Idol (franchise)

(Redirected from Idol franchise)

Idol (also known as SuperStar in some countries) is a reality television singing competition format created by British television producer Simon Fuller and developed by Fremantle. The format began in 2001 with the British television series Pop Idol; its first adaptation was the South African series Idols in 2002. It has since become the world's most widely watched television franchise, as well as one of the most successful entertainment formats, adapted in over 56 regions around the world, with its various versions broadcast to 150 countries with a worldwide audience of roughly 3.2 billion people. The franchise has generated more than $2.5 billion in revenue.[1]

Idols
Created bySimon Fuller
Original workPop Idol
OwnersFremantle
19 Entertainment (Sony Pictures Television)
Years2001–present
Films and television
Television seriesIdols (independent international versions, see below)
Audio
Original musicScores composed by Julian Gingell, Barry Stone(Jules and Stone) and Cathy Dennis
Miscellaneous
Genre
First aired6 October 2001; 23 years ago (2001-10-06)
Related shows

Each season, the series aims to find the most outstanding unsigned solo recording artist (or "idol") in a region. Originally aimed for pop singers, the series has since evolved to accept singers from different genres of music, such as rock, R&B, and country. Through a series of mass auditions, a group of finalists are selected by a panel of judges (which usually consists of artists and record producers) who offer critiques on their performances. The finalists then advance to the weekly live shows. On each live show, the contestants all sing, the television audience votes (by telephone, SMS Internet, and via apps), and then the contestant who receives the fewest votes gets eliminated. The final episode is the grand finale episode, when usually two, but sometimes three or four, finalists are left, and the contestant who gets the largest number of votes is declared the winner. The winner receives a recording contract, monetary prizes, and a title as their nation's "Idol", "SuperStar" or "Star". Sometimes one or more of the runners-up get recording contracts as well.

The various series have launched the careers of a number of highly successful recording artists around the world, including Idol winners Will Young of the United Kingdom, Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, Scotty McCreery, Fantasia, Ruben Studdard, David Cook, and Phillip Phillips of the United States, Kurt Nilsen of Norway, Ryan Malcolm and Kalan Porter of Canada, Loreen of Sweden, Guy Sebastian of Australia, and Elvis Blue of South Africa. Contestants who did not win but have still gone on to prominence include Anthony Callea, Ricki-Lee Coulter and Jessica Mauboy of Australia, Jacob Hoggard and Carly Rae Jepsen of Canada, and Clay Aiken, Chris Daughtry, Gabby Barrett, Lauren Alaina, and Adam Lambert of the United States, among many others. Some Idol contestants have also achieved success in acting and musical theater such as Melissa O'Neil of Canada, and most notably EGOT winner Jennifer Hudson of American Idol.

Origin and background

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In 2001, British talent manager and television producer Simon Fuller created the British television series Pop Idol. The series was developed by production company Fremantle and was broadcast on ITV on 6 October 2001. Fuller, along with television producer Nigel Lythgoe, was inspired to create the series by the New Zealand television series Popstars, which was adopted in the United Kingdom as Popstars in January 2001. The first series of Pop Idol proved to be more popular than Popstars, in part due to the chemistry of the judges and the success of its first winner Will Young.

Pop Idol's success led to an interest for adaptations in other countries. Before selling the format, Fuller reached out for an out-of-court settlement with Popstars creator Jonathan Dowling, in which international versions of Idols will be prohibited to use the prefix Pop in their local titles. As such, Poland, the first country to adapt the format, named their version as simply Idol. Idol was launched in 2002, months after the first series of Pop Idol ended.

Fuller, Lythgoe, and Pop Idol judge Simon Cowell attempted to sell the format in the United States in 2001, but the idea was met with poor response from major networks. Elisabeth Murdoch, daughter of News Corporation chairman Rupert Murdoch, persuaded her father to buy the rights for an American adaptation. The series, American Idol: The Search for a Superstar, debuted on the Fox network on 11 June 2002. American Idol went on to become the all-time most dominant show in the U.S. TV ratings, due to the popularity of the judges (particularly Simon Cowell) and its contestants, which were led by its first winner, Kelly Clarkson.

The success brought by American Idol led to even more adaptations in other countries, where the Dutch Idols became the top television series in the Netherlands during its airing.

There has been a global version of the franchise, called World Idol. The show was a television special, where winners of national Idol shows will compete against each other. The special was won by Kurt Nilsen, a singer from Norway.[2] A current World version of Idol acts as a YouTube channel, called Idols Global. The channel uploads clips of Idol shows from around the world. The channel currently has over 1 million subscribers. There are many more channels like this. Additionally, many individual Idol shows have their own YouTube channels.

