Archive for the ‘Season Ten’ Category

How Old Is This Song 3.0: The Three-Year Update

Friday, April 20th, 2012

As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, I was going to go back and release my updated How Old Is Thing Song study. (Thanks again to Landon Cox of Burleson, Texas for sending these numbers in.) After several weaks of looking at the numbers, poking them, tweaking them a bit, what have we found? As far as younger songs doing better than older songs in Idol competition, the numbers are looking even better than they did three years ago. As for post-Idol success, that’s harder to say: although to be fair, there are a lot of other factors at work there. So, let’s look at Seasons 8 to 10. Next week (fingers crossed),
The methodology is still the same as I outlined in How Old Is Thing Song 2.0, with one change: coronation and reprise songs will not be counted in the averages and median anymore. Most of the time, they only serve to artificially lower the number of the top two placers.

Season Eight: The Surprise Finale That Really Wasn’t


Take a good look at the difference between Kris Allen’s average song age and Adam Lambert’s. On average, Adam was singing songs almost a decade older than Kris. Then again, on average, Adam was the graybeard when it came to song choice: he was singing much older songs than the rest of the field. Lambert was not only the most controversial contestant of the season, he was (with the exception of the robbed Alexis Grace) the oldest artistically. Add to the many reasons Kris won and Adam didn’t song age.

I wish I could say that the young song picks of Season Eight made for an enjoyable season – but I’d be lying if I did. It was torture. No other season has inspired me to write a three part editorial calling out the Idol PTB. It was that bad. There is nothing that causes more anger in the Idolsphere than selective judging – whether it’s for someone or against someone.

This season’s low song age was achieved in a surprisingly easy way: theme selection. By Idol standards, there were few graybeard themes: sure, you had Motown and Rat Pack songs, but beyond that there really weren’t any atrocities. On the other hand, you had themes like Year You Were Born (when, by far, the contestants did the theme properly and didn’t cheat), Top iTunes downloads, and songs of the Opry.

However, song age can really only do so much. Young songs done poorly will still stink. This chart was done by my friends at What Not to Sing, and shows the WNTS scores of the first seven eliminated contestants in the finals. Scores over 50 have been highlighted. It speaks for itself.

Spare a thought for one contestant in particular. Alexis Grace proved again that singing older than average in a given year is dangerous for frontrunners. At the time of her elimination, her mean/median score was 32.67/35. Only Adam Lambert had an older score in both categories at that time. It was simply her bad luck to be in Season Eight and not Season Nine, as you will soon see.

Season Nine: Guys versus Girls, Contestants versus Producers

From the point of view of song age, Season Nine got off to a good start. The top 12 finalists, through three rounds of semifinals, had an average song age of 19.17 and a median of 11.5. You couldn’t complain about songs being old. And then the producers came in.

The average song age during the finals was more than a decade older at 32.13. The median was an appallingly high 39. Stop for a moment to ponder these statistics: half of the songs in the finals of the search for the next great singer in America was four decades old. The first five finals episodes had an average song age of 37.76 and a median song age of 41. What. The. Hell. Was. 19E. Thinking?

Some of the patterns we’ve seen before are, again, present in this year. Didi Benami should have lasted longer – but at the time of her ouster both her average and median song ages were above 30, where it starts to become a risk for contestants. Siobhan was in a similar situation, and also went out earlier than many pundits thought she should. On the flipside, consider the significant gender gap: there’s no guy with an average song age in the 30s; conversely no girl (save the hapless Lacey Brown) with a similar score in the 20s. However, correlation does not equal causation: in quite a few of those cases (most notably, Katie Stevens) the girls were perfectly capable of choosing young material. It just happens to be that they were eliminated before they got a chance to do that in the finals.

Season Ten: Casey Abrams, King… Graybeard?

This season was a powerful demonstration of the power of song age. First, however, I’ll dispel one possible case. Looking at Pia’s numbers, one might think that high song age was the ultimate culprit for her exit. It wasn’t. The table below show’s everyone numbers when Pia was eliminated:

If anything, Pia was singing on the younger side of the top 9! Pia left with three straight old themes on her Idol resume. Season Ten, like Season Nine, didn’t really get young songs until five weeks into the finals. That was after Pia had already left, so she’s saddled with a number that reflects the geriatric nature of the early S10 weeks. There were many factors behind her early exit, but song age… was not one of them.

