american idol (12 posts)
Watching Britney, Ignoring Gladiators
Tue., May. 13, 2008 12:32 PM PDT
The curiosity of seeing the fully functioning Britney Spears has waned. But not nearly as much as the novelty of seeing the fully pumped stars of American Gladiators.
Last night's How I Met Your Mother, featuring a return appearance by the comeback-minded Spears, averaged 9 million viewers, Nielsen Media Research estimates showed today.
The number wasn't at all bad. It just wasn't the nearly 11 million viewers—a season high—who caught Spears' March debut on the CBS sitcom.
As for American Gladiators, it might want to consider joining a support group with Speed Racer, because both franchises have lost their mojo.
A-List Secrets: The Stars Give Back...Occasionally
Tue., May. 13, 2008 9:03 AM PDT
The other day, you talked about how much celebrities charge just to show up at a club. But what about charity fundraisers? Stars have to appear for free then, right?
— Druce, Philadelphia
No. Of course not. What manner of crazy talk is this?
“Ninety-nine percent of the time,” celebrity wrangler Robert Tuchman tells me, stars charge—even for fundraisers and other pityfests, unless the event benefits the star’s own charity, foundation or pet passion.
We’re usually talking fees in the thousands of dollars. Or maybe, if the star is feeling generous, just a Rolex watch or three.
Sometimes a celebrity will waive those fees when charities come calling; Ryan Seacrest told Larry King that he and the American Idol judges donated their per-episode salaries for the most recent Idol Gives Back fundraiser. “We’re all going to give back what we would make on that night, you know, for doing that regular episode,” Seacrest told King.
But for every one of those stories, there are plenty of tales of your favorite star commanding big bucks to raise money for charity. Take a peek after the jump.
Idol Ogre's Idol: Mom
Sun., May. 11, 2008 11:38 AM PDT
Judging by his personality, we suspected Simon Cowell was hatched in an alligator nest. But now that we see that his mom is obviously a sweetheart, it's clear Simon honed his reptilian chops in the music industry. Flee the dark side, Simon, and hug your mom more often!
For more snaps of the stars and moms, check out our Mother's Day gallery.
Grand Ole Carrie!
Sun., May. 11, 2008 8:20 AM PDT
Adding another notch on her I'm-way-
more-successful-than-Kelly-Clarkson belt, country music sweetheart Carrie Underwood was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry Saturday night.
The American Idol season four champion and three-time Grammy Award winner told the sold-out crowd, "This really seems like a great family to be part of. I promise I'll do everything I possibly can to not make you regret it."
Country music star and Opry member Garth Brooks presented the award to Underwood, who is the current Female Vocalist of the Year for the Academy of Country Music and the Country Music Association. He told her, "Nothing will last as long or be more important than this award right here tonight. Congratulations."
Membership to the Opry is invitation-only and based on the artist's commitment to the show and overall contribution to country music. Underwood, 25, made her debut on the 83-year-old radio program in 2005, just two weeks after winning Idol. She's currently on the road headlining her Carnival Ride tour.
Idol's Stage Dad: Out!
Sat., May. 10, 2008 11:30 AM PDT
His son might have made it to the top three, but David Archuleta's meddlesome dad has been given the boot backstage at American Idol.
Producers have banned Jeff Archuleta from prepping the 17-year-old's performances after an unauthorized lyric change last week cost the show beaucoup bucks in lawyers' fees.
A source close to the show, speaking anonymously to The Associated Press, said that the elder Archuleta ignored warnings and encouraged his son to alter the lyrics to "Stand By Me" by throwing in a verse from Sean Kingston's "Beautiful Girls." TMZ broke the story Friday.
No Tank Job for Jason Castro
Thu., May. 8, 2008 12:15 PM PDT
Jason Castro not only didn't try to lose American Idol, the laid-back dude in dreads actually wanted to win the thing.
"Yesterday I wanted to win, and the day before [that]," Castro told reporters this morning.
The 21-year-old Texan's heretofore unexpressed ambition was thwarted by his elimination Wednesday night, his fate apparently sealed by a critically panned performance of "I Shot the Sheriff" and a lyrically challenged version of "Mr. Tambourine Man" on Tuesday.
Castro shot down theories that (1) he intentionally flubbed the words on "Tambourine Man," as alleged by judge Simon Cowell, and (2) he mouthed the plea "Don't vote" to the dialing public after one of his performances on Tuesday's show.
Simon's Chest Hair Is "Like a Rain Forest"
Thu., May. 8, 2008 10:18 AM PDT
It seems like the trick to getting Paula Abdul to talk is by tickling her funny bone.