Concept

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The show is a reality television singing competition where the winner is selected by the audience voting. The show combines a number of elements previously used by other shows such as Popstars – mass auditioning, the search of a new star, and the use of a judging panel that critiques the audtioners' performance and selects the contestants. An important element is audience participation, where the audience may vote by telephone or text to decide which contestant can proceed further each week and ultimately win. According to the show creator, Simon Fuller, "the interactivity was important because this would allow the audience to tell me who they liked best and this, in turn, would indicate to me who would have the most fans and eventually sell the most music and become the biggest stars."[3] To this is added "the drama of backstories and the real-life soap opera of the unfolding real-time events" as the show is presented as a live competition event which drew "more from a sporting concept of true competition".[3]

Format

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Hosts

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Each show has at least one host that directs the show, introduces the singers and delivers the results of each episode including the finale. While some countries have one host (Ryan Seacrest in American Idol, Boy William in Indonesian Idol (replacing Daniel Mananta in season 3-10), Dominic Bowden in New Zealand Idol, ProVerb in Idols SA, IK Osakioduwa in Nigerian Idol and Phan Anh, Huy Khánh, Duy Hải and Đức Bảo in Vietnam Idol since the third season), most shows have two co-hosts. As well as judges, some countries have adopted new members to the hosting/jury party.

Judges/jury

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A preselected panel of music industry representatives tour some, if not all audition cities (depending on which show) to observe and advance those auditioning throughout the show up to and including the Grand Finale. The judges offer critiques and/or advice after each contestant performance, which can be positive or negative; Nouvelle Star 4 for the first time in any country introduced a red and blue "score card" type system where the jury award a blue "positive" or red "negative" rating and in Nouvelle Star 14, they introduced a scoring system where the jury give a point from a range of 1 to 10 after every mottoshow performance.

As many as five stable jury members have appeared in any one Idol season (Idol Poland 3, Indonesian Idol 9), though some versions offer "guest judges" or special musical guests on the program to also offer advice.

The judges of some shows gain a lot of popularity outside of the show as well as the contestants, due to their being collectively known to have a "caustic" or raw & blunt attitude towards contestants' performances, notably Simon Cowell from American Idol and Pop Idol, Rossa, Judika, Bunga Citra Lestari, Ari Lasso, Anang Hermansyah, Agnez Mo, Ahmad Dhani, Titi DJ, and Indra Lesmana from Indonesian Idol, Amy Shark, Ian "Dicko" Dickson, and Kyle Sandilands from Australian Idol , Neha Kakkar, and Sonu Nigam, also Anu Malik from Indian Idol amongst others, and Mỹ Tâm and Maia Estianty in Vietnam Idol and Indonesian Idol.

Performance stages

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Auditions are held in numerous places in any particular region or country that give most people (audition entry is bound by certain legal requirements such as age and citizenship for example) the chance to sing in front of musical/television producers and if successful, they advance to a recorded televised audition where the show "judges" advance up to 300 people in some countries to the next round.

The Theatre round is where a specially selected group of auditioners from all regional auditions converge (always in the host city) to perform in three sub stages: a chorus line in groups of 10 where free song choices are allowed, a trio (or less commonly a duo or quartet) where contestants must memorize a preselected song to perform and choreograph together, and finally a solo a cappella round where contestants sing a song of their own choice without musical backing in front of friends, family, judges & fellow contestants.

Each stage of the theatre round, a number of contestants are eliminated and sent home by the judges, though in some countries there have been very few contestants brought back during the Wildcards show or by the disqualification or resignation of another contestant.

In American Idol, this stage was expanded to five stages (three in Hollywood, two in Las Vegas) from seasons 10 to 12.

The semi-finals occurs usually live or pre-recorded (in some countries) where contestants sing in a television studio fully televised; again judges give critiques but beginning at this stage, home viewers vote via telephone and SMS (and in some countries other voting mechanisms including via Internet or via Red Button) who they want to stay in the competition. During the "semi-final" weeks, contestants receive a workshop tuition with a vocal coach to prepare their song of choice. The format started out with contestants only singing along to a piano, though other instruments & even a live band have been introduced to some versions.

An average semi-final usually consists of 18 to 50 contestants where they either perform in an even group of contestants (three groups of ten for example) or in a "heat" type semi-final where the contestants sing every week until all finalists have been chosen. During the format, a Wildcards feature was introduced which re-introduced past semi-finalists to receive a second chance to become a finalist, in some shows – the judges sometimes pick one or more contestants to advance as well as the viewers' vote. As of late, live audiences have been incorporated into the semi-final round.

A results show of the semi-finals usually airs either a few hours after the performance show or the night after where the results are given. Three or four contestants are told that they may have received highest votes, though only a selected two or three are put through to the finals.

The Live shows (a.k.a. Mottoshows, Spectacular shows or theme shows) are an elaborate and spectacular version of the semi-final. There is a weekly theme on which contestants must base their song choices, such as "80s Hits" or "Hits of Elton John" for example. In a bid to counter sagging ratings, contestants on Australian Idol were allowed to bring instruments on stage with them and had the opportunity to sing original material from the 2006 season, a world first. Since then America and Canada have followed Australia's lead. Again a results show follows the show; this time it may include group performances, musical guests or extra footage of the contestants' time on the show. The contestant/s with the lowest polled votes leaves the competition. The live shows continue until there are only two contestants left in the competition or three contestants in some cases.

The Grand Finale occurs when there are two (or, rarely, three and only once so far four) contestants left in the competition. This is the pinnacle of the entire series and often highest rated show; also for some countries, it is venued in a prestigious location (American Idol: Dolby Theatre/Nokia Theatre, Canadian Idol: John Bassett Theatre, Australian Idol: Sydney Opera House, Philippine Idol: Araneta Coliseum, Indonesian Idol: Ecovention Ocean Ecopark/Hall D2 JIExpo/RCTI+ Studios, Idol Sweden: Ericsson Globe, Singapore Idol: Singapore Indoor Stadium). In this final stage a specially awarded song is sung by both remaining contestants which is ultimately slated to be released as the winner's debut single though recently in some countries this has been phased out.

