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American Idol
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American Idol
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AnswerNotes Directory > Reference > AnswerNotes

American Idol

Source

American Idol

An American TV show, based on the British original Pop Idol, in which
thousands of young singers (aged 16-24) audition for the chance to be
chosen as the new singing idol. Auditions are held in key cities
around the country, with judges weeding out the hopefuls, until there
are only 30 left. These 30 compete, on air, and the viewing public
votes for their three favorites each week, over the course of the next
three weeks. Those nine contestants, along with one "wild card" chosen
by the judges, continue on to the next stage of the competition, which
takes place over several weeks. Kelly Clarkson was chosen by the
viewing public as the winner of the show's first season.

Back to Top Spotlight Directory > Reference >
Spotlight of the Day

From our Archives: Today's Highlights, August 8, 2006

If you are eligible to work in the United States, are between the ages
of 16 and 28 and can sing — and even if you can't — you may want to
try out for the hit talent show, American Idol. Auditions for the
sixth edition of the show begin today at The Forum in Los Angeles.
Tryouts will also be held over the following five weeks in San
Antonio; East Rutherford, NJ; Birmingham, AL; Memphis, TN; Minneapolis
and Seattle. American Idol, a take-off of the British Pop Idol, is
hosted by Ryan Seacrest; the panel of judges is made up of Simon
Cowell, Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson. Back to Top TV
Series Directory > Entertainment > Movies


American Idol [TV Series]

* Rating: StarStarStarStar

* Genre: Music

* Movie Type: Competitive Reality Show, Vocal Music

* Main Cast: Ryan Seacrest, Brian Dunkleman, Paula Abdul, Simon
Cowell, Randy Jackson

* Release Year: 2002

* Country: US

* Run Time: 60 minutes


Plot

Based on the British series Idol, this twice-weekly Fox Network
reality series followed a pair of aspiring young singers, from first
audition to their ultimate brush with superstardom. Out of 100
auditioners, ten finalists were selected per 90-minute episode by a
panel of judges including singer Paula Abdul and music executives
Simon Cowell (a carryover from the British version) and Randy
Jackson). Of these ten, two winners per episode were deemed worthy to
appear in a live half-hour telecast the following evening. At the end
of the series, the two "final" finalists competed for a top-dollar
record deal. The series' "entertainment" value was manifested in the
audition process, with the three judges being as cruel and devastating
as possible to the rejects (one girl, protesting that she'd been
taking singing lessons for three years, was coldly advised by one of
the judges to sue her teacher). American Idol debuted on June 11,
2002. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Cast

* Ryan Seacrest - Host

* Brian Dunkleman - Host

* Paula Abdul - Judge

* Simon Cowell - Judge

* Randy Jackson - Judge


Similar Movies

Making the Band [TV Series]; Born to Diva [TV Series]; America's Next
Top Model [TV Series]; BBC Singer of the World in Cardiff; Fame [TV
Series]; Lo Mejor de Objetivo Fama Back to Top
Wikipedia Directory > Reference > WikipediaAmerican Idol

American Idol

AmericanIdoltitlecard.jpg
American Idol title card

Genre

Interactive reality game show

Running time

Varies

Creator(s)

Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg Simon Fuller

Executive producer(s)

Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg Nigel Lythgoe
Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Ken Warwick
Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg Simon Fuller

Starring

Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Ryan Seacrest
Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Brian Dunkleman (2002)
Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Paula Abdul
Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg Simon Cowell
Flag_of_the_United_States.svg Randy Jackson

Country of origin

Flag of United States United States

Original channel

FOX

Original run

June 11 2002–Present

No. of episodes

189

Official website

IMDb profile

TV.com summary

American Idol's ratings

USA United States

TV-G (audition segments TV-PG)

CAN Canada

TV-G

AUS Australia

TV-G or TV-PG

MYS Malaysia

U

SGP Singapore

PG

American Idol, formerly known as American Idol: The Search for a
Superstar, is an American television series. It is part of the Idol
series, originated as the UK show Pop Idol, a singing talent contest
to determine the best "undiscovered" young singer in the country. In
recent years it has become one of the most highly publicized music
competitions in the world.

American Idol is screened on the Fox Network in the United States
which is part of News Corporation and on CTV in Canada.[1] It is
created by Simon Fuller (manager of the Spice Girls and S Club 7) and
developed by Simon Jones of Thames Television. The directors are Bruce
Gowers (director of Queen's original "Bohemian Rhapsody" video), Nigel
Lythgoe (a judge on So You Think You Can Dance), Simon Fuller
(creator) and Ken Warwick (Gladiators and Grudge Match).

American Idol is produced by Fremantle North America which is owned by
German Bertelsmann. Each contestant may sign a contract with one of
Bertelsmann's many music labels because Bertelsmann owns half of Sony
BMG. American Idol is managed by 19 Entertainment which is owned by
the international joint venture CKX, Inc. Telephone and text message
voting are managaged by Telescope.

American Idol won a 2005 Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Award for favorite
television show. In the same year the show won the #1 spot on Nielsen
Ratings for two years in a row, favored over the NBA Playoffs, NHL
Stanley Cup Playoffs, Grammy Awards, Daytime Emmy Awards, Academy
Awards, and the Olympics. The show's success inspired other nations to
produce their own variations of the Idol series, and also became the
subject of numerous parodies.


Overview
--------


Early auditions

In the show, hosted by Ryan Seacrest, hopeful contestants are screened
by preliminary panels to be selected for singing talent or humorous
potential and human interest. Those who pass the prelims are
potentially aired on the show. They then audition before the three
main judges - Simon Cowell (one of the judges from Pop Idol), Paula
Abdul, and Randy Jackson - in selected cities across the United States.
Sometimes a celebrity fourth judge may be added. These are generally
held at large convention centers where thousands of people wait in
line for auditions. Past audition cities have included; New York City,
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Miami, Atlanta, New Orleans, Chicago,
Greensboro, Washington, D.C., Houston, Honolulu, Denver, Detroit, St.
Louis, Boston, Las Vegas, Orlando, Nashville, Memphis, Dallas,
Cleveland and Austin. (Contestants from the Season 5 Austin auditions
were flown to San Francisco, San Antonio, Texas to audition before the
judges due to the effect of Hurricane Katrina evacuees on the city.)
In order to be eligible, the contestants are not permitted to have any
current recording or talent management agreements (but may have had
one at some point in the past). Based on turnout and availability,
producers select a certain number from the crowd to audition before
the three judges (this usually takes 2-4 rounds). Contestants are
required to sing a cappella. Those who impress the majority of the
judges move on to the second round auditions which take place in
Hollywood (typically only several dozen out of the thousands in each
city move on). The contestants selected despite lack of singing talent
for appearance before the panel provide a major attraction to the
viewing audience as they simultaneously proclaim their talent while
turning out gut-wrenching performances which are ridiculed by the
judges.

