Monday, June 28, 2010
Corn Maze to Feature Crystal Bowersox
via Fox Toledo
The Butterfly House honors Toledo's Idol for 2010
WHITEHOUSE, Ohio (WUPW) - The farmer who created the Sarah Palin Corn Maze in 2008 will honor Northwest Ohio's homegrown Idol, Crystal Bowersox, for the 2010 corn maze.
The 16-acre Corn Maze at The Butterfly House in Whitehouse, Ohio is designed this year to feature two images of Crystal, including her famous dreadlocks, as well as her guitar and signature.
According to Duke Wheeler from The Butterfly House, the maze officially opens the weekend of September 11th. He says, however, plans are in the works to have a special event to coincide with the American Idol Tour at the Huntington Center, in downtown Toledo, on Septemeber 2nd.
Wheeler says he would love to have Crystal come to visit the maze, but he realizes that she has her own schedule and that may not be possible.
Friday, June 25, 2010
Clay Aiken wants to replace departing judge Simon Cowell on 'American Idol'
via NY Daily News
He may not have a British accent, a limitless supply of tight T-shirts or a sharp-tongued talent for criticism, but "American Idol" alum Clay Aiken thinks he would make a great replacement for departing judge Simon Cowell.
"I've always thought it would be a great addition to the panel to have someone who's a former contestant and knows what it's like to be up on that stage and be critiqued," Aiken, 31, told Billboard.com.
He added, "I would not put myself out there to be as caustic as [Cowell] is, but if they want to call me, bring it on. We can talk."
Aiken's comments place him among a bevy of stars rumored to be in the running to fill Cowell's shoes. Among others, Perez Hilton, Howard Stern, Elton John, Harry Connick Jr., and Bret Michaels have all reportedly been in talks with the show.
Before the season two runnerup could join Randy Jackson, Kara DioGuardi and Ellen DeGeneres at the judging table, though, Aiken's got a lot of work to do.
The singer released his fifth album, "Tried and True" on June 1, and is teaming up with season two winner Ruben Studdard for an upcoming tour.
"We've been talking for years about trying to do something together and had never really found the time to do it," Aiken said.
"It's kind of a musical revue of sorts — some of the biggest hits and greatest songs, from our point of view — and songs that have influenced us from over the past five decades," Aiken said about the tour. "We're really good friends and have a great time when we're together, so I think it's going to be a lot of fun to do a tour like this, for us and for the audiences, too."
Labels:
American Idol,
Clay Aiken,
entertainment,
music,
pop culture,
Season 10,
Simon Cowell,
TV shows
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Goodbye Idol Shirts
Well, it's official...Cafepress has taken down all of the Season 9 American Idol shirts. This is a huge disappointment to the graphic designers who have worked so hard to bring fans designs to choose from for the American Idol tour. It's also a huge disappointment to the fans who were saving up money to buy an American Idol shirt from Cafepress.
We will be closing our Idol Shirts store this weekend. It's silly to pay to operate a shop when we can't even sell any of the designs in it.
To read more about this topic, please visit the Tees in a Pod blog. Manz explains the situation very well.
We will still be selling our "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here. If you had your eye on one of our designs, we can offer buttons with that design. Unfortunately, buttons are all we can offer at this time.
If you would like to order buttons, send us an email at idolshirts@designpro1.com.
*UPDATE: You can still buy American Idol shirts from Season 7 and Season 8 in our Design Pro t-shirt store.
We will be closing our Idol Shirts store this weekend. It's silly to pay to operate a shop when we can't even sell any of the designs in it.
To read more about this topic, please visit the Tees in a Pod blog. Manz explains the situation very well.
We will still be selling our "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here. If you had your eye on one of our designs, we can offer buttons with that design. Unfortunately, buttons are all we can offer at this time.
If you would like to order buttons, send us an email at idolshirts@designpro1.com.
*UPDATE: You can still buy American Idol shirts from Season 7 and Season 8 in our Design Pro t-shirt store.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Kellie Pickler Engaged to Kyle Jacobs
via People
For Kellie Pickler, June 15 has long been "sad and hard for me," as it is the birthday of her late grandmother, Faye Pickler.
But the traditional sadness of the day turned to happiness last week, when Pickler's boyfriend, songwriter Kyle Jacobs, proposed on a Florida beach at sunset."It turned out to be the most amazing day of my life," the fifth-season American Idol star, 23, tells PEOPLE. "My whole world changed. We both feel like we got my grandmother's blessing."
