LOS ANGELES (AP) â" Mariah Carey, Celine Dion and Mary J. Blige are among the heady names being tossed around as potential judges for ââAmerican Idolââ after Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez skipped out on next season.
Star power, after all, is what judges add to TV talent shows that otherwise feature unknowns whose performances can range from surprisingly good to stunningly awful.
But Foxâs ââAmerican Idol,ââ trying to right itself after shedding viewers in its 11th season, may also need to play a numbers game â" as in the age of the judges brought in to revitalize a show whose audience is getting smaller and older, neither a plus for advertisers.
ââThey need judges who will resonate with young people,ââ said media analyst Brad Adgate.
Carey, Dion and Blige, undeniably winning stars, all are in their early 40s.
The median age for the ââAmerican Idolââ audience rose above 50 last season, the first time ever, and Adgate suggests it take a page from ââThe X Factorââ playbook, as devised by its creator and producer, Simon Cowell.
ââCowell beat them to the punchââ by hiring Britney Spears and Demi Lovato after ââX Factor,ââ the Fox version of Cowellâs British hit, stumbled in its debut last season. Spears, 30, and Lovato, 19, replaced Paula Abdul, 50, and Nicole Scherzinger, 34.
(Worth noting: The male judges, Cowell, 52, and producer Antonio ââL.A.ââ Reid, 56, are staying put for season two.)
Lopez announced her departure on Friday, a day after Tyler (an unlikely senior statesman at 64) said he was leaving ââAmerican Idolââ to concentrate on his role as Aerosmithâs frontman. Both appeared for two seasons.
ââI honestly feel like the time has come that I have to get back to doing the other things that I do that I've put kind of on hold because I love âIdolâ so much,ââ the 42-year-old actress-singer-dancer told ââIdolââ host Ryan Seacrest on his radio show.
Fox may be scouting for an entirely new panel, with some reports suggesting that original ââIdolââ judge Randy Jackson, 56, could shift to another role while Carey, whom he manages, becomes a judge. Jacksonâs and Careyâs publicists did not respond to requests for comment.
The makeover comes at a critical time. In May, ââAmerican Idolââ posted its lowest-rated finale ever after a season that marked its poorest showing yet among young adult viewers age 18 to 49. A pattern of overall declining viewership continued for the show, which fell from the No. 1 spot for the first time since the 2005-06 season, placing second to NBCâs ââSunday Night Football.ââ
ââIdolââ needs to stem its audience losses and level out, Adgate said, which would be enough to keep it a Top 10 program and a ââforce to be reckoned with.ââ
Among the younger possibilities who might help, 19-year-old Miley Cyrus fits the Lovato mold. Speculation also has focused on former ââIdolââ winner Carrie Underwood, 29, and finalists Jennifer Hudson and Adam Lambert, both 30.
Lambert addressed the possibility this week in an interview in London, where he appeared in concert with Queen.
ââWell, nothingâs been confirmed yet. If I were to be asked, I'd love the job. I think that would be great. Thatâs âif,â because nothingâs been asked yet,ââ he said, adding that he'd enjoy being a panelist who could ââhelp other artists reach their dreams.ââ
Nigel Lythgoe, an ââIdolââ executive producer who recently joked about hiring Jerry Lewis and Charlie Sheen as judges, was circumspect about Lambert.
ââThe minute âAmerican Idolâ is discussed and judges are discussed thereâs gonna be a lot of names flying around, and this is an interesting one,ââ he said. ââI happen to like Adam Lambert a great deal but I'm not sure where this has come from probably from Adam Lambertâs fan club. We'll wait and see.ââ
Youth isnât all, of course. Other factors at play involve the fan base that judges bring or develop, their skill on live TV and their chemistry with fellow panelists.
Casting a talent show judge, while less daunting than making a Supreme Court pick, can be tricky. The right person has enough celebrity cachet and success to be desirable, but not so much to be unattainable. Itâs unlikely that Rihanna, at least for now, sees a judgeship as a career ambition.
Predicting who will flourish in a reality TV setting is another hurdle. Who would have guessed, for instance, that the hard-living Tyler would display such impish charm?
Conversely, popular daytime host Ellen DeGeneres was a short-lived ââIdolââ judge, appearing ill-at-ease and timid in her contestant critiques. Songwriter Kara DioGuardi had serious music credentials but wasnât ready for prime-time.Continued...
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