Pop Idol
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<div class="image">[[File:Pop idol watermancowell.jpg]]''The highlight of the show - Waterman and Cowell's staring competition''</div> | <div class="image">[[File:Pop idol watermancowell.jpg]]''The highlight of the show - Waterman and Cowell's staring competition''</div> | ||
- | <div class="image">[[File:Pop idol judges.jpg]]''The judging panel - Fox | + | <div class="image">[[File:Pop idol judges.jpg]]''The judging panel - Fox, Cowell, Chapman, and Waterman - having decided they are more important than the name of the show''</div> |
[[Category:Variety]] | [[Category:Variety]] | ||
[[Category:Recruitment]] | [[Category:Recruitment]] | ||
[[Category:Thames Productions]] | [[Category:Thames Productions]] |
Revision as of 13:49, 11 November 2010
Contents |
Host
Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly
Co-hosts
Judges: Simon Cowell, Pete Waterman, Dr Fox and Nicki Chapman
ITV2 coverage (Pop Idol Extra): Kate Thornton
Broadcast
Thames Television for ITV1/2, 6 October 2001 to 20 December 2003
World Idol, 25 December 2003 and 1 January 2004
Synopsis
A light-entertainment talent contest rehash that quit whilst it was ahead. The thing that (almost) saves it is that it will be rehashed again in the future.
The two-headed presenting monster Antan Dec laughs at stupid auditionees then charges extortionate phone rates to vote off the least bad of the final 10 contestants. Voting people off on a weekly basis suddenly became cool, and any light entertainment formats that didn't employ this concept from that point onwards were immediately prohibited by state law.
To be fair, this wasn't bad. A good 10 million persons were transfixed, and it's fairly obvious that this show set the audition-and-vote theme in motion. The replications to which we've been treated since now stretch to such themes as politics, cookery, ballroom dancing and bouncing pens off heads. Ant and Dec were good at what they did (and ITV say they still are), and the judges bickered upon request, which is also now law.
One trend that this show still didn't manage to break was the immediate disappearance of most of its finalists and champions, with the notable exception of Will Young, who still proceeds to torture us all to this very day.
An international edition, World Idol, aired on Christmas Day 2003 and New Year's Day 2004. Ten national versions sent their champion and a judge to the London recording - for the UK, Pete Waterman was on the panel, and Will Young performed. Local hosts were used, apart from the USA, who preferred Ant and Dec to Ryan Seacrest. The contest was won by the Norwegian entrant, Kurt Nilsen, whose voice shone through despite not being much of a looker, shall we say? Unless you like that kind of thing. Overall, the show will be best remembered for runner-up Kelly Clarkson, inaugural winner of American Idol, for having the disappointed look of a thoroughly slapped arse.
Winners
2002: Will Young
2003: Michelle McManus
Inventor
Simon Fuller
Theme Tune
Credited to Cathy Dennis.