Much like the original Pop Idol version, one of the most popular
portions of each season are initial episodes showcasing American Idol
hopefuls auditioning before the panel of judges. These early episodes
focus mainly on the poorest performances from contestants who often
appear oblivious to their lack of star talent. These "contestants"
have been selected by the preliminary panels in a negative sense; a
typical combination is lack of singing ability combined with vanity
regarding their "talent." Others are selected for human interest
potential: the 2005 auditions featured a "cannibal" who had sampled
human flesh in an anthropology class and an aspiring female prize
fighter. Other examples include a man dressed in pajamas with no shoes
(whose comments made Cowell explode with laughter) and a transvestite
who kisses Cowell on the cheek after her audition wraps up. Poor
singers often face intense and humbling criticism from the judges, and
especially from Cowell, who can be harsh and blunt in his rejections.
Typically the judges express disgust or dismay or suppressed laughter.
Some poor performances have attained notoriety on their own; these
have included Season 1's portrayal of Lady Marmalade, Season 2's
performance of Madonna's Like a Virgin by Keith Beukelaer and Season
3's rendition of Ricky Martin's She Bangs by William Hung.

Contestants must be U.S. citizens eligible to work full-time and, for
the first three seasons, had to be 16 to 24 years of age on October 19
of the year of audition. For the fourth season, the upper age limit
was raised to 28 with an earlier cutoff date, August 4, to attract
more mature and diverse contestants. In early 2003, a 50-year-old
college professor named Drew Cummings filed a complaint with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, charging the show with age
discrimination because producers denied him an audition due to his
age. His case was not taken up by the EEOC. Auditioning contestants
must bring with them to the audition a valid proof of age (and
citizenship) such as a birth certificate, driver's license, and a
passport, and minors under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a
parent or guardian. All auditioning contestants are required to sign
on to the Web at www.americanidol.com and print out a copy of the
release form to fill out and turn in at the audition in order to grant
permission to be seen and heard by the producers' cameras. Contestants
who were found out to have given false information are disqualified.
Those who are ineligible are: those who have current talent
representation or a recording contract; have made it to a top 30 on
Season 1, top 32 on Seasons 2 and 3, or top 44 on Seasons 4 and 5; or
are affiliated with Fox, Fremantle, 19, its sponsors, its affiliates,
its subsidies and parent companies; anyone whose age is not in the
required age range; and non-US citizens. Even if a person is eligible,
he or she may not have a chance to audition or be seen because the
show can see only a limited number of people in each city.


Idol Audition Cities

American Idol Audition Cities

Season

Year

City

Venue

Number of Hollywood Qualifiers

One

Spring 2002

New York, New York

Los Angeles, California

Rose Bowl

Chicago, Illinois

23

Dallas, Texas

11

Miami, Florida

Fontainbleau Hilton Hotel

Atlanta, Georgia

America's Mart

Seattle, Washington

Hyatt Regency Hotel

Two

Fall 2002

New York, New York

Regent Wall Street Hotel

Los Angeles, California

Rose Bowl

44

Miami, Florida

Fontainbleau Hilton Hotel

Detroit, Michigan

Athneum Suites Hotel

Atlanta, Georgia

America's Mart

42

Nashville, Tennessee

Gaylord Entertainment Center

29

Austin, Texas

Doubletree Hotel

36

Three

Fall 2003

New York, New York

Jacob Javits Convention Center

Los Angeles, California

Rose Bowl

San Francisco, California

Pacbell Park

Houston, Texas

Minute Maid Park

Atlanta, Georgia

Georgia Dome

Honolulu, Hawaii

Aloha Stadium

Four

Fall 2004

San Francisco, California

Cow Palace

Las Vegas, Nevada

Orleans Arena

St. Louis, Missouri

Edward Jones Dome

Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland Browns Stadium

16

New Orleans, Louisiana

Louisiana Superdome

Orlando, Florida

Orange County Convention Center

Washington, D.C.

Washington Convention Center

Five

Fall 2005

San Francisco, California

Cow Palace

Las Vegas, Nevada

Las Vegas Convention Center

Denver, Colorado

Invesco Field At Mile High

Austin, Texas

Frank Erwin Center

Chicago, Illinois

Soldier Field

Greensboro, North Carolina

Greensboro Coliseum

Boston, Massachusetts

Gillette Stadium

Six

Summer 2006

Los Angeles, California

Rose Bowl

San Antonio, Texas

Alamodome

New York, New York/East Rutherford, New Jersey

Continental Airlines Arena

Birmingham, Alabama

Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex

Memphis, Tennessee

FedEx Forum

Minneapolis, Minnesota

Target Center

Seattle, Washington

Key Arena


Hollywood

Once in Hollywood, the three judges narrow the initial field of a few
hundred down to a group of 24 semi-finalists (30 in Season 1 and 32 in
Seasons 2 and 3) (complete list). In Season 1, the 30 semi-finalists
were split into three groups of ten and the top three in each group
advanced to the final ten. Three groups of three yielded nine
finalists, so the tenth was chosen in a wild card show consisting of
five previously-eliminated performers the judges felt deserved a
second chance. In Seasons 2 and 3, the 32 semi-finalists were split
into four groups of eight, from which the top two performers in each
group earned a slot in the finals. Four groups of two yielded eight
finalists out of twelve slots. The last four finalists were chosen in
a wildcard competition, with each judge selecting one performer to
advance to the finals and one performer chosen by audience voting.
(The eventual Season 2 runner up, Clay Aiken, was the viewers' wild
card choice that season, having originally been eliminated the week
that eventual winner Ruben Studdard and third-place finisher Kimberley
Locke advanced to the finals.) Beginning with the fourth season, the
semi-finalists were split into two groups separating the male
contestants from the female contestants, promoting an equal number of
each gender to the finals. For three consecutive weeks, the male
semifinalists compete only against the other men, and the female
semifinalists compete only against the other women. Each contestant
performs a song of his or her choice live (in the eastern and central
time zones), in prime time and receives critiques from the judges,
who, from this point on, serve almost entirely in an advisory
capacity, with no direct influence on the results. This format has
since been used on other Idol series.

