Australian singing competition TV series
Australian Idol
|
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|
Created by
| Simon Fuller
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Presented by
| |
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Judges
| |
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Country of origin
| Australia
|
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Original language
| English
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No.
of seasons
| 9
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No.
of episodes
| 309
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|
Running time
| 1?2 hours (includes commercials)
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Production companies
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Network
| Network 10
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Release
| 27 July 2003
(
2003-07-27
)
?
22 November 2009
(
2009-11-22
)
|
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Network
| Seven Network
|
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Release
| 30 January 2023
(
2023-01-30
)
?
present
|
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Australian Idol
is an Australian singing competition, which began its first season in July 2003 and ended its initial run in November 2009. As part of the
Idol
franchise
, Australian Idol originated from the
reality program
Pop Idol
, which was created by British entertainment executive
Simon Fuller
. Australian Idol was televised on
Network Ten
for its first seven series and was broadcast on the
Southern Cross Austereo
Radio Network between 2005 and 2007. The series returned in 2023 after
Seven Network
announced they would be picking up the show.
Finalists
[
edit
]
Series overview
[
edit
]
Judges and Hosts
[
edit
]
History
[
edit
]
Australian Idol
sought to discover the most commercial young singer in Australia through a series of nationwide auditions. The outcomes of the later stages of this competition were determined by public voting. It was the first show to use this system of voting in Australia.
[
citation needed
]
The original judging panel featured
Mark Holden
,
Marcia Hines
and
Ian 'Dicko' Dickson
. In 2005, this was changed as Dickson was replaced by
Kyle Sandilands
.
In 2007, Dickson again returned to the program, when Holden left at the end of the season. In 2009, Sandilands was replaced by
Jay Dee Springbett
.
[2]
Cancellation
[
edit
]
Network Ten
made the decision to "rest" the program for 2010 after poor ratings in 2009.
[3]
No further comment was formally made regarding the future of
Australian Idol
on Network Ten until early 2013, following the network's acquisition of rights to the American series, when program chief Beverley McGarvey hinted it may return. However, later that same year, a Ten spokesperson confirmed that it would not be returning.
[4]
Revival
[
edit
]
On 21 October 2020,
Seven Network
announced at their annual upfronts that they would be reviving the series, originally slated for 2022.
[5]
[6]
[7]
On 28 September 2022, Seven announced that
Ricki-Lee Coulter
and
Scott Tweedie
would be the new hosts, with the judging panel consisting of former
American Idol
judge
Harry Connick Jr.
, former
Australian Idol
judge
Kyle Sandilands
,
Amy Shark
and
Meghan Trainor
.
[8]
[9]
Original judge
Marcia Hines
appeared as a guest judge.
[10]
The revival premiered on 30 January 2023.
[11]
In July 2023, it was officially revealed that the show had been renewed by Seven Network for a ninth season, set to premier in 2024.
[12]
It was later revealed that Coulter and Tweedie would return as hosts, and that Sandilands and Shark will be returning to their judging positions. However, Connick Jr. and Trainor will not be returning, with Trainor leaving due to family reasons. Original judge Marcia Hines will return as a main judge.
[13]
[14]
Seven officially confirmed the 2024 judges at their upfronts in October 2023.
[15]
Format
[
edit
]
Auditions
[
edit
]
Auditions were held in major cities around Australia to find each season's contestants. Any contestant who got a "yes" from a majority of judges was put through to the top 100 in Sydney. The TV episodes showed the most interesting auditions, which generally meant the worst and the best.
Top 100
[
edit
]
Singers who progress from the auditions go to Sydney, in a stage which was sometimes called the Top 100 or Top 50 (season 8). Over a few days, these contestants are narrowed down to the semi-finalists.
Semi-finals
[
edit
]
Over different seasons, the number of semi-finalists varied between 24 and 40, with between 8 and 10 contestants. For the first seven seasons, each semi-final was spread over two nights. On the first night, each semi-finalist sang a song, and was critiqued by each judge. Then over the next day, the public voted (by phone or SMS). The second night was results night, and the top 2 or 3 went through to the top 12. There was also included a "wild card" semi-final, to give some contestants a second chance to make the top 12.
For seasons 1 to 3, each semi-final took a week, with performances on Sunday night and results on Monday night. For seasons 4 onwards, the semi-finals were all in a single week, because there was greater viewer interest in the finals than the semi-finals.
The formats for the different seasons were:
Season 1
had 5 semi-finalis of 8 contestants each. The top 2 in each semi-final made the top 12. A wild card round decided 2 more finalists (it turned out to be 3 after one contestant withdrew) - one judges' choice, two by public vote.
Seasons 2
and
3
had 3 semi-finals of 10 contestants each, with the top 3 in each semi-final making the top 12. Then a further 3 were progressed from the wild card round (2 by judges' choice, 1 by public vote). (The wild card episode in the 3rd season had a little twist, when the judges announced a third person, namely, Roxanne Lebrasse, who also had the 2nd highest number of votes, would be included in the finals, making it a Top 13.)