Pickler considers Jacobs's proposal a moment she hardly could have imagined. "I remember saying to Kyle, 'Baby it's like I'm dreaming – but if this isn't real, I'm going to be very upset!' "
Champagne and Tears
Jacobs meticulously planned the proposal, arranging a blanket, champagne and candles to be waiting as they strolled on the beach. "Afterward, we just held each other and had the most beautiful prayer," Jacobs says. "We had a little champagne and talked and laughed and cried."
The couple met through friends about 2½ years ago, and Pickler, who was raised by her grandmother after her mother left and her father went to jail, says she learned how to have a healthy relationship from her new fiancé.
"Kyle took away all my fear of marriage and has shown me the way love is supposed to be," she says.
Thanks to Jacobs – as well as a renewed relationship with her dad, Clyde Pickler, who's been sober for a year – "I'm in the happiest place I've ever been," she says, adding that she plans to have her father walk her down the aisle.
Pickler's engagement makes her the third recent country bride-to-be, joining pals Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood.
"We're all just happy for each other," Pickler says. "I'm sure we'll be having some girl talk and we'll share ideas. We just keep joking about how there must be something in the water!"
Labels:
American Idol,
engaged,
engagement,
entertainment,
Kellie Pickler,
Kyle Jacobs,
music,
pop culture,
Season 5,
wedding
'American Idol' Lowers Its Age Limit
via People
Has Bieber-fever invaded American Idol?
On the heels of Justin Bieber‘s massive success, the talent show announced it will lower its eligibility age to 15 for season 10, reports USA Today.
“A lot of young, talented people are now seeking careers and representation before they turn 16,” Idol executive producer Cecile Frot-Coutaz says. “Lowering the age limit allows us to tap into this talent pool.”
The show’s age limit was previously 16 to 28.
FOX also recently announced Idol will begin accepting online auditions via MySpace. Does that mean the show is looking for the next Greyson Chance, the 12-year-old whose video version of Lady Gaga‘s “Paparazzi” went viral?
Auditions for the next season of American Idol begin July 17 in Nashville.
Labels:
American Idol,
entertainment,
Greyson Chance,
Justin Bieber,
music,
MySpace,
pop culture,
Season 10,
TV shows
Monday, June 21, 2010
No More Season 9 Shirts
For those of you interested in purchasing an American Idol Season 9 shirt from Idol Shirts (or any other shop), you better act now to make sure you get the design you want. I received an email from Cafepress this morning stating the following:
As Season 9 has now concluded, CafePress can no longer offer merchandise featuring the specific contestants from American Idol Season 9. Therefore, as of June 23, 2010 you Season 9 designs will be pended.
After that date, please do not create any designs that feature specific Season 9 contestants nor tag your generic American Idol designs with those contestants' names. Also, if you find a Season 9 contestant-specific design in your Media Basket that we missed, we would appreciate you removing the design on your own.
I'm not 100% sure, so don't quote me on this, but I believe they are only taking down designs with the contestants full names. Again, I'm not certain about this. I guess we will find out on Wednesday.
Also, you will no longer be able to do a search for the contestants on Cafepress. If you do, you will receive a message saying "No Matching Results Found." However, you still should be able to purchase designs directly from our store.
The Idol Shirts store can be found here: www.cafepress.com/Idol_Shirts
As Season 9 has now concluded, CafePress can no longer offer merchandise featuring the specific contestants from American Idol Season 9. Therefore, as of June 23, 2010 you Season 9 designs will be pended.
After that date, please do not create any designs that feature specific Season 9 contestants nor tag your generic American Idol designs with those contestants' names. Also, if you find a Season 9 contestant-specific design in your Media Basket that we missed, we would appreciate you removing the design on your own.
I'm not 100% sure, so don't quote me on this, but I believe they are only taking down designs with the contestants full names. Again, I'm not certain about this. I guess we will find out on Wednesday.
Also, you will no longer be able to do a search for the contestants on Cafepress. If you do, you will receive a message saying "No Matching Results Found." However, you still should be able to purchase designs directly from our store.
The Idol Shirts store can be found here: www.cafepress.com/Idol_Shirts
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
"Beleeve Buttons & Bands" Contest
Our "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" contest on twitter yesterday was a huge success! Fans of Lee DeWyze had all day to retweet the following phrase: "I want to win a "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package from @IdolShirts!" Some people tweeted hundreds of times and others tweeted a few times. We had a grand total of 1,328 retweets! UnbeLEEvable!