Viewers have two hours following the broadcast of the show in their
time zone to phone in votes for their favorite contestant by calling a
toll-free number. Viewers with Cingular Wireless cell phones may also
send text messages to vote. Callers are allowed to vote as many times
as they like for any number of contestants, as long as they vote
within the voting window for the time zone assigned to their phone's
area code. (Cell phone voters who have tried voting while traveling in
other time zones have reported on various fan forums that their votes
were rejected if they tried to vote outside the time zone assigned to
their home area codes.) On the following night's episode the results
of the nationwide vote are announced, and the bottom two vote-getters
are eliminated each week. At the end of the semifinal rounds, the six
men and six women who remain advance to the finals.

Semi-finalists (and in some cases, other contestants as well) must
submit to background checks and may be summarily disqualified for past
behavior deemed undesirable, such as an arrest record. Several
finalists have been disqualified for revelations that surfaced late in
the competition. Semi-finalists are also subjected to drug tests, in
order to avoid scandals involving drug usage. Contestants who failed
the test have not been allowed to proceed in the competition.

Under terms of the personal release contract, contestants agree to be
"conclaved" from the outside world. Contestants may not use cell
phones (unless between family members or during an emergency), or the
World Wide Web (especially chatting and message boards). They also may
not leave the Hollywood jurisdiction, and may not leave their
apartments without consent. Furthermore, they may not communicate with
third-parties, watch television (especially news and sports), listen
to radio stations, or read newspapers during their duration in the
competition.


Final Twelve

In the finals, which last eleven weeks, each finalist performs a song
live in prime time from a weekly theme (two songs in later rounds) at
CBS Television City in Los Angeles, California (Also where CBS's The
Price Is Right gets taped.) in front of a live studio audience. Themes
have included Motown, disco, big band music, and Billboard #1 hits.
Some themes are based on music recorded by a particular artist, and
the finalists have a chance to work with that artist in preparing
their performances. Artists around whom themes have been based include
Billy Joel, Neil Sedaka, The Bee Gees, Barry Manilow, Rod Stewart,
Gloria Estefan, Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Queen and Elvis Presley.
Once in the top 5, the contestants sing two songs each.

When there are three finalists remaining, themes are no longer used.
Instead, each contestant sings three songs: one of their own choice,
one chosen by the judges, and one chosen by record executive Clive
Davis. However in Season 2, in the final three, one song was chosen
randomly from a bowl, with one chosen by the performer and one by the
judges.

In any case, each week on the following night's live "results"
episode, the contestant with the fewest votes is sent home. The bottom
three vote-getters (bottom two in final four, five or, from Season 5
onwards, six) are separated from the remaining contestants. Over the
course of the episode, two of the bottom group (one in final four,
five or six) are revealed as being "safe" for the week, and the reject
is sent home after performing one final song to end the episode. This
process is repeated each week until the Top 3. There is no bottom 2 in
the Top 3; instead the eliminated contestant's name is announced. Then
in the finale, one remaining contestant is declared the winner. The
stage is moved to the Kodak Theatre for the finale showdown, where the
two remaining contestants perform for an audience of at least 3,400.
The winner is announced at the end of the show.


Post-Idol promotion

At the end of the season, the winner obtains $1 million (US) dollars,
a five-album major record deal, and a strong fanbase,[2] in some cases
this is not limited to the winner, as other finalists may also get a
record deal and fanbase.

Following the week of a rejected (final twelve) contestant's
elimination, he or she makes guest appearances in testimonial
interviews, press releases, and on talk shows to promote American Idol.
The winner and runner-up make guest appearances after the season ends.
After the final episode airs at the end of the season, a studio
compilation album of the top twelve contestants as well as a CD single
featuring the winner and runner-up each are also made to promote the
show. The compilation album is released by RCA Records and the CD
singles are released by the RCA label division that the contestant
signed with. The compilation album includes full-length covers —
each contestant records one song that they performed on the show,
usually chosen as their "best" song. These tracks are not actual
singles for radio airplay and are sold on Web retailers as digital
download songs.

In the summer of the same year, usually starting in July and ending in
September, the top ten contestants tour the continental United States
(and maybe parts of Canada, such as Toronto) in over 40 major cities.
They perform in notable concert venues and sports arenas throughout
the country, most of which are considered "sold-out" shows.

In late fall or early winter, the debut albums of some contestants,
including but not limited to the winner and runner-up, are released by
a Sony BMG label division.

Post-Idol Contestants' Album Sales

1. Kelly Clarkson 13,600,000

Albums: Thankful - 2003 - 3,000,000 Breakaway - 2004 - 10,600,000

2. Clay Aiken 6,366,138

Albums: Measure of a Man - 2003 - 4,000,000 Merry Christmas With Love
- 2004 - 2,000,000 A Thousand Different Ways - 2006 - 366,138

3. Carrie Underwood 3,568,152

Albums: Some Hearts - 2005 - 3,568,152

4. Ruben Studdard 2,225,037

Albums: Soulful - 2003 - 1,780,823 I Need An Angle - 2004 - 437,114
The Return - 71,000

5. Fantasia Barrino 2,000,000

Albums: Free Yourself - 2004 - 2,000,000

The rest of the artists listed only have one album, so the sales
listed are their official album sales. (except for Justin Guarini, and
William Hung)

6. Bo Bice 833,746

7. Josh Gracin 645,000

8. William Hung 295,000

9. Kimberley Locke 209,000

10. Diana DeGarmo 200,000

11. Justin Guarini 150,000

12. Tamyra Gray 122,000

13. LaToya London 55,000

14. Jim Verraros 50,000

15. Jasmine Trias 30,000

16. RJ Helton 21,000

17. George Huff 18,000

18. John Stevens 18,000

19. Corey Clark 2,500


Season synopses
---------------

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

American Idol

AmericanIdoltitlecard.jpg

American Idol Finalists
(with dates of elimination)

Season 1 (2002)

