With the latest episode of Australian Idol still not hitting the 1 million viewer mark in the new 7.30pm time slot, it is time for Channel Ten to hit the panic button.

Kyle Sandilands may have presided over the death of Big Brother by being the host in its last year, but has he also contributed to Australian Idol’s demise by not being on the show?

Without a doubt this year Idol has had to overcome the challenge of standing down a judge the week the show premiered, the loss of co-host James Mathison, as well as other changes to try and keep a tiring concept fresh. Here is what I see the problems are:

1. The Two Hour Blockbuster Show

With the elimination and the performance show all rolled into one blockbuster episode, this has meant it is twenty minutes into the program before the contestants get to sing. First the viewer has to sit through a group number by the Idols, and also the elimination of a contestant.

Those with an itchy remote finger are channel searching and chances are watching bison mating on the ABC nature documentary. If you were a first time viewer this season of Australian Idol and saw the group song on Sunday night, a cover of Duran Duran’s Girls on Film,  you would have thought you had stumbled upon an old episode of Young Talent Time when it was in its death throes.

Also if your favourite singer has been eliminated the chances are you will not be in the mood watch the rest of the show. Yes the Monday night show was a lot of filler, but a jam-packed thirty minute show would be entertaining. This would also give the punted contestant the opportunity to have their last few minutes in the spotlight by allowing them to sing again.

2. The New Judge

Record company executive Jay Dee Springbett was thrown into the deep end as a quick replacement after Kyle Sandilands was stood down. His role is to provide the record industry perspective to the contestant and the viewer at home.

He seems nice, which may have been why he was selected in the wake of all that MasterChef Australia love. However he is just not a strong presence on TV nor that entertaining. Kyle provide some much needed snark to the panel, not that I am advocating his return.

Dicko and Jay have been told to rile each other up, but it is not working as there is no chemistry. Guest judges are now on each week to try and put some pizazz into the panel. Suzi Quatro, and Brian McFadden definitely earned their money, and were great, however the downside is the viewer has to sit through four peoples opinions.

Australian Idol should have just kept Dicko and Marcia as the permanent judges, and rotated a third person through. This occurs in the popular US version of So You Think You Can Dance.

3. The Contestants

What looked like a really strong top twenty four resulted in an underwhelming top 12. I partly blame the judges. They were able to wildcard two singers in and they picked two bland male pop performers, Casey Barnes, and Tim Johnston.

Toby Moulton an “older” pop singer was already in the top 12 so it is all too much of the same. Rocker Adam Eckersley would have added some much needed diversity to the show. At this stage out of the boys Stan Walker is a standout, his rendition of Prince’s Purple Rain was a highlight in the mediocrity which was Sunday night’s eighties theme show.

The girls don’t fare much better. Tiny Sabrina Batshon had a interesting story of overcoming mental health problems to be on the show to re-start her singing career, but her camera hogging behaviour and chatting back to the judges did not endear her to the voters. She has now been eliminated.

The only one that I see with star quality is young rock chick Hayley Warner. Yes Kate Cook is lovely, but will you buy her records?

But is it all the contestants fault they are struggling this year? Which brings me to my next point.

4. The Loss Of The Shows Musical Director John Foreman

This is the first year without the show’s uber talented Musical Director, John Foreman. His role was to guide the singer’s song arrangement ideas into a workable performance.

The new musical director is probably working out what does and does not work when trying to cut three minute songs into to a minute and a half. Thankfully he did provide a huge backing vocal section on the last episode to drown out the more woeful singers.

Australian Idol has struggled in some previous seasons, but this is most serious slide yet. Fremantle Media and Channel Ten need to examine what is or isn’t working and implement changes to ensure Australian Idol has a few more years left.

When it all gels, with talented singers, charismatic judges and great performances, it is one of the most entertaining reality shows on TV.

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17 comments

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    • Adam Dennis says:

      09:03am | 30/09/09

      There was never anything right with Australian Idol. The formula takes singing - a joyful exercise that’s good for your mental and physical health - and turns it into an excuse to deride the hopeful contestants. Six years ago a contestant was told to “shed some pounds” - this to a lovely young woman who had put in a supreme effort (like all the contestants) to be on the show and do her best.

      People watch Idol as much for the “car crash” aspect of it as for the singing. I say this isn’t good enough. The message we send to kids and adults around the country is that you shouldn’t sing unless you’re perfectly in tune and perfectly beautiful. That sucks like a Dyson. I say the message should be “sing and be happy” ... and do it for yourself, not for the coffers of television networks, not for the talentless hack judges, not for the greedy eyes of the audience waiting for the squeal of tyres and rending of metal.

    • Dolph Ziggler says:

      09:22am | 30/09/09

      How is the corporate/conference “entertainment” circuit going to cope without the availability of cut-price, former Idol contestants to belt out tuneless pop songs to pissed company execs?

      This show clearly needs to be propped up via some stimulus funding otherwise there will be dire economic implications.

    • Wayne says:

      10:45am | 30/09/09

      Yeah we’ve all gone off Idol in my house this year. Frankly, we found the vocal & entertainment quality of this year’s crop rather poor. We heard too many flat notes and so-so performances, and thought too often judges were talking up what they were stuck with, rather than criticizing like they did in the past… And yes, I do miss Kyle, he put some zing in there, and somehow made the 3 judges a better & more interesting overall package.