A classic example of song age kicking somebody out was Casey. At the time of his Judges’ Save, his average and median song age were both in the 40s (40.5/43, to be exact). That’s essentially unheard of in Idol. Anything above 30 is a warning sign, let alone 40. He left with an amazingly high median song age of 41. If there was ever a king of the graybeard songs, Casey was it. The queen, however, was, surprisingly, Thia Megia. In fact, that number seemed so wacky, that I’ve already done some digging into some… other aspects of that anomaly. Maybe that’ll come out in another couple of weeks, or it may go nowhere if the numbers don’t pan out.

Looking at the top three, the most remarkable number there has to be Lauren’s. Consciously or not, not only was she borrowing Carrie Underwood songs, she also borrowed heavily from the latter’s Idol strategy. Given the… changing conditions of song choice since Season Four (read: iTunes), getting a median below 20 and lasting as long as Lauren did was a great achievement. It was generally assumed at the time that Lauren was vote-splitting with Scotty (hence, few believed both country contestants would reach the finale), but in hindsight thay may well not have been the case. It may well have been the what she had was the teen/tween vote and not country voters. Had Lauren been picking more “average” songs age-wise, she would probably not have made it into the finale.

Haley’s numbers show what is just about the only way to get out of a song age hole. Pick a really current song and sing the crap out of it. She did it twice – Rolling In The Deep and You and I. It’s a high-risk strategy, but then again if you need to get out of a song age hole you don’t have a choice. Of course, if you’re in a song age hole because old songs are your thing – Casey’s a good example, Haley to some degree as well – then you have to realize that that is something which makes advancing week to week that much harder.

Whatever the case, Season 10 was a season of extremes. You had Lauren Alaina doing as good a job as anyone ever has of selecting young material for her stay. On the opposite end, Casey was picking from the older half of the songbook.

In Closing

The past three Idol seasons have not taught us anything we couldn’t infer original How Old Is This Song study years ago. The lessons of the past are still unchanged: on American Idol, you’re better off doing new songs rather than old ones, all other things being equal.

The Idol Off-season: How I Learned To Stop Worrying About The X Factor

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Schedules have a funny way of working out. On the same week that the Season 10 tour ended here in the Philippines, Simon Cowell’s much-awaited (or, at least, much-promoted) show, The X Factor, premiered in the US. So as the final steps of this season’s Idol journey ended, viewers at home were provided with what Simon thought a reality talent show ought to look like.

Before I go to that, though, the tour. I’m not going to do a full concert report, but: it was a fantastic show, and frankly even some contestants that I beat on during the season are much more entertaining on the stage than they ever were on the small screen. (For a full report of how the Idols were received, I suggest this recap by local radio personality Chico Garcia.)

The one thing that stands out watching this group live was the talent level. We knew that coming in, but it’s even more apparent live. Yes, you can hide some flaws with a live concert that live TV will brutally expose. But you have to have something to work with first – and with this group, you did. In spades. The basic truth of American Idol is that a successful season needs a talented “cast”. Without it, a season fails. It really is that simple.

Which brings us to The X Factor. The hype for Simon Cowell’s new show was… well, a bit excessive, to say the least. It should have utterly demolished its competition the way Idol has been doing so fairly reliably for years, righ?

Not so fast. Early numbers are a little grim. Short version: X Factor won it’s first hour, but was beaten by Modern Family in its second. In the key 18-49 demographic, it did worse than the other new singing reality show of the year, The Voice. Somewhere in Hollywood, Nigel Lythgoe and Simon Fuller are laughing evilly, and Simon Cowell is probably cursing out a poor Fox flunky. Or wanting a refund on the millions he’s thrown at his PR people.

Some – maybe even most - TV pundits may be surprised to see such a highly promoted show do so poorly, but I’m not. We’d already seen what a Cowell-run show would be like. Seasons Eight and Nine of Idol were a perfect preview of what X Factor would be like – and those were seasons where he had others to restrain him. On X Factor, no one will dare say no. We may all be seeing a slow motion wreck in progress.