Kelly Clarkson

Winner

Justin Guarini

September 4

Nikki McKibbin

August 28

Tamyra Gray

August 21

RJ Helton

August 14

Christina Christian

August 7

Ryan Starr

July 31

A.J. Gil

July 24

Jim Verraros

July 17

EJay Day

July 17

Season 2 (2003)

Ruben Studdard

Winner

Clay Aiken

May 21

Kimberley Locke

May 14

Joshua Gracin

May 7

Trenyce

April 30

Carmen Rasmusen

April 23

Kimberly Caldwell

April 16

Rickey Smith

April 9

Corey Clark

Disqualified
April 2

Julia DeMato

March 26

Charles Grigsby

March 19

Vanessa Olivarez

March 12

Season 3 (2004)

Fantasia Barrino

Winner

Diana DeGarmo

May 26

Jasmine Trias

May 19

LaToya London

May 12

George Huff

May 5

John Stevens

April 28

Jennifer Hudson

April 21

Jon Peter Lewis

April 14

Camile Velasco

April 7

Amy Adams

March 31

Matthew Rogers

March 24

Leah LaBelle

March 17

Season 4 (2005)

Carrie Underwood

Winner

Bo Bice

May 25

Vonzell Solomon

May 18

Anthony Fedorov

May 11

Scott Savol

May 4

Constantine Maroulis

April 27

Anwar Robinson

April 20

Nadia Turner

April 13

Nikko Smith

April 6

Jessica Sierra

March 30

Mikalah Gordon

March 24

Lindsey Cardinale

March 16

Season 5 (2006)

Taylor Hicks

Winner

Katharine McPhee

May 24

Elliott Yamin

May 17

Chris Daughtry

May 10

Paris Bennett

May 3

Kellie Pickler

April 26

Ace Young

April 19

Bucky Covington

April 12

Mandisa

April 5

Lisa Tucker

March 29

Kevin Covais

March 22

Melissa McGhee

March 15


Season 1

Kelly Clarkson, winner of season one of American Idol.EnlargeKelly
Clarkson, winner of season one of American Idol.

Main article: American Idol (Season 1)

The first season of American Idol debuted without hype as a summer
replacement show in June 2002 on the Fox Broadcasting Company after
being rejected by numerous other networks. The show's co-hosts were
Ryan Seacrest and Brian Dunkleman. Through word of mouth generated by
the appeal of its contestants and the presence of acid-tongued British
judge Simon Cowell, the show grew into a phenomenon ending with a
finale viewed by an estimated fifty million viewers in September 2002.
Following such a success, the second season was moved to air the
upcoming January during the higher profile 2003 fall schedule. The
number of episodes increased, as did the show's budget and the charge
for commercial spots.

Winner Kelly Clarkson signed with RCA Records the label in partnership
with American Idol's 19 Management. Immediately post-finale, Clarkson
released two singles, most notably the coronation song "A Moment Like
This" which debuted at #52, but marked the biggest jump in Billboard
history when it shot to #1, breaking a record set by The Beatles. As
part of the promotion planned for the show's first winner, the song
had been pre-recorded ready to air on radio stations the day after the
finale. Appearances on numerous entertainment/news shows followed, as
did videos for the singles that began airing on MTV's TRL. Clarkson
has subsequently had two successful albums, Thankful and Breakaway,
and several hit singles mostly from her more successful second album
Breakaway. While her first album failed to sell outside of North
America, her second was a global success and garnered two Grammy
Awards in 2006.

The show inspired a 2003 musical film, From Justin to Kelly, featuring
Kelly Clarkson and runner-up Justin Guarini. The musical love story,
produced by American Idol's Simon Fuller, was filmed in Miami, Florida
over a period of six weeks shortly after the season ended. Released
several months later in June 2003, the film failed to make back its
budget[3] during its short run in theatres. A DVD with additional
footage was released and the movie airs periodically in the U.S. and
other countries.

Besides Clarkson and Guarini, also signed were Nikki McKibbin (3rd),
Tamyra Gray (4th), and Christina Christian (6th). It is the only year
the runner-up did not release a single following the show's finale.

Runner-up Justin Guarini also signed with RCA Records. Contract
restrictions required him to reject outside offers received and delay
solo projects following the season finale, eventually debuting an
album in 2003 after the conclusion of Season 2. RCA dropped him
shortly after its debut. Guarini formed his own entertainment company
and independently released a second album in 2005, with a third album
and an independent movie scheduled for release in 2006. Nikki McKibbin
signed with RCA, but was dropped when she refused to record a country
album. She has since made appearances on various Reality TV shows, and
is finishing her debut album. Tamyra Gray was signed to RCA, but was
dropped when she demanded to write the album. She then signed with
American Idol's Simon Fuller's new label 19 Entertainment, and her
self-written debut album was released in 2004. She was dropped by the
label in 2005. She had a supporting role in the 2005 movie The Gospel.
RJ Helton released a Christian album, but sales were lackluster. Ryan
Starr had trouble getting out of her contract with RCA Records, but
independently released a single My Religion, which sold 360,000
downloads via iTunes. She is expected to release her debut album in
2006 or 2007. Jim Verraros, who came out of the closet after being
voted off American Idol, starred in an indie film and released a
dance-pop album, charting a dance hit on Billboard. Christina
Christian, EJay Day (tenth), and AJ Gil (eighth) have had little
success after the show.

The first season of American Idol will be syndicated on select T.V
stations in United States called American Idol: Rewind. The rewind
episodes will start on September 2006.


Season 2

Main article: American Idol (Season 2)

In Season 2, Seacrest surfaced as the lone host, since Dunkleman
reportedly hated working on the show, and the studio was dissatisfied
with his performance. Kristin Holt was a special correspondent. This
time, Ruben Studdard emerged as the winner with Clay Aiken as
runner-up. Out of 24 million votes recorded, Studdard finished just
130,000 votes ahead of Aiken, although there remains controversy over
the accuracy of the reported results. There was much discussion in the
communication industry about the phone system being overloaded, and
that more than 150 million votes were dropped, making the voting
invalid. [4] Since then the voting methods have been modified to avoid
this problem.

In an interview prior to the start of the fifth season, executive
producer Nigel Lythgoe revealed for the first time that Aiken had led
the fan voting from the wild card week onward until the finale.[5]
Despite Studdard's victory, Aiken has enjoyed more widespread
popularity, emerging as one of the season's true breakout stars, even
being the first to have a U.S. Hot 100 number one with This is The
Night. Ruben and Clay both released albums in the fall of 2006.
Kimberley Locke has also enjoyed radio success after American Idol
with her debut album, One Love. Her next album is also rumored to be
released early in 2007.