During the extended results show, there are usually group performances and/or special musical guests. Also, it has the best moments of the series which leads up to the announcement of the winner, which is determined by the highest number of votes. When that happens, he or she will perform an encore of the coronation single which sometimes includes pyrotechnics/fireworks.

While the show's premise is to find one winner with promises of a recording deal and other frugal benefits, the Idol series often has several contestants who go onto the same route of fame, whether they be finalists, semi-finalists, or even auditioners. Key examples of this from American Idol include Clay Aiken (second place, season 2) and Chris Daughtry (fourth place, season 5, through his band Daughtry), who have each outsold all American Idol winners except Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood; Jennifer Hudson (seventh place, season 3), who would later win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress; and William Hung, who turned his off-key season 3 audition into a recording career and has outsold some finalists.

Releases

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Often, a studio compilation album and/or a CD single is made to promote the show. In some cases, DVDs of highlights of the show will be released. While these releases have sold well in countries including the United States and Australia, many countries did not release CDs after the first series.[citation needed]

Since season 6, American Idol has sold only promotional downloads instead of CDs. For season 6, it sold studio-recorded MP3 and performance video downloads of the finalists on its website; no CDs were sold prior to the post-Idol releases of winner Jordin Sparks and runner-up Blake Lewis. For season 7, audio and video downloads are sold exclusively through the iTunes Store, which became a sponsor in that season; the iTunes downloads have included audio of all semi-finalist performances, studio recordings and performance videos for all finalists, videos of finalist group performances, and audio and video performances from the Idol Gives Back episode.[4]

Media/sponsorship

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Sony Music is the general record company associated and affiliated with the Idols format in most countries, though countries like Iceland, Vietnam and Kazakhstan have affiliate labels as they do not have a local Sony Music subsidiary. FremantleMedia and Sony Music were related through common parent Bertelsmann, which owns 90.4% of FremantleMedia's immediate parent RTL Group and previously owned 50% of joint venture Sony BMG from 2004 to 2008. Since 2011, Universal Music Group replaced Sony Music Entertainment as the general record company associated and affiliated with the Idols format in most countries.

Idols around the world

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Countries that have their own versions of Idols. Countries that film their own versions are in blue, while those that take part in a series with other countries are in green


International versions

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  Currently airing franchise
  Franchise with an upcoming season
  Franchise with an unknown status
  Franchise no longer aired
Country/Region Local title(s) Network Winners Judges
Albania
Kosovo
Superstar PRO1
  • Season 1 (2024): Upcoming season
TBA
Arab League8 سوبر ستار
(Super Star)
Future TV
  • Elias Rahbani (1–5)
  • Abdallah Al Qaoud (1–5)
  • Fadia Tenb Al Hadj (1–4)
  • Ziad Botrous (3–5)
Arab Idol MBC 1
Saudi Idol MBC 1
  • Season 1 (2023): Hams Fekri
Armenia Հայ Սուպերսթար
(Hay Superstar)
Shant TV
  • Season 1 (2003): Susanna Petrosyan
  • Season 2 (2006–07): Lusine Aghabekyan
  • Season 3 (2007–08): Lusi Harutunyan
  • Season 4 (2009–10): Raffi Ohanian
  • Season 5 (2011): Sona Rubenyan
  • Michael Poghosyan (1–4)
  • Egor Glumov (1–4)
  • Naira Gurjianyan (1–4)
  • André (5)
  • Leila Saribekyan (5)
  • Avet Barsekhyan (5)
  • Garik Baboyan (5)
Australia Australian Idol Network Ten (1–7)
Seven Network (8–)
Bangladesh Bangladeshi Idol SA TV
  • Season 1 (2013): Mong Uching Marma
Belgium Idool VTM
  • Jean Blaute (1–4)
  • Jan Leyers (1–2)
  • Nina De Man (1–2)
  • Bart Brusseleers (1–2)
  • Vera Mann (3)
  • Herman Schueremans (3)
  • Patrick Carbonez (3)
  • Sylvia Van Driesche (4)
  • Wounter Van Belle (4)
  • Koen Buyse (4)
Brazil Ídolos SBT (1–2)
RecordTV (3–7)
Ídolos Kids RecordTV
  • Season 1 (2012): Fernando Franco
  • Season 2 (2013): Julia Tavares
Bulgaria1 Music Idol bTV
Cambodia Cambodian Idol Hang Meas HDTV
  • Season 1 (2015): Ny Ratana
  • Season 2 (2016): Chhin Manich
  • Season 3 (2017–2018): Kry Thaipov
  • Season 4 (2022): Lim Tichmeng
  • Season 5 (2024): Ky Savin
  • Season 6 TBA: Awaiting Confirmation
Cambodian Idol Junior
  • Season 1 (2019): Chira Phern Sopheap
  • Season 2 (2023): Sam Lida
  • Season 3 TBA: Awaiting Confirmation
Canada Canadian Idol CTV
China 中国梦之声 Chinese Idol DragonTV
  • Season 1 (2013): XiangXiang "Sean" Li
  • Season 2 (2014): Sinkey Zheng
Colombia[5] Idol Colombia RCN Televisión
  • Season 1 (2014): Luis Ángel Racini
Croatia Hrvatski Idol Nova TV
Hrvatska traži zvijezdu RTL
  • Tony Cetinski
  • Goran Lisica-Fox
  • Ivana Mišerić (3)
  • Anđa Marić (2)
  • Jelena Radan (1)
Superstar
Czech Republic Česko hledá SuperStar TV Nova
  • Leoš Mareš
  • Ondřej Hejma
  • Ilona Csáková
  • Eduard Klezla
Czech Republic
Slovakia
SuperStar
(Česko Slovenská Superstar)
TV Nova
Markíza
Denmark Idols TV3
  • Thomas Blanchman
  • Kjeld Wennick
  • Henriette Blix
  • Carsten Kroeyer
East Africa9 Idols DStv
  • Lebogang Mzwimbi
  • Thato Matlhabaphiri
  • Angela Angwenyi
  • Trevor Siyandi
  • Kawesa Richard
Estonia Eesti otsib superstaari TV3
Finland Idols MTV3
France3 Nouvelle Star
(A la Recherche de la Nouvelle Star)
M6 (1–8; 13)
D8 (9–12)
Georgia ჯეოსტარი
Geostar
Rustavi 2
საქართველოს ვარსკვლავი
Georgian Idol - Sakartvelos Varskvlavi
ჩვენ ვარსკვლავები ვართ
We Are The Stars - Chven-Varskvlavebi Vart
Imedi TV
  • Season 1 (2017): Mananiko Tsenteradze
საქართველოს ვარსკვლავი
Georgian Idol - Sakartvelos Varskvlavi
Germany Deutschland sucht den Superstar RTL
Deutschland sucht den Superstar Kids
Greece Super Idol Mega TV
Greek Idol Alpha TV
Iceland Idol stjörnuleit Stöð 2
India Indian Idol SET