    • Bald Eagle says:

      10:56am | 30/09/09

      People are tired of this stupid show. Reality TV was created after the dot com bust saw a huge fall in advertising revenue. It was a way of making cheap programming for the masses . Because it was new and different, it attracted attention. Now it is old and boring. People are not looking for someone who can sing their fat ass off and be endlessly promoted to squeeze every last cent from the public. We are waiting for the next wave in TV programming that delivers quality programming, not this swill.

    • Hallie says:

      11:00am | 30/09/09

      Idol this year is ‘forgettable’. By that i don’t mean the contestants are forgettable (well… some of them are actually..), but their new format doesn’t allow the viewers to be reminded of who the contestants are, what they can do, and probably most important of all to the moneymakers - who to vote for.

      I watched Idol the last few years, and although the weeknight show may have some drivel, i found that it gave you more idea about who the contestants are, and by doing that, it’s allowing the viewers to connect and relate to the contestants. Personally, this year, by the time Tuesday comes around, I’ve already forgotten all about Idol, and most of who is on it. Sunday night comes around and the reason why i’m most likely to be sitting in front of the tv to watch Idol is because I hadn’t planned anything for the night - and because i was channel surfing and realised it was on.

      I say bring back a mid-week show to job people’s memories, and they just might find more viewers and probably even more votes (a.k.a $$$) if they left the lines open a few more days!

    • Dani says:

      11:12am | 30/09/09

      I think it was slipping a long time before Kyle left. But here’s my problem with this year’s idol - it’s become all about “finding yourself” and “being vulnerable”, rather than singing in tune.
      And yeah, too much of the same in terms of performers. The wildcard choices were terrible.

    • Michael says:

      01:23pm | 30/09/09

      I’m frankly done with TV, both paid and Free to air, paid seem to have even more ads then free to air TV, and both offer up crap other countries got to watch years ago, The net has all on the run and it seems only ABC has a real online presence. Idol is just old, networks need to stop relying on ratings and actually get out and about and ask the public what they think face to face.

      If free to air wants me back they need to start getting some good shows back from paid, and if paid ever wants me they should stop flooding their channels with ads.

    • Jade says:

      02:19pm | 30/09/09

      Idol should have been put down long ago, its cruel to keep letting it go on and must cost the recording companies and tv station a fortune.  The only singers that have made something from it are Guy, Jessica Mabou and Shannon.  The rest are all forgotten. like I wish the show was…...

    • Leanne says:

      02:37pm | 30/09/09

      I think Yumi Stynes should be co-host with Andrew G. She would bring some music credibility as well as coolness and style.

    • timbo says:

      02:41pm | 30/09/09

      I’ve only watched one night of Idol this season after not tuning in for a couple of years and I’m astounded at the lack of talent they’ve all got. Is this REALLY the best they got through the auditions??? Flat singing, barely any stage presence and NO comments from ANY of the “judges” that come anywhere NEAR providing honest feedback on their performance.

      Basically, I think Idol’s reputation as a “shortcut-to-stardom” is now very clearly revealed, and documented, as a corporate trap, and those people with the real talent are chosing other routes to push their music. Its turned into a very obvious factory, and it’s churning out more and more swill with every season.`

    • jackie says:

      04:16pm | 30/09/09

      Absolutely no talent in the group. They all sound flat.  Heard a thousand times better performances at the Hopetoun Hotel and what a disaster to the local Sydney music scence that it has now closed . Where will we spawn our indy musos of the future. Hope we are not relying on this talentless lot.

    • Helena Dank says:

      11:09pm | 30/09/09

      I stopped watching after the third episode - Kyle’s last

    • Shane says:

      11:34am | 01/10/09

      why does everyone keep calling Dicko etc the shows ‘Judges’. They don’t do any judging, the viewers thumbs and SMS bills do that.

    • Ben says:

      02:19pm | 01/10/09

      The fact that voting lines are open from the very beginning of the show and not after everyone’s performance finally shows that this is not a singing contest, but one of popularity - ie, the best looking wins (consider who’s voting), which ultimately has now brought it back to the realms of Big Brother where no talent is involved in winning. There’s your ratings slide.

    • Jaythulhu The Great says:

      08:54pm | 07/02/10

      Perhaps if there was something other than wanna-be crooners and divas trying to turn every song into a “see-how-long-i-can-hold-this-note” contest, this show would be worth watching.

      As long as you’ve had a frontal lobotomy first, of course.

    • Emma says:

      06:20pm | 23/02/10

      The reason Idol gained popularity in the first place is the same reason it will end. People believed they would get to share in the journey of a star being born. It is not the talent or lack therof, it is the terrible songs these people are forced to release afterward.
      The idol winners always look strained, uncomfortable and confused. I blame the company with whom they sign the contract for forcing people changing to what they think the audience wants.

    • dman says:

      12:25pm | 08/03/10

      I don’t think much will help it,
      Finally i think Aussies are starting to realize that they’re being fed crap by channel 10. I dont know why it took so long, Its very concerning. Shows like this are crap and its just a cheap and easy way out for the stations to air something that requires no creative thought.  We don’t really have any good shows, they all come from overseas. When was the last time channel 10 (or any other channel for hat matte) came up with something funny or clever? Kath and Kim seems to be the only thing worth watching (funny as hell too!). All this reality pop dance singalong stuff is crap

 

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