Fourth-place finisher and former Marine Josh Gracin has had huge
success as a country artist, signing with Lyric Street Records, and
his first album spawned three hit singles, including a number one
song, Nothing to Lose."

One contestant, Frenchie Davis, was disqualified and removed from the
competition after topless photos of her surfaced on the Internet. She
later appeared in the Broadway musical Rent.

During the course of the contest Ruben became known for wearing 205
Flava jerseys representing his area code. Shortly after the end of the
contest, Ruben sued 205 Flava, Inc for $2 million for using his image
for promotional purposes. Flava responded by alleging that Ruben had
accepted over $10,000 in return for wearing 205 shirts, and produced 8
cashed checks to validate their claim. The allegations, if true,
indicate a clear violation of the American Idol rules. [6] The lawsuit
was settled out of court. [7]

The rumor mills were buzzing once again in 2005 when Season 2
contestant Corey Clark, who was kicked off the show because of a
police record he had not disclosed earlier, alleged that he had an
affair with judge Paula Abdul. Clark also alleged that Abdul gave him
preferential treatment on the show because of their alleged romance. A
subsequent investigation by Fox found no evidence to support Clark's
charges. [8]


Season 3

Main article: American Idol (Season 3)

Fantasia Barrino, winner of season three of American Idol.EnlargeFantasia
Barrino, winner of season three of American Idol.

The third season of American Idol premiered on January 19, 2004.

The early part of the season introduced William Hung, a UC Berkeley
student, who became popular following his terrible rendition of Ricky
Martin's "She Bangs." His performance as well as his attitude facing
Simon's criticisms (which was a stark contrast to other contestants'
confrontational, angry reactions) landed him a record deal with Koch
Entertainment Records making over $500,000 in record sales.

During the season, controversy over the legitimacy of the contest
increased as rocker Jon Peter Lewis and young crooner John Stevens
stayed afloat while others were unexpectedly eliminated. Jasmine Trias,
despite some negative comments from Simon Cowell survived elimination
and took the third spot over Latoya London. Jasmine later released a
CD and attracted fans in her home state of Hawaii and in the
Philippines, Singapore, Guam and other South East Asian countries. The
third season was also shown in Australia on Network Ten about half a
week after episodes were shown in the U.S..

After a nationwide vote of more than 65 million votes in total - more
than the first two seasons combined - Fantasia Barrino won the
American Idol title and Diana DeGarmo was runner up. Fantasia has
enjoyed commercial success and has been labeled by many respected
individuals as a future musical legend. She released her first single
in June 2004 on the RCA record label. The single included "I Believe"
– cowritten by former Idol contestant Tamyra Gray (who also sang
backup on it) – which Fantasia performed on the finale of Idol, the
Aretha Franklin hit "Chain of Fools" (released before on an American
Idol compilation), and her signature version of "Summertime". The
single entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number one, the first artist
to do so with her first record. [4] On the sales chart, the single
spent 11 consecutive weeks at number one (10 weeks in Canada), giving
it the longest consecutive stay at #1 on that chart for an American
Idol contestant. The CD, "I Believe", went on to become the top
selling single of 2004 in the U.S and has since been certified double
platinum by the CRIA and received 3 Billboard Awards. In 2006 she
received 4 Grammy Nominations for her double platinum debut album "Free
Yourself."

Fantasia has also taken part in writing and acting projects. These
include her life memoir, Life Is Not A Fairy Tale, and an original
Lifetime movie about her life story, which debuted to a record
breaking 19 million viewers over it's weekend premiere and is
Lifetime's 2nd most watched movie in the Networks' 22 year history.
[9] Fantasia also guest starred on an episode of The Simpsons as a
younger version of herself named Clarissa Wellington. Her character
came in third on the American Idol parody, Li'l Starmaker. Fantasia
appeared on a Luther Vandross tribute CD a year after winning the
show. She also appeared on Sam Moore's collaboration CD "Overnight
Sensational on a track entitled Blame It On The Rain and has
collaborated with Soul Legend Aretha Franklin on a song entitled "Let
Me Put You Up On Game" set to be released on Aretha Franklin's
upcoming album. Fantasia's as-yet-untitled sophomore CD has
collaborations with Aretha Franklin, Kanye West,Steven Tyler, Missy
Elliott, Ne-Yo, Tweet and Diane Warren and is due out December 12th,
2006.

Diana DeGarmo's first CD, Blue Skies, unfortunately was not a
commercial success due to a lack of promotion by RCA and she
eventually asked to be released from the contract with RCA. She was
not dropped by the label, a common misconception. She has since
received a role in the Broadway production of Hairspray, where she
played the part of Penny Pingleton from February 7th-May 21st and
received outstanding reviews from critics. Currently, Diana is
starring with Melba Moore in the national tour of Brooklyn the Musical
through mid-August. On September 8th, Diana will return to the
Broadway production of Hairspray to once again assume the role of
Penny Pingleton for a six month period. Diana is also working
independently on a second album while performing in the musicals.

Diana wasn't the only non-winner of the season to land herself a
record deal. Jasmine Trias signed with an independent label, and
although she has failed to achieve commercial success in the mainland
USA, she has become a major celebrity in other countries, such as the
Philippines. Latoya London signed with Peak Records and released an
album of slow jams, which didn't sell well. George Huff signed with
Word Records to release a gospel album and has since had mild success
in that genre.

John Stevens, the red-haired crooner who many say made it farther than
he should have, landed a deal with Maverick Records, but was dropped
due to low album sales. Jennifer Hudson is starring alongside Beyoncé
Knowles and Jamie Foxx in the upcoming Dreamgirls movie, and is
expected to release her album sometime in 2007. Camile Velasco was
once signed to Motown Records, but left the label after her first
single flopped. Still, like Jasmine, she has become somewhat popular
in the Philippines. Eleventh place contestant Matthew Rogers is now a
TV personality, starring alongside Mikalah Gordon on Idol Extra, which
goes behind the scenes of the American Idol season 5.

Ironically, the amusingly unmusical also-ran William Hung became a
bigger star than most of the finalists from that season.