Indian Idol Junior
  • Season 1 (2013): Anjana Padmanabhan
  • Season 2 (2015): Ananya Nanda
Indian Idol Marathi[6] Sony Marathi
  • Season 1 (2021): Sagar Mhatre
Telugu Indian Idol[7] Aha
  • Season 1 (2022): BVK Vagdevi
  • Season 2 (2023): Soujanya Bhagavatula
  • Season 3 (2024): Nazeeruddin Shaik
Indonesia Indonesian Idol RCTI
Indonesian Idol Junior MNCTV (1–2)
RCTI (3)
  • Season 1 (2014–2015): Johannes Tinambunan
  • Season 2 (2016–2017): Sharon Padidi
  • Season 3 (2018): Anneth Delliecia
Iraq Iraq Idol MBC Iraq
  • Season 1 (2021): Ali Leo
  • Season 2 (2022): Afraa Sultan
Kazakhstan SuperStar KZ Channel One Eurasia
Kurdistan Kurd Idol Kurdsat
  • Season 1 (2017): Jînda Kenco
Latin America Latin American Idol Sony Channel
Malaysia Malaysian Idol 8TV
TV3
Maldives Maldivian Idol Television Maldives
  • Season 1 (2016): Laisha Junaid
  • Season 2 (2017): Mohamed Thasneem
  • Season 3 (2018): Aishath Azal Ali Zahir
  • Ahmed Ibrahim (1)
  • Ibrahim Zaid Ali (1–2)
  • Unoosha (1–3)
  • Ismail Affan (2–3)
  • Zara Mujthaba (3)
Myanmar Myanmar Idol MNTV
Channel 9 (4)
Nepal Nepal Idol AP1TV
  • Season 1 (2017): Buddha Lama
  • Season 2 (2018): Ravi Oad
  • Season 3 (2019–2020): Sajja Chajlagain
  • Season 4 (2021): Bhupendra Thapa
  • Season 5 (2024): Karan Pariyar
  • Current
  • Sambhujeet Baskota (4–)
  • Sugam Pokharel (4–)
  • Subani Moktan (4–)
  • Former
  • Nyhoo Bajracharya (1–3)
  • Kali Prasad Baskota (1–3)
  • Indira Joshi (1–3)
Nepal Idol Junior
  • Season 1 (TBA): Upcoming Season
  • TBA
  • TBA
  • TBA
  • TBA
Netherlands Idols RTL 4
New Zealand NZ Idol TVNZ 2
Nigeria Nigerian Idol Various
  • Season 1 (2010–11): Yeka Onka
  • Season 2 (2011–12): Chinwo "Mercy" Nnenda
  • Season 3 (2012–13): Moses Obi-Adigwe
  • Season 4 (2013–14): Evelle
  • Season 5 (2014–15): K-Peace
  • Season 6 (2021–22): Kingdom Kroseide
  • Season 7 (2022): Progress Chukwuyem
  • Season 8 (2023): Victory Gbakara
  • Season 9 (2024): Chima Udoye
  • Season 10 TBA: Awaiting Confirmation
North Macedonia Macedonian Idol A1TV
Norway Idol TV 2
  • Current
  • Tshawe Baqwa (10–)
  • Silje Larsen Borgan (10–)
  • Andreas Haukeland (11–)
  • Former
  • Jan Fredrik Karlsen (1–2, 5)
  • Ole Evenrud (1, 3)
  • Morten Ståle Nilsen (1)
  • Lena Midtveit (1)
  • Anneli Drecker (2)
  • Douglas Carr (2)
  • Thomas Strzelecki (2)
  • Tone-Lise Skagefoss (3–4)
  • Tor Milde (3–4)
  • David Eriksen (3)
  • Amund Bjørklund (4)
  • Hans Olav Grøttheim (4)
  • Asbjørn Slettemark (5)
  • Benedicte Adrian (5)
  • Mariann Thomassen (5)
  • Bertine Zetlitz (6)
  • Marion Ravn (6)
  • Hans-Erik Dyvik Husby (6)
  • Gunnar Greve Petterson (6–10)