Seasons 4
,
5
,
6
and
7
had 4 semi-finals of 6 contestants each, with the top 2 in each semi-final making the top 12. Then a further 4 made the Top 12 from the wild card round. Seasons 4 and 5 had same gender semi-finals, while Season 6 had 3 males and 3 females in each semi-final. For the wild card show, Seasons 4 and 6 selected 3 by judges' choice and 1 by public vote; Season 5 selected 2 by judges' choice and 2 by public vote;.
Season 8
had 3 semi-finals of 8 contestants each, with the judges putting 4 from each through to the top 12, on the same night. There was no public voting and no wild card round.
For the first five seasons, contestants who made the semi-finals in previous seasons were not eligible to audition. From the 2008 season onwards, only Top 12 contestants from previous seasons were ineligible.
Finals (Top 12)
[
edit
]
In the Season 1 to 7 finals, one contestant was eliminated per week. (With the exception of Season 1, which eliminated 2 in the first 3 weeks of the finals, and Season 3, which eliminated 2 in the first week of finals due to having a final 13). In the Season 8 finals, two contestants were eliminated per week.
Each week, contestants chose a song to a weekly theme on the Sunday night. (As the number of contestants got smaller, they sang two or three songs each). As in the semi-finals, each performance was critiqued by the judges, and then there was (approximately) 24 hours of voting by phone or SMS, before the results were announced on the Monday night. The eliminated competitor(s) then presented a final song ? usually the number they sang the previous night. In Season 8, each of the bottom 4 performed on elimination night, after voting had closed but before the results were announced.
Grand Finale
[
edit
]
The final results night, the Grand Finale, was held at the
Sydney Opera House
. It usually featured fireworks and an outdoor concert with many past
Idol
stars and other Australian musicians. It had been the highest rating episode of each season. The top 12 were celebrated and at the end of the night the winner was announced. Seasons 1?5 were held inside Sydney Opera House on the concert hall stage. For seasons 6 and 7, the finale was held on a stage erected on the Opera House forecourt.
After the first two seasons, the top 12 and top 10 went on a national tour. There were no tours for later seasons. However, there was a "Winner's Journey Tour" involving the winner with some guest performances from the Top 12 for seasons 4 and 5.
Touchdowns
[
edit
]
A "touchdown" was awarded by judge Mark Holden when, in his own opinion, a contestant's performance was particularly good. Holden awarded his first ever "touchdown" to
Cosima De Vito
for her rendition of Cold Chisel's "
When the War Is Over
" in the Top 8 on Australian Made night in Season 1. De Vito also received a touchdown for her rendition of
Respect
, a classic hit by Aretha Franklin. Season 4 winner,
Damien Leith
and Season 2 winner,
Casey Donovan
have the record for the highest number of touchdowns at four apiece. Leith is the only contestant to receive two touchdowns in the same night.
Emily Williams
, and
Matt Corby
, runners-up of seasons 3 and 5 respectively both hold the record of receiving the most touchdowns without winning, at three apiece. In 2004, Top 8 contestants choice night, he awarded his only ever 'Grand Royal' Touchdown when
Anthony Callea
sang his stunning rendition of "
The Prayer
" which is still regarded as one of the most memorable performances of all seven series. Another two of Holden's most memorable "touchdowns" were awarded to
Guy Sebastian
for his rendition of "Climb Every Mountain" on the Top 3 show in Season 1 and to
Jessica Mauboy
for her rendition of
Christina Aguilera
's "
Beautiful
" on the Top 10 Number 1 Hits show in Season 4. Holden's final touchdown went to 2007 winner
Natalie Gauci
in the Top 4 on Big Band night during Season 5.
During Season 6, due to Holden's departure from the judging panel, the other judges awarded "touchdowns" themselves. The first "touchdown" was delivered by Kyle Sandilands to Chrislyn Hamilton on top 12 night. She later received another on Motown night by guest judge and first series winner, Guy Sebastian. Thanh Bui received one from Marcia Hines during ABBA night and Mark Spano was also delivered one by Ian "Dicko" Dickson during Top 6 Rolling Stones night. Eventual winner, Wes Carr was awarded two; one by Hines and guest judge
Jermaine Jackson
on
Michael Jackson
night and another on Top 3 night by Dickson.
An alternate version of a "touchdown" was done by Dickson if he believes the performance was extraordinary saying "big ticko from Dicko". This was used in one of Natalie Gauci's performances and a few other performances when Holden was around.
In the first seven seasons, a "touchdown" did not carry any official status. However, in
Season 8
, during the Top 24 performances, each judge was allowed one "touchdown", which put a singer immediately through to the Top 12.