In May 2005, Telescope announced that the third season had a total of
approximately 360 million votes, in comparison to its succeeding
season which jumped to about 500 million.


Season 4


Main article: American Idol (Season 4)

The season of American Idol premiered on January 18, 2005. It was the
first season in which the age limit was raised to 28, in order to
increase variety. All Season 4 contestants had to be between the ages
of 16 and 28 on August 4, 2004, born on or between August 5, 1975 and
August 4, 1988.[10][11] Among those who benefited from this new rule
were Constantine Maroulis (born September 17) and Bo Bice (born
November 1), considered to be the eldest and somewhat most experienced
of the season's Idol contestants. They were also constantly mentioned
by Seacrest and in the media as "the two rockers", since their long
hair and choice of rock songs made them stand out from conventional
Idol standards. The presence of more rock-orientated contestants has
continued with Chris Daughtry in Season 5, who was inspired to
audition for the show by Bice.

This season also implemented new rules for the final portion of the
contest. Instead of competing in semi-final heats in which the top
vote-getters are promoted to the final round, 24 semi-finalists were
named; 12 men and 12 women, who competed separately, with 2 of each
gender being voted off each week until 12 finalists were left.

Mario Vazquez, who was originally one of the top 12, dropped out of
the competition on March 11, just days before the top 12's first
performance, citing "personal issues", opening a spot in the final 12
for Nikko Smith (son of Baseball Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith), who had
been voted off in the semi-finals the previous week.

The winner was Carrie Underwood, a country singer, the first winner
since Kelly Clarkson to not only win but avoid being in the bottom
three for the entire competition. Bo Bice came in first runner-up. Her
first single, Inside Your Heaven, was released on June 14, 2005. The
single debuted at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, with first-week sales
of 170,000 copies, and briefly stopped Mariah Carey's run at #1 with
We Belong Together. One week later, runner-up, Bo Bice, released his
version of the song, which debuted at #2. The B-side of Carrie's CD
was Independence Day, a cover of the Martina McBride hit. On November
15, 2005, Carrie released her debut album, "Some Hearts", which peaked
and debuted at #2 on Billboard. It has currently sold over 3 million
copies, and has gone triple platinum. Underwood's first single, Jesus,
Take The Wheel was made available for radio airplay on October 18,
2005. It received so much airplay that it debuted at #39 on the
Billboard Country Chart in its first week, setting a record. As it
climbed, it finally reached #1 for 6 consecutive weeks, and was only
two weeks shy of Connie Smith's record of an 8 week run back in 1964-1965.
The single also debuted at #48 on the Billboard Hot 100 where it
reached a peak of #20. Underwood's second single, Don't Forget to
Remember Me, released for radio in 2006, peaked at #2 on the Billboard
Hot Country Charts, as well as, #49 on the Billboard Hot 100.Carrie's
third sinlge "Before He Cheats" not only peaked a #1 on the Billboard
Hot Country charts, but it is also her fastest rising single to date.
The song peaked at #24 on the Billboard Hot 100 as well. Carrie now
has the most successful debut album coming from any American Idol
finalist, "[[Some Hearts" has sold over 3.6 million copies as of
November 2006, beating the previous most sells record held by Clay
Aiken's "Measure of a Man" which sold 2.7 million copies total.

Meanwhile, Bo Bice's first single, The Real Thing has appeared on
American Top 40 radio. Although Bice's sales did not match that of
Underwood, he stands as the second-most successful recording artist to
not win the American Idol title with RIAA platinum status. Third-place
contestant Vonzell Solomon landed a role in a film, Still Green and a
single on a Christmas album. Fourth-place contestant Anthony Fedorov
has appeared in television shows such as Fear Factor, where he
competed with Season 2 contestant Carmen Rasmusen, winning second
place, and has finished taping several episodes for a new MTV show to
air in the fall. Sixth-place contestant Constantine Maroulis has
redone his Bohemian Rhapsody rendition for a Queen tribute album, and
has announced his pre-production debut album's release in the fall of
2006, as well as to star in an ABC television sitcom and an
independent feature film. Maroulis was also featured in the Broadway
musical The Wedding Singer, beginning in August 2006. Seventh-place
contestant Anwar Robinson has released his self-titled EP on an
independent label. Mario Vazquez and Nikko Smith will each have a new
single by the summer of 2006. 12th-place contestant Lindsey Cardinale
has recorded her first single, Nothing Like A Dream (B-side Drive) in
the summer of 2005 on an independent label, and released in March 2006.

In May 2005, Telescope announced that the season had a total of
approximately 500 million votes.


Season 5

Taylor Hicks, winner of season five of American Idol.EnlargeTaylor
Hicks, winner of season five of American Idol.

Main article: American Idol (Season 5)

The fifth season of American Idol began on January 17, 2006. Auditions
were in Austin, Boston, Chicago, Denver and San Francisco, with
Greensboro, North Carolina and Las Vegas, Nevada included after the
cancellation of the Memphis auditions due to Hurricane Katrina. The
season used the same rules as Season 4. Contestants had to be between
the ages of 16 and 28 on August 15 2005, being born on or between
August 16, 1976 and August 15, 1989.[12][13]

Although this season had little controversy in comparison to the four
prior seasons, various troubles emerged. Derrell and Terrell Brittenum
were twins who auditioned together in Chicago. Derrell had threatened
to, and did quit when he had mistakenly heard his brother was cut.
After realizing his error, Derrell pleaded to the judges to let him
reclaim his spot in the competition, much to their consternation. They
gave Derrell and his brother another chance, but the twins were later
disqualified in January 2006 due to a prior arrest for identity theft.

Finalist Bucky Covington also had prior troubles with the law.
Coincidentally, Covington's crimes involved himself and his twin
brother, Rocky. The two had allegedly switched spots in 1998 to
confuse the police. However, this prior crime had no effect on
Covington's time on American Idol, and he was voted off on April 12.

The winner of the season was Taylor Hicks, with Katharine McPhee
finishing as his runner-up. Taylor Hicks joined Kelly Clarkson and
Carrie Underwood as the only winners of American Idol to never be in
the bottom three or two. Hicks was named American Idol on May 24, 2006
at 9:56 PM (EDT). On May 30, 2006, Telescope announced that a total of
63.5 million votes were cast in the finale round. A total of 580
million votes were cast in the entire season.[14] Taylor Hicks is the
second American Idol winner from the city of Birmingham, Alabama (the
first being Ruben Studdard), and the fourth finalist with close ties
to the city. The finale was seen by some as the best yet, with
surprise performances from stars such as Live, Mary J. Blige, and Toni
Braxton singing duets with the members of the final 12. An additional
performance by Prince was generally seen as a statement of Idol's
acceptance in the music world.