The winner was chosen randomly this morning. We set up all the tweets on our computer, scrolled the mouse with our eyes closed, and stopped on a tweet. The lucky winner was Gina Ricci, aka DeWyzeGirl08 on twitter. Gina will receive one "Beleeve Button" and one "Beleeve Band" to wear at the American Idols Live tour.
Congratulations, Gina! Thank you to everyone who entered!
Order your "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here.
The winner was chosen randomly this morning. We set up all the tweets on our computer, scrolled the mouse with our eyes closed, and stopped on a tweet. The lucky winner was Gina Ricci, aka DeWyzeGirl08 on twitter. Gina will receive one "Beleeve Button" and one "Beleeve Band" to wear at the American Idols Live tour.
Congratulations, Gina! Thank you to everyone who entered!
Order your "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Lee DeWyze Army T-Shirts
Idol Shirts has partnered up with the Lee DeWyze Army to bring you two different styles of t-shirts. The first style is an army-themed design in army green colors. The second design is one of our best-sellers modified with "Lee DeWyze Army" and their slogan "Live. Love. Lee." on the back of the shirt. Both of these designs are available on shirts and a number of different products. Show your support for Lee and the Lee DeWyze Army by purchasing one of these shirts.
Shirts are available here: www.cafepress.com/Idol_Shirts
Make sure you follow the Lee DeWyze Army on twitter: www.twitter.com/LeeDeWyzeArmy
Shirts are available here: www.cafepress.com/Idol_Shirts
Make sure you follow the Lee DeWyze Army on twitter: www.twitter.com/LeeDeWyzeArmy
Monday, June 14, 2010
Paula Abdul: Bret Michaels Would Be an "Awesome" American Idol Judge
via US Magazine
Ex-American Idol judge Paula Abdul has given Bret Michaels her blessing as Simon Cowell's successor.
"If he were to take that position I think he would be awesome at it because you've got to have a passion and love for music," Abdul, 47, told UsMagazine.com at the Tony Awards Gift Lounge in NYC Sunday.
Michaels has been considered a top contender for the open seat since his surprise performance of "Every Rose Has Its Thorn" at the May 26 finale.
"It takes somebody who really, really understands young people to try to make the magic happen in those 30 seconds," she added. "[Bret] would fit the mold perfectly."
But Michaels isn't the only person Abdul envisions sitting with Randy Jackson, Kara DioGuardi and Ellen DeGeneres at the judge's table.
"I think Simon's mom Julie would be brilliant, because who knows him better than she?" Abdul told Us.
"Honestly, the word replacement to me does not apply because, as we all know, they broke the mold after Simon. I don't think he could ever be replaced," she said. "There should be no comparison."
And as Us Weekly first reported in May, Abdul is gearing up for her role as head judge on CBS' upcoming Got to Dance, a U.S. version of the hit U.K. reality competition.
"I'm beyond excited about this," Abdul said. "We’re in the middle of hiring the amazing talent that makes the magic happen!"
Beleeve Buttons & Bands
Idol Shirts is excited to announce our new "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package! This package includes one "Beleeve Button" and one "Beleeve Band" plus FREE shipping to anywhere in the United States for $14.95. The buttons and wristbands are green, Lee's tour color. You can't find this offer anywhere else. We only have 50 packages in stock, so order yours now before we run out!
Order your "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here.
Order your "Beleeve Buttons & Bands" package here.
'American Idol': 15 Ways to Fix It!
via Entertainment Weekly
Ratings and buzz undeniably slipped in season 9; we've got some sure-fire suggestions to help get 'em back
REBOOT THE JUDGES' PANEL, BUT (GULP!) KEEP KARA
After nine seasons, Randy still hasn't learned the fine art of giving succinct, honest, witty feedback to contestants. Ellen, meanwhile, seems to have lost interest in giving any feedback whatsoever (aside from calling everything ''great!''). Idol's producers should give 'em both the hook, and replace them with folks who'll inspire formerly annoying Kara to further raise her game, not drag her into a pit of mealy-mouthed ineloquence. As Project Runway has proven, a judges' table can sustain more than one tough, opinionated panelist.
GIVE US FULL SONGS
Speaking of the panel, if Idol would cut back to three judges — preferably three who weren't completely consumed by a passion for hearing their own voices — the show might have enough time for contestants to occasionally sing entire songs, not just 90-second snippets! I mean, imagine how much more awesome it would've been if season 9 champ Lee DeWyze had gotten to tell the full tale of ''The Boxer,'' rather than perform a radical lyric-ectomy and shrink it down to 90 seconds.
