Juniors Christmas Extra Rewind |
| Other: | Underground Compilation Series Controversy Discography Episodes Font Idol series Magazine Video game |
American Idol is an annual American televised singing competition, which began its first season on June 11, 2002. Part of the Idol franchise, it originated from the British reality program Pop Idol.
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Simon Fuller (born May 17 1960 in Hastings, England) is one of the the most powerful men in entertainment in the world. He is a British entrepreneur and creator of the Idol series, first seen as Pop Idol in the UK and over 100 other versions including American Idol,
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Bruce Gowers is an English music video director. His first video was for Queen for their song "Bohemian Rhapsody". The band asked him to get their Queen II album cover to come to life. Since then Gowers was established as an important director for this medium.
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Ryan Seacrest (born December 24, 1974) is an American radio and television personality. Seacrest is also a former children's game show host, who gained prominence as the host of the reality television amateur-search series American Idol.
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Paula Julie Abdul (born June 19, 1962) is an American multi-platinum selling Grammy Award-winning singer, dancer, television personality, jewelry designer, and Emmy Award-winning choreographer.
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Simon Cowell (born 7 October, 1959) is a British artist and repertoire ("A&R") executive for Sony BMG in the United Kingdom and a television producer, more commonly known as a judge on television programmes such as Pop Idol, The X Factor, American Idol
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Randall Darius Jackson (born June 23, 1956 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana) is a Grammy Award-winning American rock bassist, singer, record producer and Emmy Award-nominated television and radio personality, now best known as a judge on American Idol.
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"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
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"Auditions" June 11, 2002 -
Auditions held in Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, New York, Atlanta, Dallas and Miami. Of approximately 10,000 contestants, 121 are chosen to move on to Hollywood.
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Auditions held in Los Angeles, Seattle, Chicago, New York, Atlanta, Dallas and Miami. Of approximately 10,000 contestants, 121 are chosen to move on to Hollywood.
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Nigel Lythgoe
Nigel with Mary Murphy and Dan Karaty
Born July 9 1949
The Wirral, England
United Kingdom
Died
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Nigel with Mary Murphy and Dan Karaty
Born July 9 1949
The Wirral, England
United Kingdom
Died
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Ken Warwick is a television Executive Producer and director, most noted for producing the reality television series American Idol and Pop Idol. Before being a producer he was a dancer.
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Simon Fuller (born May 17 1960 in Hastings, England) is one of the the most powerful men in entertainment in the world. He is a British entrepreneur and creator of the Idol series, first seen as Pop Idol in the UK and over 100 other versions including American Idol,
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Fox Broadcasting Company
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Type Broadcast television network
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Availability National (available in parts of northern U.S.
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American Idol is an annual American televised singing competition, which began its first season on June 11, 2002. Part of the Idol franchise, it originated from the British reality program Pop Idol.
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Fox Broadcasting Company
Type Broadcast television network
Availability National; also distributed in Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean and certain other Latin American countries.
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Type Broadcast television network
Availability National; also distributed in Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean and certain other Latin American countries.
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January 16 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Events
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20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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May 23 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Events
- 1430 - Joan of Arc is captured by the Burgundians while leading an army to relieve Compiègne.
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20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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Simon Cowell (born 7 October, 1959) is a British artist and repertoire ("A&R") executive for Sony BMG in the United Kingdom and a television producer, more commonly known as a judge on television programmes such as Pop Idol, The X Factor, American Idol
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Paula Julie Abdul (born June 19, 1962) is an American multi-platinum selling Grammy Award-winning singer, dancer, television personality, jewelry designer, and Emmy Award-winning choreographer.
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Randall Darius Jackson (born June 23, 1956 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana) is a Grammy Award-winning American rock bassist, singer, record producer and Emmy Award-nominated television and radio personality, now best known as a judge on American Idol.
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Ryan Seacrest (born December 24, 1974) is an American radio and television personality. Seacrest is also a former children's game show host, who gained prominence as the host of the reality television amateur-search series American Idol.
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Jordin Brianna Sparks (born December 22, 1989)[1] is an American pop singer. On May 23, 2007, she was declared the winner of the sixth season of the reality television show American Idol. At 17, Jordin is the youngest winner in American Idol history.
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Fox Broadcasting Company
Type Broadcast television network
Availability National; also distributed in Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean and certain other Latin American countries.
..... Click the link for more information.
Type Broadcast television network
Availability National; also distributed in Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean and certain other Latin American countries.
..... Click the link for more information.
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Herod_Archelaus