  • Tone Damli Aaberge (7–8)
  • Kurt Nilsen (7–8)
  • Esben Selvig (7–8)
  • Ina Wroldsen (9)
  • Øyvind Sauvik (9)
  • Sandeep Singh (9)
Idol Junior
  • Season 1 (2014): Mathilde Spurkeland
  • Alejandro Fuentes
  • Aleksander With
  • Margaret Berger
  • Sandra Lyng
Pakistan Pakistan Idol Geo Entertainment
Philippines Philippine Idol ABC
Pinoy Idol GMA Network
Idol Philippines ABS-CBN (1)
Kapamilya Channel (2–)
A2Z (2–)
TV5 (2–)
Poland Idol Polsat
Portugal Ídolos SIC
  • Sofia Morais (1–2)
  • Manuel Moura Dos Santos (1–5)
  • Luis Jardim (1–2)
  • Ramón Galarza (1–2)
  • Laurent Filipe (3–4)
  • Roberta Medina (3–4)
  • Pedro Boucherie Mendes (3–4, 6)
  • Bárbara Guimarães (5)
  • Tony Carreira (5)
  • Pedro Abrunhosa (5)
  • Paulo Ventura (6)
  • Maria João Bastos (6)
Ídolos Kids
  • Season 1 (2012): Ana Baptista
  • TBD
Puerto Rico Idol Puerto Rico WAPA-TV
Idol Kids Puerto Rico
  • Season 1 (2012): Edgard Hernández
  • Season 2 (2013): Christopher Rivera
  • Erika Ender (1)
  • Edgardo Diaz (1–2)
  • Florentino Primera (1)
  • Servando Primera (1)
  • Ana Isabelle (2)
  • Kany Garcia (2)
Romania SuperStar România Pro TV
  • Season 1 (2021): Alessandro Mucea
Russia6 Народный Артист
(People's Artist)
Rossiya 1
  • Evgeniy Fridlyand (1,3)
  • Larisa Dolina (1)
  • Anton Komolov (1)
  • Tigran Keosayan (1–2)
  • Laima Vaikule (2)
  • Kim Breitburg (2)
  • Artur Gasparyan (2)
  • Maksim Dunayevsky (3)
  • Gennady Khazanov (3)
  • Alena Sviidova (3)
Serbia and Montenegro
Macedonia
Idol RTV BK Telecom
  • Saša Dragić (1–2)
  • Petar Janjatović (1–2)
  • Biljana Bakić (1–2)
  • Mirko Vukomanović (1–2)
Singapore Singapore Idol MediaCorp
Slovakia Slovensko hľadá SuperStar STV (1–2)
Markíza (3)
South Africa Idols M-Net
Mzansi Magic
  • Somizi Mhlongo (11–19)
  • Thembi Seete (18–19)
  • JR (18–19)
  • Randall Abrahams (1–17)
  • Unathi Nkayi (7–17)
  • Gareth Cliff (1–12)
  • Mara Louw (2–9)
  • Dave Thompson (1–5)
  • Marcus Brewster (1)
  • Penny Lebyane (1)
Idols
(Afrikaans version)
kykNET
Spain Idol Kids[8] Telecinco
  • Season 1 (2020): Índigo Salvador[9][10]
  • Season 2 (2022): Carla Zaldívar[11]
  • Season 3: Renewal pending
Sweden Idol TV4
Turkey Türkstar Show TV
  • Season 1 (2004): Emrah Keskin
United Kingdom (original) Pop Idol ITV
United States6 American Idol Fox (1–15)
ABC (16–)
Vietnam Vietnam Idol
Thần Tượng Âm Nhạc: Vietnam Idol (1–4)
Thần Tượng Âm Nhạc Việt Nam (5–7)
Thần Tượng Âm Nhạc: Vietnam Idol Thế Hệ Mới (8–)
HTV7
HTV9
(1–2)
VTV3
VTV6
VTV9
(3–)
Vietnam Idol Kids
(Thần Tượng Âm Nhạc Nhí)
VTV3
  • Season 1 (2016): Hồ Văn Cường
  • Season 2 (2017): Nguyễn Minh Thiên Khôi
West Africa11 Idols M-Net