EXPAND THE WEEKLY LIST OF PRE-CLEARED SONGS
Idol's decision this season to release its weekly lists of pre-approved songs on iTunes exposed the brutally limited options foisted on the contestants. And that's why it was so galling during ''Songs from the Cinema'' Week, for example, to hear Simon blast the kids' choice of ditties when we knew their 50 cleared tunes included the nearly lyric-free ''Gonna Fly Now,'' the Hindi-language ''Jai Ho,'' rap track ''Lose Yourself,'' and camp classics like ''Ghostbusters'' and ''Eye of the Tiger.'' (Yes, yes, the contestants can ask for additional songs to get okayed, but given their packed schedules, it's no wonder most of them stick to the producers' roster.) With all the money Idol rakes in, it should have an entire song-clearance department that spends the entire year adding to massive lists of potential musical selections for contestants. With the sales bump most artists experience from having their compositions performed in front of an audience of 20 million, how many would say ''no'' in the first place?
ACKNOWLEDGE MUSIC WRITTEN AND RECORDED AFTER 1990
No disrespect to the Beatles, the Stones, Elvis, Sinatra, Stevie, and Dolly, but it's no wonder the show is seeing its 18-34 demo shrinking when the average age of the songs covered on the Idol stage would easily qualify for an AARP card. If nothing else, an occasional foray into modern songbooks — think Beyoncé or Green Day or even '90s-era boy bands — would help us determine which wannabes are likeliest to thrive on modern radio.
UPDATE THE OPENING CREDITS
After nine seasons, it's time to retire those creepy SIMS people clutching mics and strolling through futuristic stagescapes. Imagine if the show's producers instead cut together quick flashes of Idol's greatest moments over the last nine seasons — from the auditions to Hollywood Week all the way to the finals — and reminded us of the magic that keeps our dance cards filled every Tuesday and Wednesday from January to May. As a bonus, each episode's credits could end with a video clip for a hot new single from a former Idol contestant. See where we're going with this?
KILL THE SWAYBOTS! (AND GET THE BAND DOWN FROM THE RAFTERS!)
Nothing quite kills an authentic musical moment like the sight of sorority chicks waving their arms in the air for the sole purpose of trying to score some precious airtime. Send those Swaybots (TM) back from the pit whence they came, move the judges' table back up against the stage, and while we're at it, let's move the band down from the rafters and on to the same level as the singers. Our Idol wannabes would probably be a lot more relaxed if they had some musicians — and not all that empty space — surrounding 'em, no?
PUT THE KIBOSH ON TOP 24 SPOILERS
For the last several seasons, the list of Idol semifinalists has leaked to the Internet before Hollywood Week episodes have finished airing. The show's producers could easily solve the problem by turning the pre-taped Top 24 announcement episode into a live telecast. Indeed, why not put the final 50 hopefuls in a room with the judges and let them find out their fates at the same time as the rest of the Idoloonie nation? Bonus points for reviving the sadistic season 8 sing-offs in front of a live audience of millions!
LET THE CONTESTANTS WRITE ALREADY!
Idol isn't just about finding which paint salesman or subway busker can serve up the best Beatles cover. Indeed, the show's ultimate success hinges on its ability to find the next Kelly Clarkson or Chris Daughtry, viable artists whose own post-Idol output will allow them to compete against the John Mayers and Pinks and Katy Perrys of the world. Why not have a week (or two!) where contestants get paired with A-list songwriters to separate the ''Undo Its'' from the ''No Boundaries,'' so to speak?
CREATE A BANNED SONGS LIST
Step one: Ban any song performed live during the current or previous season of Idol. Step two: Ban any song that's been performed three or more times in Idol history. Step three: Toss in the ''20 Songs EW Would Ban from Idol Forever.'' Don't worry, Leonard Cohen can live without another round of ''Hallelujah'' residuals, especially since both Tim Urban and Lee DeWyze tackled his tune in 2010.
TAKE US BEHIND THE CURTAIN
Is there anything more painful than hearing Ryan Seacrest rehash the same tired questions for the contestants (and the judges) on Idol results night? Why not go behind the scenes and take a deep-dive look at how the singers grapple with song selection and arrangement, what other tracks they considered (and tossed) before coming up with their selections, and why they've staged their performances in a particular way? The end result can't be less interesting than forcing Casey James to answer another ''cougar bait'' question.
