Chattanooga Times Free Press

Swan song for ‘American Idol’ after 15 game-changing years

- BY LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES — It started on June 11, 2002, with a couple of unfamiliar hosts posing in an empty theater and making an overblown declaratio­n to TV viewers.

“Live on this stage, an unknown talent will be launched into superstard­om,” said Brian Dunkleman.

“You at home decide who will become the next American idol,” intoned Ryan Seacrest.

The reasonable reaction: uh- huh, sure. But it turned out the two were underselli­ng Fox’s “American Idol.”

The singing contest, which begins its 15th and final season Wednesday, was a blockbuste­r that invigorate­d its network. It made stars of Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, Jennifer Hudson and others, and resurrecte­d the TV talent show as a boom industry that includes NBC’s “The Voice” and ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars.”

“It not only was a huge success for Fox but impacted everyone else,” said Bill Carroll, media analyst with Katz Television Group. “It once again underscore­d the fact that broadcast television is communal and an event.”

“American Idol,” from megaproduc­er Simon Fuller and based on his British hit “Pop Idol,” did even more. It breathed life into the music industry as it and network TV both grappled with technology-driven changes in consumer habits.

The show’s end is the result of dwindling ratings, the inevitable fate of even durable performers. “Idol,” which averaged more than 30 million weekly viewers at its 2006 peak and ranked No. 1 for nine consecutiv­e years, averaged about 11 million last season ( still enough by today’s standards to land it in the top 20, but with fewer advertiser-favored younger viewers).

Whatever its change in fortunes, the series will get a send-off worthy of a television landmark, said executive producer Trish Kinane.

As she sees it, that means paying tribute to its past while focusing on the battle among this year’s contestant­s to become the last “Idol” winner.

“It’s that tricky thing of, ‘Hey, it’s the 15th season, let’s do nostalgia, let’s look back at the show’s really rich history,’” Kinane said. “But on the other hand, you’ve got to find an amazing American Idol. So we’re trying to combine both of those things.”

To accomplish that “organicall­y,” she said, past winners and familiar runners-up will be sprinkled throughout the season, starting with the open auditions in which Ruben Studdard, Clay Aiken, Taylor Hicks and others were on hand to share tips with the hopefuls.

Plans also call for duets pairing contestant­s with their now-famous predecesso­rs, who “all want to be involved,

somehow,” Kinane said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Singer and songwriter Kelly Clarkson poses for a portrait in promotion of her forthcomin­g album “Piece by Piece” at the Sony Club in New York. Clarkson launched her career after winning the premiere season of the singing competitio­n series “American...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Singer and songwriter Kelly Clarkson poses for a portrait in promotion of her forthcomin­g album “Piece by Piece” at the Sony Club in New York. Clarkson launched her career after winning the premiere season of the singing competitio­n series “American...
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Jennifer Hudson poses with the Oscar she won at the 79th Academy Awards in 2007 in Los Angeles. She was a finalist on the third season of “American Idol.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Jennifer Hudson poses with the Oscar she won at the 79th Academy Awards in 2007 in Los Angeles. She was a finalist on the third season of “American Idol.”

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