I represent the first generation who, when we were born, the television was now a permanent fixture in our homes. When I was born people had breakfast with Barbara Walters, dinner with Walter Cronkite, and slept with Johnny Carson.
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Monday, September 04, 2023
This Week in Television History: September 2023 PART I
On this day in 2002, Kelly
Clarkson, a 20-year-old cocktail waitress from Texas, wins Season One of American
Idol in a live television broadcast from Hollywood’s Kodak Theater.
Clarkson came out on top in the amateur singing contest over 23-year-old runner-up
Justin Guarini after millions of viewers cast their votes for her by phone. She
was awarded a recording contract and went on to sell millions of albums and
establish a successful music career. (Clarkson and Guarnini also co-starred in
the 2003 box-office bomb From Justin to Kelly, which was nominated for a
Golden Raspberry Award for that year’s worst film but lost to the Jennifer
Lopez-Ben Affleck vehicle Gigli.) Starting with its first season, American
Idol became one of the most popular TV programs in U.S. history and spawned
a slew of talent-competition shows.
American Idol was based on a British TV show called Pop Idol,
which was developed by the English-born entertainment executive Simon Fuller
and debuted in the U.K. in 2001. The Idol concept was shopped around in
the United States and reportedly rejected by several TV networks before Fox
picked it up. The American Idol premiere, which aired on June 11, 2002,
was co-hosted by Ryan Seacrest and Brian Dunkleman (who was dropped from the
program after Season One) and starred a trio of judge--the acerbic British
music executive Simon Cowell, the singer-choreographer Paul Abdul and the
musician-producer Randy Jackson. The show followed the judges as they selected
contestants, who were required to be teens or young adults, from open auditions
around the United States. Contestants who made the cut were flown to Hollywood,
where they were eventually narrowed to 10 finalists, who performed live on
television and were critiqued by the judges. Home viewers phoned in their votes
for their favorite performers and each week the contestant who received the
lowest number of votes was eliminated from the competition.
Following Clarkson’s Season One victory, subsequentAmerican Idol
winners--Ruben Studdard, Fantasia Barrino, Carrie Underwood, Taylor Hicks,
Jordin Sparks and David Cook--have had varying degrees of success in their
music careers. In some cases, American Idol runner-ups, such as Clay
Aiken (Season Two, second place) and Chris Daughtry (Season Five, fourth place),
have sold more records than certain A.I. winners. Jennifer Hudson, who
finished seventh in Season Three of the show, later won an Academy Award for
her supporting performance in Dreamgirls (2006), the film adaptation of
the hit Broadway musical.
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