SUPPORT YOUR ALUMNI OVER FLAVORS-OF-THE-WEEK
In a situation that made less sense than a sleep-starved Paula Abdul, Idol gave season 9 results-night performance slots to Ke$ha, Demi Lovato, and Perez Hilton protégé Travis Garland, but not talented former contestants like Jason Castro, Blake Lewis, Carly Smithson (and her band We Are the Fallen), or Kimberly Caldwell (all of whom had recent albums or singles to promote). Here's hoping the show bats a thousand in booking Idol grads for every season 10 results show.
CAST A MORE DIVERSE GROUP OF SEMIFINALISTS
Considering the stunning success of season 4's Carrie Underwood, it's baffling that Idol has done a lackluster job of casting country-oriented females in five subsequent seasons (not counting season 8's tragically overlooked Mishavonna Henson, that is!). Likewise, the show hasn't cast a viable African-American diva since season 6. And its track record with country-leaning males and R&B dudes isn't exactly stellar, either. For season 10, we'd like to see the judges cast a wider net and bring us 24 super-talented hopefuls from a variety of musical genres.
CONDENSE GIMMICKY AUDITIONS
Nine seasons in, attention-seeking foolios like Bikini Boy and Fainting Girl are as stale a bowl of month-old potato chips. Meanwhile, during season 9, the producers axed promising vocalists like Jermaine Purifory and Angela Martin with barely any explanation whatsoever. Stunt auditions should be limited to 15 minutes or fewer per episode, while Hollywood Week should be expanded to provide viable reasons for how and why our early favorites got cut.
BAN LIP-SYNCHING
Bad enough that Ken Warwick & Co. continue to believe that audiences are entertained by the sight of the show's finalists performing woeful song-and-dance medleys. But it's absolutely reprehensible that the majority of these dated ditties feature an Auto-Tuned backing track and dead mics for the contestants. If we wanted to waste our time on ''singers'' with no natural ability, we'd skip the Idol experience and go download Heidi Montag's latest, thanks very much.
CUT ''GREATEST HITS'' ON FINALE NIGHT
No matter how talented the singer, there's no re-creating an ''Idol Moment.'' So why does the show insist that the final two contestants repeat a performance they did earlier in the season? As David Cook proved in season 7 by eschewing a ''greatest hit'' and instead brilliantly covering ''The World I Know,'' a brand-new creation will always trump a reheated leftover.
Ratings and buzz undeniably slipped in season 9; we've got some sure-fire suggestions to help get 'em back
REBOOT THE JUDGES' PANEL, BUT (GULP!) KEEP KARA
After nine seasons, Randy still hasn't learned the fine art of giving succinct, honest, witty feedback to contestants. Ellen, meanwhile, seems to have lost interest in giving any feedback whatsoever (aside from calling everything ''great!''). Idol's producers should give 'em both the hook, and replace them with folks who'll inspire formerly annoying Kara to further raise her game, not drag her into a pit of mealy-mouthed ineloquence. As Project Runway has proven, a judges' table can sustain more than one tough, opinionated panelist.
GIVE US FULL SONGS
Speaking of the panel, if Idol would cut back to three judges — preferably three who weren't completely consumed by a passion for hearing their own voices — the show might have enough time for contestants to occasionally sing entire songs, not just 90-second snippets! I mean, imagine how much more awesome it would've been if season 9 champ Lee DeWyze had gotten to tell the full tale of ''The Boxer,'' rather than perform a radical lyric-ectomy and shrink it down to 90 seconds.
EXPAND THE WEEKLY LIST OF PRE-CLEARED SONGS
Idol's decision this season to release its weekly lists of pre-approved songs on iTunes exposed the brutally limited options foisted on the contestants. And that's why it was so galling during ''Songs from the Cinema'' Week, for example, to hear Simon blast the kids' choice of ditties when we knew their 50 cleared tunes included the nearly lyric-free ''Gonna Fly Now,'' the Hindi-language ''Jai Ho,'' rap track ''Lose Yourself,'' and camp classics like ''Ghostbusters'' and ''Eye of the Tiger.'' (Yes, yes, the contestants can ask for additional songs to get okayed, but given their packed schedules, it's no wonder most of them stick to the producers' roster.) With all the money Idol rakes in, it should have an entire song-clearance department that spends the entire year adding to massive lists of potential musical selections for contestants. With the sales bump most artists experience from having their compositions performed in front of an audience of 20 million, how many would say ''no'' in the first place?