If Chinese philosophy has the yin and the yang, talent shows have Spectacle and Talent. The two Idol seasons that Simon dominated backstage were loaded with Spectacle – and, particularly in the second year, lacked for Talent. Based on the premiere, X Factor was even more so. Given how poorly the Idolsphere – and the public – reacted back then, was there any reason to think that this year would be any different?

Aside from the overdose of Spectacle, however, X Factor has another problem. Much of the spectacle this particular show uses has become downright rancid. Simon Cowell made his mark as the “brutally honest” judge a decade ago, but over the years it had become more brutal and less honest. The Simon-Paula buddy act was overshadowed by the fact that Paula was completely out of her mind. Was there ever a huge demand to see all of this again? Really? Really?

Now, it’s very premature to call it a flop. If it were anything but a Simon Cowell super-production, these numbers would be healthy. After all, coming in second to the big winner of the just-held Emmy Awards? And, while his image and reputation may have been sullied and reduced since its height in the mid-2000s, it’s still worth a lot of viewers. A show with Simon Cowell isn’t going to be a total stinker as far as ratings go.

What it isn’t, however, is the Idol-killer that it was all hyped up to be. As it turns out, the American viewing audience is very sensitive to talent levels in their singing shows. Unless X Factor turns out to actually have a deep pool of great talent – and frankly, there isn’t much to indicate that will be the case – it will be a long, long season for Simon Cowell.

And that, in and of itself, is priceless.

Season 10 Finale: New Beginnings

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

Country singers on Idol tend to go two ways. Most of them tend to… overstay their welcome and leave long after they really should have. (Two shining examples: Kristy Lee Cook and Kellie Pickler.) When country produces a contender, though… everyone else really has no chance.

Hell will freeze over before we get full Idol voting numbers, but it’s a safe bet that Scotty’s win may well have been one of the biggest landslide victories in Idol history. He established a fanbase with country voters and tweens solidly behind him. The one thing that’ll stand out from Scotty’s stay on Idol will be consistency. Yes, he had no real highlights the way so many of the other finalists had, but on the flip side he didn’t have real disasters either. When he got bad rankings, it was more due to fatigue with his near-constant style, not necessarily due to bad singing. It’s almost like Scotty was the tortoise and the rest of the field was the hare.

Despite his frankly underwhelming Idol record Scotty’s fate in Idol history will depend largely on how well he does post show. After the disappointing sales of Lee DeWyze it is important that Scotty do well. He’ll probably be in good hands, but nothing is certain. There’s at least some indication of anti-Idol pushback from some country radio programmers, but hopefully the Idol title will open doors – and keep them open, at least for a while.

What about Lauren? In hindsight, losing Idol may help her in the long-term. She’s amazingly talented, but needs a lot of development. Putting the pressure of being an Idol winner on her shoulders would have been a much riskier bet than Scotty. Scotty is better than Lauren right now, but in the long run Lauren has a bigger upside than Scotty does. She can take some inspiration from her idol, Carrie Underwood: she’s improved a great deal since she won six seasons ago, particularly how well she performs. In any case, I wish them both well. As an Idol fan, it only helps the franchise if its contestants do well post-show.

The good, the bad, and the ugly: Here’s our rundown of the good, the bad, and the utterly horrific of Season 10 of American Idol:

The Good

1. The talent pool: in terms of natural talent this may have been one of the best Idol seasons ever. You can quibble with how they developed (or didn’t), but there was a lot of potential in this year’s contestants. Even despite some fairly egregious robberies in the semifinals, you could do a heck of a lot worse than Season 10′s top 12. Just look at last year.

2. Jimmy Iovine: I suspect the real reason Iovine was brought onto Idol this year wasn’t just to mentor the contestants. It was to ensure that there was some sort of artistic continuity between what the contestants did on-show with what they did post-show. Too many Idols have released material post-show that didn’t mesh all that well with what they did on the show. That’s… not an ideal situation.