Winner competitions

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Region Series title Network Winner Judges
Asia12 Asian Idol Indonesia: RCTI Season 1 (2007): Hady Mirza
World13 World Idol
Season 1 (2003): Kurt Nilsen


Themes

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A notable commonality among Idol-format shows is the theme logo & intro style. Many different versions of the Idol logo and show intro have been created since Idol's inception in June 2001.

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The basic plan for the logo is an oval with the particular show's name centered in custom lettering based on a common font (Kaufmann). Mostly the name of the show is written horizontally, however occasionally part of the name is angled upwards.

The original Pop Idol logo featured an enhanced star in the logo. The star also appeared briefly on the American Idol logo, but was scrapped early in the Season 1 auditions.

The logo for some countries comes with an underline on the words SuperStar, or Idol, such as Deutschland sucht den Superstar, Hrvatski Idol, Hrvatska traži zvijezdu, SuperStar Hrvatska, SuperStar Arab, (Česko Slovenská) SuperStar, Hay Superstar, Nouvelle Star (until 2017), Idol Puerto Rico, Idol Kids Puerto Rico, Nepal Idol, Narodniy Artist, SuperStar România, Super Idol, Bangladeshi Idol, Idol Colombia, Ídolos Kids Brasil, Cambodian Idol Junior, Indian Idol Junior, Indonesian Idol Junior and Pinoy Idol (which also has a raised word). Türkstar has the only Idol logo not to use the common font style. As part of a relaunch after the first season, the French Nouvelle Star logo was changed to purple, and their name was shortened. They are the only logo to depart from the standard blue palette until the fifth season of SuperStar Arab changed to the same color scheme as well. Several versions such as Vietnam Idol and Chinese Idol have both English and local language titles shown in their logos.

'Intro' sequence

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Since the series debuted in 2001, this franchise has seen many variations of the opening intro. From its first creation 'Idolatry' in 2001 to its latest creation 'Hall of Idols 3.0' in 2023. Each show had its own version of the opening title from having a video length of the standard 30–35 seconds to some that even lasted as long as 5–10 seconds. The majority of the countries used the same intros at the same time and length of their release. While other franchises kept the older intros for a longer time or made their own versions. Here are some of the intros the series has seen over the years.

Idolatry (2001–2006)

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The original version of the Idol intro was created by Liquid TV Graphics in London which started with the dark blue Idol logo descending on the screen. A CGI human figure appears, with arms raised, intended to be the 'Idol' of the show's name. While the Idol figure sings and then walks. Images of guitars, microphones, cameras, and airplanes flow by, representing the life of a superstar. During this, the gender of the figure alternates between male and female. Finally, the figure is again in front of the Idol logo, raising hands in victory. American Idol altered their logo in seasons 2-3, as well as displaying famous national landmarks in the first scene. They added new sound effects and replaced the jet airplanes with waving flags. The landmark and flag concepts were also used for Indian Idol and World Idol.

Tunnel (2005–2012)

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In 2005, a new version of the Idol intro was created by Aerodrome Pictures in Los Angeles which first appeared on the Season 4 premiere of American Idol. The intro starts with the Idol logo without the dark blue background spinning in the American and Canadian versions while the other Idol formats have their logo glow and sparkle, next the logo zooms in featuring a long section of the CGI Idol figure riding an open elevator past large vertical screens and displays and then walking down a stylized tunnel to a stage, where the figure starts to perform. On this basic template, the American and Canadian versions are customized, with past Idol winners appearing on the screens in the American version, while the Canadian version's screens feature Canadian landmarks. The American & Canadian versions last for 30 seconds; the other Idol shows only lasts 15 seconds, with no customization and instead of the logo being 'stuck down' to the outside of the tunnel, it is pasted over the top. Also, the intro sequence for Nouvelle Star has a purple and blue color scheme instead of the standard light blue/light green.

Gyroscope (2008–2016, 2021-present)

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In 2008, a new version of the Idol intro was created and introduced by BLT & Associates in Los Angeles on the American Idol 7th season finals. The intro starts with the Idol logo spinning behind a gyroscope then features real male and female Idol figures passing horizontal and arc displays then walking to an arena where the two figures start to perform. Finally, only one figure raises his/her hands in victory in front of a huge arc display and then zooms out to the atmosphere and to space, where the title of the show zooms out in front of planet Earth. The ending title of this intro is similar to the Universal Pictures logo of 1990 (for the starry background) and in 2012 (for the earth model). The American, Australian, Canadian, Croatian, Latin American, and Swedish versions are customized by featuring their past Idol winners in the horizontal and arc displays and last for 30 seconds. However, Sweden's version only displayed their former Idol winners in 2010. They also displayed their 2 remaining finalists in the intro for their 2009 finale. Other versions are also customized and last for 30 seconds without featuring their past winners. The French version lasts for 20 seconds and Norway's version in 2016 lasted 4 seconds. Some countries didn't use the Gyroscope theme, like India and Germany. India used the Tunnel theme from 2005 to 2010. But in 2012, they switched to using the 'Hall of Idols' theme. Meanwhile, Germany used the 'Tunnel' theme from 2005 to 2012. From 2013-2021, the German version used its own intro in place of the 'Gyroscope' and 'Hall of Idols' intros called "New Idol". Since 2021, Nigerian Idol has reverted to this opening title for their revival on Africa Magic.

