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A British singing competition that has run annually from 2004. It is the Spiritual Successor to Pop Idol, and came about because producer/presenter Simon Cowell wanted an intellectual property that he owned the television rights to. It's basically the same as Pop Idol (and American Idol) except the contestants are split into categories. The categories originally consisted of 16-24 year olds, Over 25's and Groups. However with the addition of a fourth judge in Series 4 (2007), The 16-24 catergory was split into boys aged 16-24 (16-27 in 2010) and girls aged 16-24 (16-27 in 2010) with the Over 25's (Over 28's in 2010) and the Groups categories remaining the same to give four categories in total. After the initial round of frankly embarrassing auditions, each Judge is randomly assigned a category and has to coach his or her group up until the weekly live shows, which enters a Battle Royale With Cheese where the losers are voted off by telephone polls until only one remains. After that, the winners pump out one guaranteed hit single (usually that year's Christmas Number One)- because the show is literally a two-month advertisement for their single - before becoming an answer in a pub quiz. It is worth noting, though, that three of the show's seven winners (Shayne Ward, Leona Lewis and Alexandra Burke) have actually achieved continued success since their debut single. It was probably the first show in this genre to glamorise and promote the judges over the actual singers. Indeed, most of the drama comes from the behaviour and conflict between the judges - which, let's face it, is probably scripted - and when it comes to the final rounds, the contest is promoted more as "Which judge('s group) will win?" than "Which singer will win?" The judges are: - Simon Cowell himself (2004-2010)
- Louis Walsh (2004-present); an Irish Cloudcuckoolander with a tendency to put forward joke acts. His bickering with the other judges is a source of much of the show's humour. May or may not be Obfuscating Stupidity
- Sharon "Wife of Ozzy" Osbourne (2004-2007). The only judge prior to the near-total overhaul of the panel in 2011 never to have a winning act.
- Dannii "Sister of Kylie" Minogue (2007-2010)
- Minogue was absent for the 2010 auditions and temporarily replaced by a series of "guest judges" including Geri Halliwell, Katy Perry, Natalie Imbruglia, Pixie Lott and Nichole Scherzinger.
- Brian Friedman (2007); showed up for two episodes as a replacement for Louis Walsh. Demoted back to his choreography position after Louis was bought back, but to this day insists he'd be a better judge than him. Moved along with Simon Cowell to the US version in 2011, where he has a somewhat less visible role.
- Cheryl Cole (2008-2010); member of the group Girls Aloud, winner of Popstars: The Rivals in 2002. At first seems the least cruel of the judges but is a master of the Stealth Insult.
- Gary Barlow (2011-present); member of the group Take That
- Kelly Rowland (2011); former member of the group Destiny's Child
- Tulisa Contostavlos (2011-present); member of the group N-Dubz
- As of writing, the 2012 series has begun without a fourth permanent judge, meaning there will be another round of guest judges for the year's auditions. So far, Geri Halliwell, 2006 winner Leona Lewis and Rita Ora have sat in the vacant judging seat.
Depending on the extent to which you view reality as subjective, the show is either an important yearly television tradition or an ever-growing armpit stain on the shirt of British culture. Winners, their categories and their mentors: - Season 1 (2004): Steve Brookstein, Over 25's, Simon Cowell
- Season 2 (2005): Shayne Ward, 16-24's, Louis Walsh
- Season 3 (2006): Leona Lewis, 16-24's, Simon Cowell
- Season 4 (2007): Leon Jackson, Boys, Dannii Minogue
- Season 5 (2008): Alexandra Burke, Girls, Cheryl Cole
- Season 6 (2009): Joe McElderry, Boys, Cheryl Cole
- Season 7 (2010): Matt Cardle, Boys, Dannii Minogue
- Season 8 (2011): Little Mix, Groups, Tulisa Contostavlos
Already having been exported to numerous countries, an American version started in 2011. Tropes for the American series follow the British series. Not to be confused with X-Factor, one of Marvel's X-Men spinoffs. Compare to Britain's Got Talent. British version This series contains examples of:
The American version started in September 2011, taking Cowell away from American Idol, and for a few weeks, Cole from the UK X Factor. The judges are: - Simon Cowell again (2011-present)
- Paula Abdul (2011); returning from American Idol to rekindle her on-screen chemistry with Simon and to add a note of sweetness to an otherwise snarky panel. And the Fandom Rejoiced.*
When Paula left the show, both she and Simon made it very clear that it had nothing to do with problems between them, and Simon even mentioned that he's working up another project he wants Paula for. - Cheryl Cole (2011); borrowed from the UK version for a few episodes until she either quit or was fired to return to the UK version (and then, for whatever reason, did not return to the UK), replaced by would-be co-hostess Nicole Scherzinger.