Whatever the reasons Jimmy was brought on, however, he’s improved the quality of the performances – not so much at the top end, but by removing the utter disasters. That, in itself, was worthwhile.

3. The finale episode: Compared to Tuesday night’s lackluster competition show, the proper finale was pretty good. (One person who may disagree: Lee DeWyze.) Entertaining songs, nice guest list, and the video packages weren’t utterly cringe-worthy. Great, great way to close out a season.

The Bad

1. Hour-long results shows: I know, the combined salaries of the judges and Ryan aren’t cheap. The money has to come somewhere. But… even a hardened Idol fan can only take so much. At least it’s not the most filler-tastic reality show. That dubious honor goes to Dancing With the Stars.

2. The Idol bus: Is it too much to ask for excessive meddling to stop? No? An Idol pundit can dream.

The Ugly

1. Horrific judging: If there was one thing that almost ruined the season, it was the judge’s comically bad “judging”. I’ve hit this point already earlier in the season, so I won’t repeat myself too much. I know they went to kinder, gentler panel as a clear sign they were moving away from the Simon Era. But they went too far in the opposite direction this year. Another season of cheerleading is liable to result in another season filled with frustration.

The voting system, again: The one topic that’s on the mind of the Idolsphere after every season is: the voting system. Few – if any – Idol fans have good words to say about the existing vote system. Radical suggestions (like one number, one vote) are unlikely to happen: there’s too much money for AT&T in all the votes that come in, and it would be an admission that something was wrong with the old system.

So, let me suggest a tweak. For the purposes of this experiment, I’ll be using estimates, but if the Idol PTB really want to fix the judging system they can generate the real numbers. Let’s say that the cutoff between casual and power voters is 500 votes. Up to that number, one sent in vote would count as one vote. Beyond that number, though, let’s say that each vote would be worth less than one. Let’s say it would be worth 95%. So if you voted 501 times, it would be worth 500.95 votes. Depending on how the math is set up, the values of each succeeding vote would fall really quickly, or more gradually so. Properly done, it would lessen the influence of power voters (totally neutering it by going to a number that is too small would probably be a bad idea.)

Of course, as far as the producers are concerned the system isn’t broken. It makes for good TV. If there’s going to be change, it’ll have to come from inside. Depending on how this year’s crop turns out the force for change might be, of all people, Jimmy Iovine: his priorities are different from Nigel Lythgoe or Fox. His interests lie in getting whoever he signs to do well in the music industry: “shock” boots may not help there.

How to sell music, in the Web 2.0 world: One of the Idol franchise’s problems in recent years has been the supposed commercial failure of its contestants. Kris Allen and Lee DeWyze, in particular, have been blamed for this problem. They may have been tarred a little unfairly, in my opinion.

For nine seasons, the basic formula for Idol winners was the same: after the show, go on tour for a few months. After that, hurriedly cut an album for release in mid-November. Up until about Season Five, I’d argue it worked.

What happened? The Internet happened. The old business model – dependent on relatively expensive CDs and full albums – didn’t work anymore, either for consumers or the sellers. Digital sales – which cost less – became more prominent. The attention span of the popular culture fell as well: it’s as if the whole culture suffered from ADHD. To that kind of thinking, the months between an Idol victory and the November album release dates might as well be an eternity.

What was the response from Idol? Sell tracks on iTunes during the show. Right. Post-show, they basically changed nothing from Kelly Clarkson’s day to Lee DeWyze’s. Of course the record sales were going to fall; the whole strategy was from a bygone era. Let me put it this way: if you magically transported 2005-era Carrie Underwood to today, her debut album wouldn’t sell 7-plus million. The conditions to do that just don’t exist anymore. The times changed, but the tactics did not. Failure was just about guaranteed.

Since Lady Gaga was on the finale, maybe we can use her as an example of how much the music industry has changed. Born This Way is being sold and promoted in ways that would have been unthinkable or downright impossible just a few years ago: available for as low as one dollar on Amazon, being promoted (and given away) via Farmville – say what you will about her music, but the marketing guys handling Lady Gaga know their stuff. Obviously, the same tactics won’t work for Idol alumni – their image and target audiences don’t match – but today’s music industry requires that kind of clever and unique thinking to create a star.