ACKNOWLEDGE MUSIC WRITTEN AND RECORDED AFTER 1990
No disrespect to the Beatles, the Stones, Elvis, Sinatra, Stevie, and Dolly, but it's no wonder the show is seeing its 18-34 demo shrinking when the average age of the songs covered on the Idol stage would easily qualify for an AARP card. If nothing else, an occasional foray into modern songbooks — think Beyoncé or Green Day or even '90s-era boy bands — would help us determine which wannabes are likeliest to thrive on modern radio.
UPDATE THE OPENING CREDITS
After nine seasons, it's time to retire those creepy SIMS people clutching mics and strolling through futuristic stagescapes. Imagine if the show's producers instead cut together quick flashes of Idol's greatest moments over the last nine seasons — from the auditions to Hollywood Week all the way to the finals — and reminded us of the magic that keeps our dance cards filled every Tuesday and Wednesday from January to May. As a bonus, each episode's credits could end with a video clip for a hot new single from a former Idol contestant. See where we're going with this?
KILL THE SWAYBOTS! (AND GET THE BAND DOWN FROM THE RAFTERS!)
Nothing quite kills an authentic musical moment like the sight of sorority chicks waving their arms in the air for the sole purpose of trying to score some precious airtime. Send those Swaybots (TM) back from the pit whence they came, move the judges' table back up against the stage, and while we're at it, let's move the band down from the rafters and on to the same level as the singers. Our Idol wannabes would probably be a lot more relaxed if they had some musicians — and not all that empty space — surrounding 'em, no?
PUT THE KIBOSH ON TOP 24 SPOILERS
For the last several seasons, the list of Idol semifinalists has leaked to the Internet before Hollywood Week episodes have finished airing. The show's producers could easily solve the problem by turning the pre-taped Top 24 announcement episode into a live telecast. Indeed, why not put the final 50 hopefuls in a room with the judges and let them find out their fates at the same time as the rest of the Idoloonie nation? Bonus points for reviving the sadistic season 8 sing-offs in front of a live audience of millions!
LET THE CONTESTANTS WRITE ALREADY!
Idol isn't just about finding which paint salesman or subway busker can serve up the best Beatles cover. Indeed, the show's ultimate success hinges on its ability to find the next Kelly Clarkson or Chris Daughtry, viable artists whose own post-Idol output will allow them to compete against the John Mayers and Pinks and Katy Perrys of the world. Why not have a week (or two!) where contestants get paired with A-list songwriters to separate the ''Undo Its'' from the ''No Boundaries,'' so to speak?
CREATE A BANNED SONGS LIST
Step one: Ban any song performed live during the current or previous season of Idol. Step two: Ban any song that's been performed three or more times in Idol history. Step three: Toss in the ''20 Songs EW Would Ban from Idol Forever.'' Don't worry, Leonard Cohen can live without another round of ''Hallelujah'' residuals, especially since both Tim Urban and Lee DeWyze tackled his tune in 2010.
TAKE US BEHIND THE CURTAIN
Is there anything more painful than hearing Ryan Seacrest rehash the same tired questions for the contestants (and the judges) on Idol results night? Why not go behind the scenes and take a deep-dive look at how the singers grapple with song selection and arrangement, what other tracks they considered (and tossed) before coming up with their selections, and why they've staged their performances in a particular way? The end result can't be less interesting than forcing Casey James to answer another ''cougar bait'' question.
SUPPORT YOUR ALUMNI OVER FLAVORS-OF-THE-WEEK
In a situation that made less sense than a sleep-starved Paula Abdul, Idol gave season 9 results-night performance slots to Ke$ha, Demi Lovato, and Perez Hilton protégé Travis Garland, but not talented former contestants like Jason Castro, Blake Lewis, Carly Smithson (and her band We Are the Fallen), or Kimberly Caldwell (all of whom had recent albums or singles to promote). Here's hoping the show bats a thousand in booking Idol grads for every season 10 results show.
CAST A MORE DIVERSE GROUP OF SEMIFINALISTS
Considering the stunning success of season 4's Carrie Underwood, it's baffling that Idol has done a lackluster job of casting country-oriented females in five subsequent seasons (not counting season 8's tragically overlooked Mishavonna Henson, that is!). Likewise, the show hasn't cast a viable African-American diva since season 6. And its track record with country-leaning males and R&B dudes isn't exactly stellar, either. For season 10, we'd like to see the judges cast a wider net and bring us 24 super-talented hopefuls from a variety of musical genres.