- Antonio "LA" Reid (2011-present); black, bald, award-winning record producer willing to be harsher than Randy Jackson of American Idol, and thus more likely to confront Simon directly. Also even more experienced in the music industry than Randy, making him a Worthy Opponent for Simon.
- Nicole Scherzinger (2011); The Ace from the UK series in her guest judging, initially hired as co-hostess but promoted to judge/mentor on Cole's departure early in the first season.
- Britney Spears (2012-present): It's Britney, bitch.
- Demi Lovato (2012-present): Disney Teen Idol known for her starring roles on Camp Rock and Sonny With A Chance, as well as her own career in music. Became a tabloid sensation in late 2010 when she entered a rehab facility for various emotional and physical troubles; after making a full recovery, she released a new album to great critical and commercial success.
Winners of the US version, their categories and their mentors: - Season 1 (2011): Melanie Amaro, Girls, Simon Cowell
American version The American series contains examples of:- Cloudcuckoolander: No, not Paula Abdul. At least, not by comparison to Nicole Scherzinger, whose grandiose praise often contains very mixed metaphors.
Simon Cowell: I'm sitting in Nicole's chair so I'm going to critique like Nicole. I believe in you. You believe in me. You transcend the universe. God is smiling on you. Life is a waterfall, and you are the ultimate rainbow. - Britney Spears in the new series said a person sung like "She was in a dream" and has said some other intriguing critiques.
- Cluster F-Bomb: Dylan Lawson's audition performance
was basically a minute-long example of this trope. Granted, that was kinda to be expected since he chose to perform Lil Wayne's "Swag Surfin'," but Dylan certainly seemed very enthusiastic in his vulgarity. - Cringe Comedy: In the final episode of the first season, trying to banter with Nicole Scherzinger, emcee Steve Jones asked her if he could come to her house for Christmas. Scherzinger twice said, "What?" forcing him to repeat the question before finally answering, "Yes. Yes. No." The already awkward moment was given an added layer of creepy the next day, when Jones told reporters, if fired from the show, he would ask Scherzinger out on a date.
- Cross Over: Season 1 contestant Astro is featured on a remixed version of British X Factor finalist Cher Lloyd's single "Want U Back".
- Death Is Cheap: As was tradition with American Idol, all eliminees returned for an opening number in the final episode of the first season. Less traditionally, popular eliminees Drew, Astro and Marcus Canty were given duets with the surprise guest musicians (Justin Bieber, 50 Cent and Pitbull & Ne-Yo, respectively), while Rachel Crow emceed for one segue.
- Does Not Like Shoes: First season Justin Bieber fangirl Drew seemed to like to perform barefoot.
- Face Heel Turn: While Nicole Scherzinger was quite popular and well-liked on the UK version, American audiences had a much different reaction to her as a judge. At first, they were lukewarm, but then she voted to eliminate 14-year-old sweet Christian girl Drew just to punish Simon and received death threats afterward. The following week, she refused to vote against three-time bottom two member Marcus Canty, so as not to hurt his feelings, which caused the elimination of Badass Adorable Rachel Crow (and led to the Heartwarming Orphan falling to the stage in tears and the Crowning Moment Of Heartbreaking in which she begged her adoptive mother for forgiveness). From then until the final episode, fan opinion on Scherzinger was split. Some referred to her as a Dirty Coward, whereas others insisted she was a Complete Monster.
- Is It Always Like This?: Similarly to Louis in the UK version, a frequent question from the US judges to Simon Cowell during the auditions phase.
- Logic Bomb: When Nicole was making the decision that would ultimately lead to Rachel Crow's elimination, she said "I don't want to have to send you home Rachel... so the act that I'm gonna send home is Rachel."
- Male Frontal Nudity: Within the first episode, Geo Godley
sang about being a stud. Then he dropped his pants and showed off his ahem, "other stud" in front of the entire audience. It was such an awful sight that it led Paula to become quite nauseated by it, having to Rage Quit to the bathroom.- He was wearing a thong, though that didn't stop people from leaving the auditions.
- The Mean Brit: Guess. Although, perhaps due to the mentoring process, compared to American Idol he seems almost cuddly to the contestants and typically reserves his harshest criticisms for their mentors. Cheryl Cole was a borderline case of this prior to being forced off the show; while not as mean as Simon or even LA, she was decidedly snarkier than either Paula or Nicole. Meanwhile, emcee Steve Jones at times plays this for the contestants, but usually by accident.
Steve Jones: (to eliminated girl group Lakoda Rayne) The dream is over. - My God, What Have I Done?: This occurred during the first season; Marcus Canty (who was in the bottom 2 for the third time) and Rachel Crow (who was seen as a frontrunner by many) were in the bottom 2, and the deciding vote went to Nicole Scherzinger. If she voted to eliminate Marcus, he would have gotten the boot. Nicole didn't want to do that, though, so she voted to eliminate Rachel, sending the vote to deadlock. The final result? Rachel has the lowest amount of votes from America and was sent home. Cue a now-very sad 13 year old girl, sobbing while FALLING TO HER KNEES, in front of millions of people. Nicole (who was directly responsible for this happening), naturally grew inconsolable at what she had done and began crying as well.