As the American Idol judge made her way out of Hollywood hot spot Mr. Chow Wednesday night, one of the paparazzi managed to break through the gossipy questions that poker-faced Paula was ignoring by interjecting a humorous request.
"Tell Simon his chest hair is like a rain forest," said the photog. "Like a rain forest!"
"Now, that's funny!" Paula replied with a laugh, before taking a moment to wish everyone a happy Mother's Day.
Never has the use of the word mother, when lodged at the paps, sounded so sweet.
Jason Dodges Idol Triple Threat
Wed., May. 7, 2008 10:10 PM PDT
Eyes, look your last.
Jason Castro, he of the long lashes and nappy dreads, was eliminated from American Idol Wednesday after leaving a season-high 51 million voters with practically no choice following his stunted salute to rock 'n' roll.
After wowing the judges and millions of viewers with indie radio-ready renditions of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow," "Hallelujah," "Travelin' Thru" and more, the 21-year-old Texas A&M student had seemingly been riding the wave downward over the past few weeks, crashing and burning last night with a squeaky "I Shot the Sheriff" and a bungled "Mr. Tambourine Man."
Which could have been so good, except for that whole skipped-lyrics thing that had Simon Cowell advising Castro to pack his suitcases.
"Three songs next week—I don't know what I would have done," Castro agreed when host Ryan Seacrest observed that he looked somewhat relieved to be going home.
Idol Note-by-Note: Jason Can't Do Justice to the Bobs
Tue., May. 6, 2008 9:11 PM PDT
Don't miss one song—or one note of British sarcasm—with our performance-show liveblog:
Love 'em or hate 'em, this is your season-seven top four, and tonight the lucky ducks will dip into the 500-strong list of songs designated by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as the tunes that shaped the face of rock 'n' roll as we know it today.
David Archuleta and his Top 40 proclivities, Jason Castro and his indie-rock friendly vibe, David Cook with his KROQ-ready rasp and Syesha Mercado and her Mariah-Whitney-Broadway aspirations have one heck of a songbook to choose from. But the finalists also have to contend with the fact that millions of viewers will know exactly how each of these beloved songs is supposed to sound, and each one is going to have to do something vocally special to distinguish him or herself from the pack.
Then again, this is American Idol. So, getting Simon's seal of approval, picking a culturally vital song or being David Archuleta helps, too.
Simon Cowell: Being Famous Is "Fantastic"
Tue., May. 6, 2008 2:04 PM PDT
Hey, all you famous folks out there who complain about the constant attention: Simon Cowell wants you to just deal with it.
In a new interview with Parade.com, the American Idol judge calls fame "fantastic," saying, "I have zero problems being well known...Couldn't care less if someone wants to take my picture. Anyone who complains about invasion of privacy shouldn't work in the entertainment business. You can't have it both ways."
Maybe if the Brit with such wit were, say, a famous young woman in her 20s followed relentlessly by paparazzi, he might feel differently.
But to be fair, he does point out, "We live right now in what I consider to be a fame epidemic. Everybody wants to be famous. That's part of the fun. There's something fascinating watching and hearing somebody who is obviously useless, but believes for whatever reason that they're incredible. I find it addictive."
Ah, a man after our own heart.
Jamie Lynn Goes Out on Top
Tue., May. 6, 2008 12:36 PM PDT
And for her first baby shower present, Jamie Lynn Spears got a hit Zoey 101. One last time.
The hourlong season—and series—finale of the hit Nick tween comedy, billed as the Zoey 101 movie Chasing Zoey, was the most watched show in the 10,000-show cable universe, averaging 5.1 million viewers, per the latest Nielsen Media Research rankings.
Another Zoey 101 airing after the finale placed second, with 5 million viewers.
The shows aired Friday, the night before the pregnant Spears celebrated a baby shower in Louisiana with her family, elder sister Britney Spears included.
Brooke White: "I've Been Packed for Two Weeks"
Thu., May. 1, 2008 11:54 AM PDT
For Brooke White, being on American Idol was an emotional experience. And leaving it was "kind of a relief."
"I think after Tuesday night I was ready [to go on]," White told reporters today. "Then I woke up Wednesday morning, and I knew: Brooke, you're going home."
White met her end in Neil Diamond week, and after two performances, one of which was deigned a "nightmare" by judge Simon Cowell. She placed fifth overall.
"I've been packed for two weeks," White admitted.
It was last week that White committed a historic Idol gaffe, stopping and restarting her rendition of "You Must Love Me," because she "lost the lyric." But Carly Smithson, not White, took the fall on results show night.
White was asked whether she had survivor's guilt about the turn of events.


