CONDENSE GIMMICKY AUDITIONS
Nine seasons in, attention-seeking foolios like Bikini Boy and Fainting Girl are as stale a bowl of month-old potato chips. Meanwhile, during season 9, the producers axed promising vocalists like Jermaine Purifory and Angela Martin with barely any explanation whatsoever. Stunt auditions should be limited to 15 minutes or fewer per episode, while Hollywood Week should be expanded to provide viable reasons for how and why our early favorites got cut.
BAN LIP-SYNCHING
Bad enough that Ken Warwick & Co. continue to believe that audiences are entertained by the sight of the show's finalists performing woeful song-and-dance medleys. But it's absolutely reprehensible that the majority of these dated ditties feature an Auto-Tuned backing track and dead mics for the contestants. If we wanted to waste our time on ''singers'' with no natural ability, we'd skip the Idol experience and go download Heidi Montag's latest, thanks very much.
CUT ''GREATEST HITS'' ON FINALE NIGHT
No matter how talented the singer, there's no re-creating an ''Idol Moment.'' So why does the show insist that the final two contestants repeat a performance they did earlier in the season? As David Cook proved in season 7 by eschewing a ''greatest hit'' and instead brilliantly covering ''The World I Know,'' a brand-new creation will always trump a reheated leftover.
Labels:
American Idol,
entertainment,
music,
pop culture,
singing,
TV shows,
voting
Friday, June 11, 2010
Get Ready for the American Idols Live Tour
In less than a month, your favorite ten Idols will be traveling from city to city to perform for you. You've watched them all season and soon you will have the chance to show the Idols how much you love them. We have several t-shirts available for each of the ten Idols. Here are some of our favorite designs.
Simon Cowell Makes Dying Little Girl’s Dream Come True
via Access Hollywood
Simon Cowell might be best known for shattering some people’s hopes and aspirations while he was a judge on “American Idol,” but over the weekend he made one 5-year-old’s singing dream come true – just days before she died.
According to Britain’s Daily Mail, Bethany Fenton, 5, was able to sing for the former “Idol” judge on Saturday at the “Britain’s Got Talent” finals, where he is also is a judge.
“Simon let me sing ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’ to him. He’s so nice and I love him,” Bethany told the Daily Mail following her performance.
Only four days after her dream performance came true, Bethany reportedly died following complications from a brain tumor. She was previously diagnosed with an anaplastic astrocytoma brain tumor – which was inoperable. She reportedly died in the arms of her mother, Jemma, and father, Sean, at the Helen House Hospice in Oxford, England.
When asked about his daughter’s trip the “BGT” finals, her dad told the paper, “The highlight of the day was meeting Simon Cowell, who was a true gentleman, joking with Bethany and listening intently as she sang to him.”
A family friend and spokesman told the paper, “On Sunday she was fine, she was absolutely over the moon with what happened. Her dad said that she had done what she always wanted to do, meet Simon Cowell and sing to him. She had achieved her big ambition and was now ready to depart this earth.”
Simon’s rep reportedly said the British reality star “was so touched” by Bethany’s performance and was very distraught over her death.
“He is really upset, he said what a beautiful little girl she was… He is just so sad, and sad for the whole family. She was a very special little girl and Simon was so touched when she sang for him,” his rep told the paper. “He was happy that he was able to do a special something on Saturday night to give her a few precious moments but it is so sad and his heart goes out to Bethany’s mum and dad and he is thinking of them.”
Bethany had three siblings, 2-month-old Millie, Gracie, 2, and Louis, 10.
Labels:
American Idol,
Bethany Fenton,
Britain's Got Talent,
judge,
Simon Cowell
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Lee DeWyze launches official Twitter account
American Idol winner Lee DeWyze has launched his official Twitter account with the obvious username of @LeeDeWyze. Despite having tweeted only a handful of times thus far, DeWyze currently has about twenty thousand followers (the account has been verified by Twitter itself as being authentic). Lee’s first official tweet? “Hey everyone! This is my official Twitter , so glad to be able to talk to you now, so sign up! I’ll keep you posted on everything! – lee”
Labels:
American Idol,
Lee DeWyze,
pop culture,
Season 9,
tweet,
twitter
Saturday, June 5, 2010
You've Got Mail
My mail is normally very boring--junk mail and bills. However, today was a different story. I received a large, brown evelope with a return address reading "Andrew Garcia." I cannot tell you how thrilled I was to see his name on that envelope! I opened the package and pulled out two autographed pictures of Andrew!