The introduction of the Golden Idol awards brought back memories from
the auditions, such as the return of "Crazy Dave" and even the
foul-mouthed Rhonetta Johnson (or at least a skilled impersonator),
while providing comic relief in the midst of the suspense. For
example, Michael Sandecki was an auditioner who closely resembled
Season 2 runner-up Clay Aiken at his original audition, but unlike
Aiken, Sandecki was not a good enough singer to be accepted to
Hollywood. He appeared on the finale to receive a Golden Idol for
"Best Impersonation", and was asked to sing. He started to sing "Don't
Let the Sun Go Down on Me", and much to his and Idol fans' joy and
surprise, the real Clay Aiken came out on stage and finished the song
with him.


Season 6

Main article: American Idol (Season 6)

American Idol Season 6 will begin in January 2007.


Episodes
--------

Main article: List of American Idol episodes


Media sponsorship
-----------------

American Idol is often noted for advertising its sponsors during the
show's runtime. Being the number one rated show in the United States,
it costs around $705,000 for a 30-second commercial[citation needed].

Coca-Cola is a major sponsor in the U.S., and all the judges, hosts,
and contestants are seen consuming beverages out of cups bearing the
Coca-Cola logo, while contestants and host Ryan Seacrest gathering for
a Keeping it Real segment between songs in the Coca-Cola Red Room, the
show's equivalent to the traditional green room. (During rebroadcast
on ITV in the UK, the Coca-Cola logo is obscured in the shots.) In
seasons 1 through 4, after every Wednesday results show, the remaining
contestants and host meet in the Coca-Cola Red Room to discuss next
week's theme; the footage of this meeting is shown at the start of the
following Tuesday's performance show.

Voting is made possible by Cingular Wireless, and viewers who cast
votes on Cingular Wireless cellular telephones benefit from lower
billing costs[citation needed].

Kellogg and Pop-Tarts are also two major sponsors, especially of the
cast tour that follows the end of every season[citation needed].

Products from the Ford Motor Company also receive prominent product
placement; contestants appear in Ford commercials on the results
shows, and the final two of Seasons 4 and 5 each won free Mustangs. In
addition, the American Idol logo strongly resembles the Ford Motor
Company logo (both are blue ovals featuring cursive script). Previous
winners Kelly Clarkson and Taylor Hicks have also been tapped to do
commercials for Ford.

Contestants will occasionally don Old Navy clothing during
performances[citation needed], and celebrity stylist Steven Cojocaru
appeared in two previous seasons to assist contestants with picking
out wardrobe pieces from Old Navy. Clairol hair care products also
sponsors the show, with contestants usually getting Clairol-guided
hair makeovers after the first two or three episodes during the round
of 12[citation needed].


Controversy
-----------

Main article: American Idol controversy

* The show is known for encouraging favoritism within the
contestants and having viewers vote for their "favorite" rather
than singing ability. Critics claim that this treatment places
social status above musical aesthetics.

* American Idol has come under fire for maintaining what some claim
to be total control of the careers of the winners of the contest.
Former co-host Brian Dunkleman referred to the show as "owning"
the winning contestants, noting that winners sign contracts to
only record with companies owned by the show's producers and to
allow related agencies to manage their careers.

* Former contestant Corey Clark told reporters in April 2005 that he
and Idol judge Paula Abdul had a "secret affair" prompting an
internal Idol investigation. [15] Abdul was eventually deemed
innocent.

* During season three, contestants LaToya London and Jennifer Hudson,
both of African-American heritage, were eliminated. Thought both
of them would be the final three (especially LaToya), along with
Fantasia Barrino, many were outraged because they believe
eliminating two favorite singers from the show who are
African-American is racism.

* Season 3 winner Fantasia Barrino included a controversial song on
her first album titled Baby Mama about single motherhood that has
received widespread criticism. Although the song has been thought
of and labeled by Fantasia herself as an inspirational anthem for
single mothers everywhere by many, others see the song as an
example of poor "family values."

* Since the 2004 season, American Idol producers have battled online
community services such as the weblogs DialIdol.com,
Worldsentiment.com, and VotefortheWorst.com. DialIdol predicts the
winner of each week's contest based on how often an automatic
dialer encounters a busy signal for each contestant;
Worldsentiment uses very large samplings and algorithms to predict
the outcome of the vote-off; and VotefortheWorst exhorts viewers
to vote for what the site deems to be the worst contestant, rather
than the best. Some in the media have implied that Las Vegas odds
makers exert behind-the-scenes influence in protecting the
services.

* Former season 2 and 5 contestant, Daniel James 'DJ' Boyd, arrested
for allegedly videotaping sexual encounters with minors after
supplying them with alcohol in Utah.[16]

* Season Two contestant, Corey Clark, arrested again on Trespassing
charges and violating terms of probation.[17]


Television ratings
------------------


U.S.

Seasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of
American Idol on FOX.

Each U.S. network television season starts in late September and
ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May
sweeps.

Season

Premiered

Ended

TV Season

Timeslot

Rank

Viewers
(in millions)

Date

Viewers
(in millions)

Date

Viewers
(in millions)

1st[18]

June 11, 2002

9.90

Final Performances: September 3, 2002

18.69

2001-2002

Tuesday 9:00PM
(performance show)

n/a

12.50

Season Finale: September 4, 2002

22.77

Wednesday 9:30PM
(results show)

n/a

13.50

2nd[19]

January 21, 2003

26.50

Final Performances: May 20, 2003

25.67

2002-2003

Tuesday 8:00PM
(performance show)

#5

21.50

Season Finale: May 21, 2003

34.24

Wednesday 8:30PM
(results show)

#3

21.90

3rd[20]

January 19, 2004

28.56

Final Performances: May 25, 2004

25.13

2003-2004

Tuesday 8:00PM
(performance show)

#2

25.73

Season Finale: May 26, 2004

28.84

Wednesday 8:30PM
(results show)

#3

24.31

4th[21]

January 18, 2005

33.58

Final Performances: May 24, 2005

28.05

2004-2005

Tuesday 8:00PM
(performance show)

#1

27.32

Season Finale: May 25, 2005

30.27

Wednesday 9:00PM
(results show)

#3

26.07

5th[22]

January 17, 2006

35.53

Final Performances: May 23, 2006

31.78

2005-2006

Tuesday 8:00PM
(performance show)

#1

31.17

Season Finale: May 24, 2006

36.38

Wednesday 9:00PM
(results show)

#2

30.16

American Idol does not have a ranking for the 2001-2002 season because
it aired in the summer of 2002. If it had aired within the official
2001-2002 U.S. television season, the Wednesday results show would
have ranked #25 and the Tuesday performance show would have ranked
#30, assuming it would have had the same rating as it did in the
summer.