Hall of Idols (2011–present)

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In 2011, a new version of the Idol intro was created once again by Aerodrome Pictures in Los Angeles which first appeared on the Season 10 premiere of American Idol. The intro starts with a stage being spotted under a spotlight from the sky. Then, a stylized bridge leading towards a screen is shown. Winners of Idol, as well as notable alumni from past seasons are shown on the screen. The camera turns to a pyramid-like shape blooming and a CGI figure appears. Depending on the figure's gender in the intro, the figure would yield a different action in front of the American Idol logo and the huge "IDOL" word string (in "American Idol" and "Indonesian Idol" (not shown anymore since Season 9). The male figure raises his hand in victory and strikes a pose while the female figure raises her arms in victory before bowing down. American Idol switched between the male and female CGI figures. While most franchises that used this intro always had the male figure. However, Arab Idol, Kurd Idol and Iraq Idol always used the female figure. Vietnam Idol started using the Hall of Idols intro in Season 5, the old logo was replaced by a new one titled "Thần tượng Âm nhạc Việt Nam".

New Idol (2013–2021)

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In 2013, a new version of the Idol Intro was created on the Season 10 premiere of Deutschland sucht den Superstar. The new intro begins with a mysterious person with a microphone at the mouth. As previous posting Intro male and female talents are displayed. They sing and dance on the big stage. In the meantime, always a person who appears followed a path. On that path along former candidates from earlier seasons are displayed on screens.

Gyroscope 2.0 (2014-2023)

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In 2014, a new version of the Idol intro was created by The Mill in Los Angeles which first appeared on the Season 13 premiere of American Idol. The intro starts with a hole opening up. Then, the gyroscope logo comes out of the hole. A crowd cheers surroding the stage. Finally, the gyroscope logo appears with the Roman numerals "XIII" below the logo for the American version. The intro was also used in the South African version of Idol also starting in 2014 until their cancellation in 2023.

Idol on Street (2015)

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In 2015, a new version of the Idol intro was created by Trollbäck + Company and appeared on the Season 14 premiere of American Idol. It starts by zooming out of a microphone on a mic stand with a spotlight coming out of it. Next you see a female CGI figure singing into the microphone on a city street with multiple microphones having spotlights come out of them. The female figure is also infront of a sunset while having other CGI figures dancing and watching the singer perform from the sidewalks. Next it cuts to an American Idol tour bus driving on the road with a line of microphones having spotlights come out of them next to the bus while having a male CGI figure in the sunset singing into the microphone. Then it cuts to a big hill with more microphones with spotlights and 4 CGI figures appear with 3 of them singing and 1 playing guitar. Finally it zooms out of another microphone with a spotlight with another CGI figure singing as the American Idol and the huge American Idol logo is titled to the left with the roman numerals "XIV" on the bottom right corner of the logo. The CGI figure at the end will also switch between a male and female figure. However in the season finale, the intro featured the 2 remaining finalists as the CGI figures.

The Farewell of Idol (2016)

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In 2016, a new version of the Idol intro was created by Spencer Tucker and appeared on the Season 15 premiere of American Idol. It starts by zooming into the American Idol logo which is surrounded by names of previous Idol contestants throughout the years. On the season premiere, it started the same and then had a montage of the previous intros that they used in reverse. They used the same intro concept on the season finale and didn't reverse the montage.

Hall of Idols 2.0 (2016–2017)

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In 2016, a new version of the Idol intro was created and appeared on the Season 5 premiere of Idols in The Netherlands. It starts by panning around city buildings surrounding a stage with light beams popping out of the spotlights, then it cuts to a sign that will say the current stage of the competition. Next it cuts to a building showing the map of the country and another building showing the judges desk while the camera turns to the left and moves up. Finally, you will see a spotlight in the middle of the stage appearing with the Idols logo appearing with a female CGI figure singing as the Idol and an audience watching the Idol perform.

Shooting Star Idol (2018-present)

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American Idol's revival on ABC was accompanied with a Disney-like intro starting with their Season 16 premiere. Which was created by Spencer Tucker and Rami Hachache. Possible Productions were added to the credits for seasons 18 and 19 only. It starts with several shooting stars falling from the sky before curving up and circling the neon American Idol logo with fireworks in the background at the end. This opening is much shorter than in previous years. It acts as an integrated part of a longer opening introduction in each episode rather than a standalone opening theme as in previous seasons. Ídolos (Portugal) used this intro in 2022 for their revival on SIC. Australian Idol also used this opening title for their revival starting in 2023 on 7 and 7+. Deutschland sucht den Superstar had a similar version of this intro in 2022. But they used a blue background with shooting stars.

20th Anniversary Idol (2022)

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American Idol's 20th season brought in a new intro which appeared on the season finale, created by The Other House in Los Angeles. It starts with a closeup of the logo at the top of the 2 in '20' and tracing itself with gold lines as the camera pans to the right. Next, you will see the middle of 2 and 0 panning to the bottom left of the logo. Then you'll notice the left half of the logo while it pans to the right. Finally, the camera comes in from the bottom right corner and you'll see the entire logo and then it zooms into the middle of the logo and cuts to the studio.