- Nausea Dissonance: The first act of one episode featured a flasher who got on stage just to expose himself to the judges. While 3 of them were totally fine, Paula went to the bathroom to vomit for about 15 minutes.
- Now Buy The Merchandise: Played straight by Simone Battle during the first season. Just moments after being eliminated, Simone announced that her first music video "He Likes Boys" was going to officially premiere the next day on YouTube.
- Not to be outdone, The Stereo Hogzz also released their first music video within a day of their elimination, though they didn't announce it onscreen like Simone did.
- Older than They Look: Rachel Crow from the first season plays up a precocious, Shirley Temple-like image, which is somewhat disconcerting because she's actually 13 years old.
- Only One Name: In the time between the Judge's houses and the live shows, first season finalist Drew Ryniewicz dropped her last name.
- Positive Discrimination: Nicole voted The Stereo Hogzz off the show in favor of Lakoda Rayne purely because the former was an all-male group, and the latter was all-female. On top of that, she said after the show that she would always vote for a girl group over a boy (or mixed) group, irrespective of how well they actually performed. At the time, some praised her for sticking to her beliefs even though they may be controversial, but in retrospect many regard this as where things started to go horribly wrong for Nicole.
- Reassignment Backfire: The decision to replace Cheryl Cole with Nicole Scherzinger, if only because of the mess surrounding Rachel Crow's elimination. If, as many have speculated, Cheryl was deliberately set up to make a total ass of herself and get fired, then Nicole was supposed to come in and bowl US viewers over in the same way she had done in her brief UK stint, then it's an even worse case of this trope.
- Re Tool: Steve Jones, Nicole Scherzinger, and Paula Abdul all parted ways with the show after its first season... on the same day. Simon wasn't kidding when he said the show would undergo changes ahead of its second season.
- Shocking Elimination: Drew and Astro's double elimination surprised quite a few people, as they were favorites to win the season among many.
- And only a week later, viewers got another shock, as Rachel Crow was eliminated in a deadlock decision, saving Marcus Canty for the third week in a row.
- Technician Versus Performer: On season 1, Melanie Amaro is a technically perfect pop belter, whereas 3rd place finisher Chris Rene may not have the best voice, but his simple message ("Love life!") and sincerity connect with the audience on a larger scale. Meanwhile, Josh Krajcik, who finished in 2nd is both a multi-talented composer/musician with a stunning set of pipes for blues and rock and also a relatable and extremely likable bloke (albeit decidedly not in a "prefabricated pop star" way - which is, like Rene, part of his charm). This was everything just short of lampshaded in the penultimate episode with the final three's duets with established pop stars. Amaro's partner was R Kelly, whose personal life is... let's just say "off-putting"... but who is undeniably, even to his detractors, as competent a singer and songwriter as they come. Rene's was Avril Lavigne, who has been lambasted and spoofed for her less-than-polished voice and often simplistic music, but who has maintained a career long since many of her "pop diva" contemporaries faded into nostalgia collection obscurity with her seemingly boundless energy and grungy charm. Whereas Krajcik's partner was Alanis Morissette, who began her career, in the eyes of many, as a sort of poor man's Sheryl Crow, Liz Phair or Courtney Love, depending on whom you ask, due both to her slightly less conventional attractiveness and slightly more formulaic songwriting, but who has since established herself, in the words of judge Nicole Scherzinger, as "rock royalty," thanks to both her willingness to use her unique stage presence to her advantage and her nearly encyclopedic knowledge of music industry history and current events.
- Title Drop: Astro
"WHEN YOU SAY X, I SAY FACTA!" - Transatlantic Equivalent
- You Might Remember Me From: Averted in the first season. Although contestant LeRoy Bell cowrote two hits for Elton John in the late '70s ("Are You Ready for Love" and "Mama Can't Buy You Love"), this was never referenced during his run on the show, and he did not perform either of these two songs even for his "save me." Interestingly, two other contestants - ex-Disney star Christa Collins and Audrey Madison-Turner, former backup singer for Ike Turner (and his widow) - did have their past successes discussed on the show, but mentor Nicole Scherzinger eliminated Collins during the "judges' houses" phase, and Madison-Turner failed to make the bootcamp cut.
- Likewise, the previous career successes of fellow Over 30 contestant, Stacy Francis, such as being in a girl group "Ex-Girlfriend" and originating the role of Rusty in the musical version of Footloose on Broadway, were never addressed on the show. Of course, this could be because she had claimed in her original audition that she'd had no real success in show business and the truth made her seem like a less sympathetic character.
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