American Idol has bucked the trend of most successful television
programs, past and present, by growing in audience numbers in its
fifth season. According to the overnight ratings for May 24, 2006, an
average of 42.94 million viewers[23] tuned in to the final half-hour
of the fifth season finale when Taylor Hicks was announced as the 2006
American Idol.


International
-------------

American Idol is broadcast to over 100 nations outside of the United
States, including many with their own version of Idol; however, it is
not a live broadcast and may be tape delayed by several days or weeks
(excluding India, Israel, Canada, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines,
and the United Arab Emirates in which it is also aired live).


International networks broadcasting American Idol

* In Australia, the show screens on Network Ten.

* In Canada, the show screens on CTV.

* In Czech Republic, the show screens on TV Nova.

* In Denmark, the show screens on TV3.

* In Finland, the show screens on Subtv.

* In Germany, the show screens on RTL.

* In India it airs live on Star World.

* In Indonesia, the show screens on RCTI as well as on Star World
live satellite feed.

* In Ireland, the show screens on TV3 Ireland.

* In Israel, the show screens on IBA-channel 1, IBA-Channel 33, as
well as on Star World.

* In Italy, the show screens on Fox Life.

* In Japan, the show screened from the 5th season on FOX TV Japan.

* In Latin America, the show screens on Sony Entertainment
Television.

* In Malaysia, the show screens on 8TV as well as on Star World live
satellite feed.

* In New Zealand, the show screens on Television New Zealand (Tv2)

* In the Philippines, the show screens on Associated Broadcasting
Company as well as on Star World live satellite feed.

* In Singapore, the show screens on Channel 5, as well as on Star
World.

* In Slovakia, the show screens on Jednotka.

* In South Africa, the show screens on M-Net Series.

* In South Korea, the show screens on On Style.

* In the United Arab Emirates, the show airs LIVE on Star World.

* In the United Kingdom, the show screens on the digital channel
ITV2.


Spin-offs
---------

Main article: List of American Idol spin-offs


Trivia
------

* Another show taped at CBS Television City, besides American Idol,
is CBS's longest running Game Show, The Price is Right.

* In the cartoon Kim Possible there is a show called American
Starmaker. It is a spoof of American Idol.


See also
--------

* America's Got Talent

* America's Most Talented Kid

* American Juniors

* American popular music

* Canadian Idol

* Idol series

* List of American Idol spin-offs

* Latin American Idol

* Music of the United States

* Music competitions

* Pop Idol

* Star Search

* Superstar USA

* Teen idol

* Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour

* The X-Factor

* Star Academy


External links
--------------

* American Idol Official Website


Footnotes
---------

1. ^ CTV.ca, American Idol

2. ^
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2002/08/02/DD202525.DTL

3. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0339034/business

4. ^
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA417981.html?display=Top+of+the+Week

5. ^
http://www.realitynewsonline.com/cgi-bin/ae.pl?mode=1&article=article9455.art&page=1

6. ^ http://www.realitytvworld.com/index/articles/story.php?s=1518

7. ^
http://www.realitytvworld.com/news/ruben-studdard-settles-lawsuit-against-birmingham-jersey-maker-205-flava-2109.php

8. ^
http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/08/12/abdul.idol.reut/index.html

9. ^ http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060822/nytu132.html

10. ^ http://www.americanidol.com/archive/season3/showinfo/rules.htm

11. ^
http://www.americanidol.com/archive/season3/showinfo/audition71404.pdf

12. ^
http://www.americanidol.com/archive/season4/showinfo/rules_721.htm

13. ^
http://www.americanidol.com/archive/season4/showinfo/ai5_release.pdf

14. ^ http://www.telescope.tv/press_idol_06.html

15. ^ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7591639/

16. ^ http://www.bandpulse.com/article/0/40/.html

17. ^ http://www.bandpulse.com/article/4642/50/Corey-Clark.html
article

18. ^ "Reality TV World: Ratings: ABC's 'Dancing With The Stars'
finale hits summer highs not seen since 'Idol'", July 10, 2005.

19. ^ "Cincinnati Enquirer: Television networks face reality check",
May 25, 2003.

20. ^ Viewership numbers of primetime programs during the 2003-04
television season

21. ^ Viewership numbers of primetime programs during the 2004-05
television season

22. ^ Viewership numbers of primetime programs during the 2005-06
television season

23. ^ Mediaweek: The Programming Insider (May 25, 2006)

American Idol

Season 1 | Season 2 | Season 3 | Season 4 | Season 5 | Season 6

Hosts and Judges

Ryan Seacrest | Randy Jackson | Paula Abdul | Simon Cowell | Brian
Dunkleman

Winners

Kelly Clarkson | Ruben Studdard | Fantasia Barrino | Carrie Underwood
| Taylor Hicks

Spin-offs

From Justin to Kelly | American Juniors | An American Idol Christmas |
Idol Chat | American Idol Extra | American Idol Rewind

Other

American Idol Compilation Series | Controversy | | American Idol
Magazine | American Idol Underground | Font | Video game | List of all
contestants | List of spin-offs | List of episodes

Idol series

Pan-Arab •

Armenia • Australia • Belgium • Brazil • Canada • Croatia
• Czech Republic • Denmark • Finland • France • Germany •
Greece • Iceland • India • Indonesia • Kazakhstan •
Pan-Latin America • Malaysia • Netherlands • New Zealand •
Norway • Philippines • Poland • Portugal • Russia • Serbia,
Montenegro & Macedonia • Singapore • Slovakia • South Africa •
Sweden • Turkey • United Kingdom • United States
World Idol


This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed
encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors
(see full disclaimer)

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