The most important move Idol made may have been changing record labels. Sony was frozen, sticking to a model which they knew had worked. Even if UMG has been as hard hit as anyone by the downturn, they still bring fresh eyes to look at the problem of Idol promotion. The rumors that we’re going to see singles from Pia and Haley relatively soon is, to me, a very good thing. At least they’re willing to consider new ways to sell the music of Idol contestants – ways that fit today’s connected world, as well as the unique promotional medium that is America’s top singing competition.

Random notes: Steven Tyler is a freak of nature. All the abuse he’s put his body through and he can still nail the Dream On scream?

You could do a heck of a lot worse than to be in the shape Tony Bennett is at 84.

If music doesn’t work out for Casey, he should find work in TV. He is absolutely golden in front of a camera.

Chances that we’ll see Latino night, mentored by Marc Anthony, next year: Pretty damn high.

Ford says Scotty and Lauren can have any Ford car they want? Pity the Ford GT stopped production in 2007, then.

For the ultimate in reality show crossovers, John Rich should have come out singing an Idol version of You’re Fired. Aimed at the judges. Fans displeased with the walking stock phrase machine that is Randy Jackson can only dream. Failing that, how about this guy making an entrance and dealing with the judges? Cue the breaking glass sound effect and James going absolutely nuts.

Closing thoughts: There was one question that this season had to answer. Could the Idol franchise survive the loss of its headline act, Simon Cowell? The answer: you bet. Towards the end, ratings were better on a year-on-year basis with Season Eight; doomsayers had predicted large declines. Nigel Lythgoe’s return made the Idol ship run more smoothly and efficiently – even if more than a few times, us passengers asked “where the hell are we going?”

Much will depend on how well Scotty, Lauren, Haley, and the rest of this year’s contestants who get signed do after the show ends, but there are encouraging signs even there. For me, at least, this season didn’t bring the overwhelming feeling of “thank God that’s over!” that reflected last year’s disaster. To me, the litmus test of a good Idol season is right after its finale is: overall, did America and the rest of Idol‘s audience around the world get introduced to some great singers they didn’t know about when the season started? I think the answer is yes.

Is Season Ten going to be remembered as a “classic” season? No. The problems of bad judging and no growth from most of its contestants keep it from that lofty title. What can be said about Season Ten, however, was that it laid the foundation for a successful post-Simon Idol era. There are problems that need fixing, but the solutions are there to be found. Considering all the uncertainty that we had when the season started, that’s a pretty good achievement in and of itself.

Much has been made of the arrival of competing music-based shows like The Voice and Cowell’s own X-Factor.The flaws of the Idol mothership hide the fact that both prospective competitors have – or will have – problems of their own. We’ll see in the end how those shows fare, but I can say this: after this season, the Idol franchise is healthier than it’s been for quite some time. There’s no feeling of “oh crap, what did we do wrong this time?” that I saw last year. Whether you agree or disagree with all of Nigel’s… shenanigans, one thing is clear: he did a heck of a job this year. Welcome back Nigel, we missed you.

A few personal notes. This means that it’s time for me to enter the hibernation chamber and re-emerge in a few months time for the next season. I’m not going to cover X-Factor like I do Idol; I’m frankly not up to covering two shows so close together. The creative juice has to recharge. Maybe, just maybe, I’ll be talking about it on my Twitter account @theidolguy, which you can get to by clicking on that link or by hitting the small-t button at the top of the page.

Unlike some (maybe even most) Idol pundits, I don’t buy an awful lot of music from Idol contestants – it just happens to be that my personal buying habits don’t cross with what Idol produces very often. In fact, I’ve only done it for two contestants. After this season, I’m going to make it three: I’ll be waiting for Haley Reinhart’s debut with more than a little anticipation.

Anyway, I hope everyone had a good time visiting this year, and I hope to see you all again for Season Eleven. Idol Guy, out.