From the beginning of the competition, Andrew was one of my favorites. His story made me respect him and his rendition of Paula Abdul's "Straight Up" completely won me over. He became even more special to me after his friend wore one of my t-shirt designs on American Idol. I wrote Andrew a letter and expected nothing in return, especially since it arrived at the studio after he was voted off the show.
Thank you, Andrew, for sending autographs and making my day! I'm looking forward to seeing you on tour. Hopefully, I'll be able to thank you in person.
Labels:
American Idol,
Andrew Garcia,
autographs,
entertainment,
mail,
music,
pop culture,
Season 9,
signatures,
TV shows
Friday, June 4, 2010
'American Idol' Winner Lee DeWyze To Sing At NBA Finals On Sunday
via MTV News
Before the Lakers and Celtics face off in game two at the Staples Center, DeWyze will perform the national anthem.
This time 12 months ago, "American Idol" season-nine champ Lee DeWyze was probably kicking back with some pals at a Mt. Prospect, Illinois, bar while watching the NBA Finals. What a difference a year makes. DeWyze will have a front-row seat for Sunday (June 6) night's game two of the Los Angeles Lakers/ Boston Celtics series at L.A.'s Staples Center when he sings the national anthem before tip-off.
The gig will be DeWyze's first performance at a major event since he won "Idol" last Wednesday, and ABC will air it live beginning at 8 p.m. ET. DeWyze will join good company, as the NBA has featured nearly all the "AI" winners at its championship games since 2004, including Kelly Clarkson, Ruben Studdard, Carrie Underwood, Taylor Hicks, Jordin Sparks, David Cook and Kris Allen.
The slot in front of 20,000 screaming NBA fans will be good practice for this summer's American Idols Live! tour, which will hit 49 markets beginning on July 1 with a show at the Palace of Auburn Hills in Auburn Hills, Michigan, and keep the top 10 on the road through a September 16 date in Portland, Maine.
DeWyze also made his official debut on the Billboard Digital Songs chart this week. And while the numbers were tame, the former paint store clerk said he was not sweating it.
"You can't complain about that, regardless of what it is," DeWyze told MTV News. "But this is the first season that we did a cover song for the finale, and that's obviously different from past seasons, whatever part that has to do with it. ... There [were] things presented, and, you know, that was the right song for the moment, I felt. And I'm glad I did it."
DeWyze's coronation song, a cover of U2's "Beautiful Day," landed at #12, while four of his other remakes from the show, "Hallelujah," "The Boxer," "Everybody Hurts" and "Simple Man," also charted in the top 200, along with his duet with runner-up Crystal Bowersox of "Falling Slowly."
Labels:
American Idol,
Celtics,
entertainment,
Lakers,
Lee DeWyze,
music,
national anthem,
NBA,
NBA finals,
pop culture,
Season 9,
Staples Center,
TV shows
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Bret Michaels: I Would Make a Great Idol Judge
via People
Ten songs into Bret Michaels‘s recent concert in Biloxi, Miss., the rocker casually mentioned, “I don’t know if it’s true, but I could possibly be a judge on American Idol.”
Though no formal job offer has been extended, departing judge Simon Cowell suggested Michaels as a replacement when chatting with reporters at the Idol finale party last week.
The 47-year-old Michaels had performed on the show that night alongside finalist Casey James despite suffering life-threatening health problems. “I was honored that Simon said that,” Michaels tells PEOPLE, “and I would be honored to do it.”
The Poison frontman says he has all the qualifications that 23 years in the rough-and-tumble music business brings.
“I’m talking old-school, paying-my-dues experience,” he says. “I used to move the pool table out of the way to play for people six nights a week, playing five sets a night, where I had to announce the dinner special. I grew up the old-fashioned way. I would have done anything to have a platform like American Idol when I was growing up.”
“For a lot of these young musicians, I’d be able to give them incredibly awesome and very, very real advice,” adds Michaels. “Not just the music, but their attitude and what it’s gonna take. Because everyone forgets one simple thing: Once you get chosen as the winner, you still have a big road ahead.”
Michaels already has quite the reality-show resume: He was a judge on Nashville Star, he wooed the ladies on three seasons of his own Rock of Love series, and he just won Celebrity Apprentice.
“I would bring my heart and my soul and amazingly honest and truthful advice,” he says. “And I would tell them if I thought their chances of making it were really slim — and how to fix that. Because my chances of making it were extremely slim. It’s come from brute determination.” –- Anne Marie Cruz
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)