USA TODAY US Edition

Kelly Clarkson’s talk show: ‘I’m just doing me’

- Bill Keveney

LOS ANGELES – As a recent taping of “The Kelly Clarkson Show” begins, the three-time Grammy winner emerges from behind the bank of audience seats, performing Heart’s “Alone” while walking through rows of cheering fans.

Clarkson even stops to let one join in before making her way down to the center of the airy, comfy set, closing the tune with a trademark power riff. She then calls out to a woman in the audience wearing a “Meaning of Life” shirt, the title of her eighth studio album and most recent concert tour.

The opening plays to the first “American Idol” winner’s strength, but she embraces it more for familiarit­y than as a branding maneuver.

“Honestly, the singing at the beginning of every show was more for me to be comfortabl­e. I’ve done it for a decade on tour. And I’ve been covering songs forever. Obviously, I’m from “Idol” – Hi! Sang covers the whole time. It’s what got me here, so it’s what I’m going to be doing on the way out,” she says, laughing.

“Clarkson,” focused on “humor, heart and connection,” features a guest panel that mixes celebritie­s and regular people with uplifting stories.

A-list movie star Dwayne Johnson headlines Monday’s premiere, which also features an Oregon woman who runs a community food pantry. Other first-week guests include Ellen DeGeneres, Jennifer Garner, John Legend, Jay Leno and Chance the Rapper.

Clarkson approvingl­y cites the unpredicta­ble guest matchups on “The Graham Norton Show” as inspiratio­n: “He always sets you up with just the most random characters that you would never find in one place. I think that’s really clever, and it breaks down walls when (guests) are nervous.”

To the likely disappoint­ment of some fans, Clarkson, who has sold more than 25 million albums and is known for such hits as “Miss Independen­t” and “Because of You,” won’t be opening each show with her own

songs.

“I think it’d be a genuinely tool thing, me singing my own music. They’re all covers . ... I like doing songs people love to sing to,” says the singer, whose show band is the same one she tours with. “At Christmast­ime, I might sing something from my Christmas record. Or if we’re releasing a new single, I might sing something as a surprise.”

Clarkson, 37, displays an engaging, natural enthusiasm that bubbles up in conversati­on, as with the interjecte­d “Hi!” or when she briefly interrupts an on-set interview to quiet her crew – “Hey, guys, I love you, but this is on camera!” – and later calls out her husband and manager, Brandon Blackstock, for playing a video on his phone.

The talk show allows room for Clarkson’s digression­s and improvisat­ions, even her glitches (“Oh, my gosh. I’m an idiot,” she says during the taping, after one inconseque­ntial error). They convey a charm that has helped her connect with fans throughout her music career and, more recently, her time as a coach on NBC’s “The Voice,” to which she returns for Season 17 on Sept. 23.

Clarkson’s engaging “Voice” presence suggested her potential as the host of her own show, which is produced by NBC and will air on many of the network’s owned stations.

“I always say she’s one of us in a way that so many celebritie­s aren’t, because we chose her,” says executive producer Alex Duda, referring to Clarkson’s talent-show roots. “Even though she’s a big superstar, we all feel like she’s our best friend. That’s the best combinatio­n of qualities for a daytime host. She’s like a jazz artist. She brings all the humor, all her personalit­y and infuses it into the basic melody we give her.”

Approachab­ility is key to the appeal of Clarkson, who recently relocated to Los Angeles from Tennessee with Blackstock and their children: River Rose, 5, and Remington, 3. (She also is the stepmother of Blackstock’s children, Seth and Savannah.)

“My youngest daughter has already asked me if she can be on the show,” she says.

Clarkson, who worked as a cocktail waitress in her hometown of Burleson, Texas, before becoming at star at 20, had been singing since childhood and knew music, but daytime talk is a new and dramatic shift.

She felt some reassuranc­e after twice hosting the Billboard Music Awards to positive reviews. Still, it took some persuading from Blackstock.

“I was very nervous about taking on something I hold a high bar to, all the (hosts) I love watching. I didn’t know how it would play out, and my husband convinced me. He said, ‘Look at all the stuff you love whenever you talk about Oprah, Ellen or Rosie O’Donnell back in the day, how they were able to do so many good things,’ ” she says. “There’s so much negativity, so much division (now). One of the main reasons I signed on is I wanted a place that was fun, joyful, had a lot of heart.

“I knew I could talk. I don’t get nervous with people ever. I’m quite the extrovert. That’s not a surprise, I imagine, for anyone. I really genuinely love people. I’m a full-on tourist in that sense,” she says. “I’m very down to earth, and I think everybody’s very similar. We all just come in different packages and we all love different things. I like getting in there and finding that connection.”

To provide more opportunit­ies for the singer to interact with the audience, “Clarkson” includes familiar elements from her concerts. Audience members suggest cover songs, explaining their personal significan­ce, and Clarkson leads “Kelly-oke” group singing sessions. The set design includes seats just feet from Clarkson and her guests, because she likes the close contact.

And while music is a signature component, the show will explore a broad range of topics, including family and motherhood.

Clarkson says she’s not focused on the treacherou­s daytime landscape, which has claimed talk shows helmed by such high-profile names as Katie Couric, Harry Connick Jr., Meredith Vieira and Anderson Cooper.

“This is what’s weird about me. Ignorance is bliss. I’m just doing my thing. I love talking to people. I love singing. I love the audience being kind of a cohost with me. My band’s here,” she says. “So, I’m just kind of doing me. It might work and it might not.”

 ??  ?? Grammy winner Kelly Clarkson hopes to bring joy to daytime TV.
Grammy winner Kelly Clarkson hopes to bring joy to daytime TV.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY ?? Kelly Clarkson lets a Heart fan chime in on “Alone” during a recent taping of “The Kelly Clarkson Show,” a nationally syndicated talk show that premieres Sept. 9.
PHOTOS BY ROBERT HANASHIRO/USA TODAY Kelly Clarkson lets a Heart fan chime in on “Alone” during a recent taping of “The Kelly Clarkson Show,” a nationally syndicated talk show that premieres Sept. 9.

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