Top 2 Performance Night: Sputtering To The Finish

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Expectations for this week’s finale really depended on if you liked country music or not. I didn’t expect a brilliant final competition show, but historically finales have not always been that great. What we got… was cheese. A lot of it. Finalist home videos and a visit from a doctor? (More on that little publicity stunt a little later.)

First round wasn’t just a slight edge to Scotty; the gap was pretty wide in his favor. I didn’t particularly like the first version of Gone, but this week’s version was a little better. Scotty still looks awkward when he tries to perform, but at least this was marginally entertaining.

Lauren’s Flat On The Floor, though… well, she tried. That’s really the best you can say. Her vocals were just rough, particularly when she went for the power notes. A for effort, but ultimately not particularly good. Advantage Scotty for Round One.

The second round… I really wish we’d gotten at least video clips for the picks. We know why Carrie chose Maybe It Was Memphis – it was a song she’d wanted to do during her own run – but not George Strait’s. Of course, it could be something as simple as self-promotion, but I’d like to think there may have been more noble reasons. In any case, both choices worked reasonably well.

Check Yes or No was another Scotty Special. Competently sung, adored by his fans… lukewarm to me. I know I’m going to get crucified by country fans for this, but you could almost imagine this performance serving as the background to a scene from a romcom movie set in a country-themed nightclub. It was decent, but didn’t set the stage on fire.

I can’t help but wonder for what week Carrie wanted to sing Maybe It Was Memphis. It was a very respectable performance – it didn’t suffer from the vocal issues that her first song did, and it was a good fit for her. It seemed a little slow and lethargic in spots, but chalk that up to the Idol Finale Bug. For the round, advantage Lauren.

The last round, with their future singles… yikes. I Love You This Big had the silliest lyrics this side of This Is My Now. It was awful, no two ways around it, but I can’t blame Scotty for it: he had nothing to work with. Nothing. You may as well have sent him out to the O.K. Corral with a rubber prop knife. He’s a good storyteller, but a good story has words better than what he got. I mean, Friday would have had more coherent words than this giant piece of garbage that Scotty had to sing.

If Scotty had to jump through silly hoops for his single, Lauren’s was a good fit. This was the sort of emotional ballad that Lauren has done fairly well on – if with a bit too much beauty pageant affectations – so of course she was at least going to do well. As it is, it was as good an Idol coronation song you’re ever going to get. Which is still pretty far from great, but it was good – sappy, but good. Best song of the night.

Overall, Lauren “won” the night, but I doubt it mattered. The episode itself was remarkably listless and dreary – and before anyone says I have a bias against country, it’s not because of the genre. It’s because neither of the two finalists really sang to the caliber that most people expect of an Idol finale.

Audience Manipulation 101: I’ve got to say, that was a masterful bit of audience manipulation from the Idol powers-that-be before the show. Spreading rumors that Lauren would have to drop out due to sickness, that Haley would have to fill in at the last minute… puh-lease. The conspiracy theorist in me wonders if somebody realized from the dress rehearsals how dull the finale would turn out, so it needed some last-minute buzz. Nigel, whoever that guy/gal was, give ‘em a raise. He/she deserves it, even if it didn’t work.

The finale may have needed that additional buzz: going from up 15% year-on-year last week to down 7% this week? (Note that fall is in ratings points, not raw number of viewers, which was about the same. Guess which one Fox is playing up.) That’s a pretty sizable change in direction in just one week. Now, of course, Nigel is playing up the number of votes, but 100 million plus votes is less impressive than it sounds. Remember, the voting was over a four-hour period. Obviously, it’s not a straight-up doubling of votes, but 110+ million votes shouldn’t have been out of the question if the voters were as “hot” this week as they were last week. Obviously, they were not. I wonder why…

Pre-ordained finale: Idol finales are never decided on the last performance night. By that time just about everyone who votes is locked into someone, and the finalists are good enough to avoid the major fiascos that might actually hurt their chances.

Scotty’s fanbase has been bulletproof since the start. Never in the bottom two, good support from country voters and tweens… it would have taken an exceptionally good Idol contestant (good in the “crafting a strategy” way, not just the “singing” way) to get past that. There’s no doubt in my mind who’s going to win.

The winner of American Idol season 10 is… Scotty McCreery.