Transparent Idol (2023-present)

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American Idol brought in a new intro which appeared on the twenty-first season premiere. This time it was transparent. Once again created by The Other House in Los Angeles. There are 2 versions of this opening title. The first one starts with the logo appearing vertically from behind the camera and the word 'American' comes in on top of the word 'Idol' facing the left side of the screen and turns to the right as it comes in. The world 'Idol' comes in under the word 'American' and is slightly turned to the right but turns itself to the left as it forms the logo. Finally the logo faces slightly towards the left side of the screen and stays in position. The second version only has the logo coming in the frame horizontally and facing up. Next it comes down as the logo moves into the frame. Finally you'll see the whole logo sitting still in the frame.

Hall of Idols 3.0 (2023–present)

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In 2023, a new version of the Idol intro was created. It appeared on Vietnam Idol's Season 8 revival, which was the remake of the original Hall of Idol intro with some differences such as the opening which became shorter, similar to 2018 ABC's Idol intro, different background color and the opening uses an English title (Vietnam Idol) instead of its traditional Vietnamese title "Thần tượng Âm nhạc Việt Nam" which was used from Seasons 5-7.

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See also

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Notes and references

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Notes

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  1. ^ Citizens of Macedonia were eligible to participate in the third season.
  2. ^ Citizens of Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan are eligible to participate throughout the series.
  3. ^ Citizens of Wallonia and Québec were eligible to participate in the first season.
  4. ^ Citizens of Austria and Switzerland are eligible to participate throughout the series.
  5. ^ Citizens of Cyprus were eligible to participate in Super Idol.
  6. ^ Citizens of Belarus and Ukraine were eligible to participate in the first and second season.
  7. ^ Citizens of Puerto Rico were eligible to participate in the eighth season.
  8. ^ Countries whose citizens were eligible to participate include all the member states of the Arab League.
  9. ^ Countries whose citizens were eligible to participate include: Botswana, Burundi, Comoros, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Lesotho, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Réunion (a part of France), Rwanda, Seychelles, Somalia, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
  10. ^ Countries whose citizens were eligible to participate include all of the Latin American countries, with the exception of Brazil.
  11. ^ Countries whose citizens were eligible to participate include: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Saint Helena, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo.
  12. ^ Winners of Indian Idol, Indonesian Idol, Malaysian Idol, Philippine Idol, Singapore Idol, SuperStar KZ, and Vietnam Idol participated in Asian Idol, in which the winner was determined the greatest percentage of votes.
  13. ^ Winners of inaugural seasons of American Idol, Australian Idol, Canadian Idol, Deutschland sucht den Superstar, Idool, Idols (Dutch version), Idols (South African version), Idol (Polish version), Idol (Norwegian version), Pop Idol, and SuperStar (Arab version) participated in World Idol, in which the winner was determined by the most collective points given by each of the other participating countries (similar to the Eurovision Song Contest).

References

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  1. ^ "'IDOL' FRANCHISE WORTH $2.5 BILLION". New York Post. 9 January 2007. Archived from the original on 18 August 2018.
  2. ^ "Entriq, Inc. and FremantleMedia Sign Agreement to Bring 'World Idol' Pay-Per-Video to the Internet". California: Entriq. Archived from the original on 5 June 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2012 – via PR Newswire.
  3. ^ a b Fuller, Simon (20 May 2011). "Simon Fuller on how 'Idol' began". Variety. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 6 August 2011.
  4. ^ "iTunes Downloads". American Idol. Archived from the original on 22 February 2008.
  5. ^ "Idol Colombia". Archived from the original on 22 December 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "Indian Idol Marathi To Premiere On Nov 22, Sony TV Shares Audition Video". News18. 20 November 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  7. ^ "Aha to launch Telugu Indian Idol; here are the audition details". Vizag. 18 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  8. ^ "'Idol Kids', el programa donde nacen las estrellas, próximamente en Telecinco" ['Idol Kids', the program where the stars are born, soon on Telecinco] (in Spanish). Telecinco. 14 June 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  9. ^ Yotele (6 August 2019). "Telecinco confirma la producción de de 'Idol Kids' y a Isabel Pantoja como estrella del jurado" [Telecinco confirms the production of 'Idol Kids' and Isabel Pantoja as star of the jury]. El Periódico de Catalunya (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  10. ^ Quijorna, Christian (4 September 2020). "Telecinco estrena 'Idol Kids' el lunes 7 de septiembre" [Telecinco to premiere 'Idol Kids' on Monday, September 7] (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  11. ^ a b c "Telecinco rescata 'Idol kids': prepara la segunda edición con novedades". El Periódico (in Spanish). 27 September 2021. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  12. ^ a b c d Soriano, Sergio (22 October 2021). "'Idol Kids' ficha a Omar Montes, Ana Mena y Camela para revolucionar el jurado en su segunda edición". FormulaTV (in Spanish). Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  13. ^ a b c "Telecinco confirma la segunda temporada de 'Idol Kids' sin Isabel Pantoja y comienza el casting". Bluper (in Spanish). 14 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "First Canada, Now The World. Canadian Idol Ryan Malcolm Takes Global Stage In World Idol, Dec. 25 and Jan. 1 on CTV". Bell Media. 13 November 2003. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2012.