Season synopsis
[
edit
]
Season 1
[
edit
]
When Network Ten paid $15 million for the first season of Australian Idol they anticipated it to be a critical and financial success like it had been in other countries such as the UK and the USA. When the show aired for the first time in August 2003 it was a ratings bonanza attracting diverse ranges of viewers, from people wanting the crazy auditions to people who wanted to hear great voices. The audition process went through several major cities in Australia including Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide and Darwin. Australian Idol became the most popular TV show in the country with more ratings than major events such as the AFL Grand Final. The Grand Final at the Sydney Opera House attracted more than 3 million viewers. It was listed as the ninth highest rating TV show in Australia in the past century in 2007. The eventual winner of the competition was
Guy Sebastian
with
Shannon Noll
finishing in 2nd place.
Guy Sebastian has released ten top 10 albums, with eight reaching the top 5, including three No. 1's.
[16]
His debut album
Just As I Am
was certified 6× platinum and sold in excess of 480,000 units.
[17]
[18]
Beautiful Life
,
Closer to the Sun
and
Like It Like That
were all platinum sellers, with
The Memphis Album
,
Twenty Ten
and
Armageddon
reaching double platinum.
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
Madness
has been certified gold.
[24]
His most recent album,
T.R.U.T.H.
became his third number one album and has been certified gold. He has also released 23 top 20 singles, with 14 reaching the top ten, including six No. 1's.
[16]
Sebastian is the only Australian male artist in Australian music history to achieve six No. 1 singles, and is third overall for all Australian acts.
[25]
His debut single
Angels Brought Me Here
was the highest selling single in Australia in 2003, reaching 5× platinum certification.
[26]
[27]
It won the 2004 ARIA for Highest Selling Single, and in 2010 ARIA announced it was the highest selling song of the previous decade.
[28]
[29]
"
Like It Like That
" the title track from his fifth album reached 4× platinum and was the highest selling Australian artist single of 2009.
[30]
[31]
"
Who's That Girl
",
Twenty Ten'
s only single, reached 5× platinum certification and won the 2011 ARIA Award for Highest Selling Single.
[30]
[32]
[33]
"
Don't Worry Be Happy
, the lead single of Sebastian's seventh album
Armageddon
also reached 5× platinum.
[34]
The third single "
Battle Scars
" featuring
Lupe Fiasco
debuted at No. 1, becoming his sixth No. 1 single in Australia, and achieved 12× platinum certification.
[35]
[27]
Sebastian has been awarded 69 platinum and seven gold certifications for albums and singles in Australia, the highest for any Australian Idol contestant.
[36]
"Angels Brought Me Here" reached No. 1 in Malaysia, Singapore, The Philippines, Indonesia and New Zealand.
[37]
[38]
Sebastian achieved a second No. 1 on the
New Zealand Charts
with "Who's That Girl", and reached the Top 10 with his debut album and four other singles, and has six platinum and three gold certifications there.
[39]
[40]
[41]
[42]
Sebastian is currently the Australian Idol contestant to chart in the US. "Battle Scars" reached No. 71 on the
Billboard
Hot 100
, No. 23 on the
Billboard
Digital Songs Chart
and No. 1 on the
Billboard
R&B/Hip-hop Digital Song Chart.
[43]
[44]
It has spent 20 weeks in the Hot 100 and has been certified platinum in the US for sales of one million.
[45]
[46]
"Battle Scars" also reached No. 2 in
Norway
.
[47]
In 2015 Sebastian was selected to represent Australia in the
Eurovision Song Contest
. He finished 5th, and his song "
Tonight Again
" charted in the top 50 in a number of European countries, including No.6 in
Iceland
and 16 in
Austria
.
[48]
[49]
[50]
During his career Sebastian has received 32
ARIA Award
nominations, winning six of them, including Best Pop Release and Best Live Act.
[51]
[52]
[53]
[54]
[55]
[56]
[57]
[58]
Shannon Noll has released five top 10 albums.
[59]
His debut album
That's What I'm Talking About
gained 5× platinum certification and his second album
Lift
reached 3× platinum, both debuting at No. 1 on the ARIA charts.
[19]
[60]
His third album,
Turn It Up
, peaked at No. 3 and achieved platinum certification,
[61]
His fourth album
No Turning Back: The Story So Far
reached No. 7, with his fifth album
A Million Suns
peaking at #8. Neither of these albums have gained certification. Between 2004 and 2007 Noll released ten top 10 singles including three #1's, and he is the only Australian male artist to have achieved 10 consecutive top 10 singles.
[62]
[63]
Since then he has released seven more singles, with two reaching the top 50, the highest one peaking at #26.
[62]
"
What About Me
" was the highest selling single in Australia in 2004 and he received ARIA nominations for highest seller for it and his debut album at the 2004 Aria Awards.
[29]
[64]
He also received nominations for best pop release for his second album
Lift
and a highest selling single nomination for its lead single "
Shine
" in 2006.
[65]
"Don't Give Up" a duet with
Natalie Bassingthwaighte
was nominated for highest selling single at the 2007 ARIA Awards.
[66]
He has a total of 17 platinum and three gold certifications for albums and singles in Australia.
[36]
Noll's first single "What About Me" also reached No. 2 in Ireland and No. 10 in New Zealand, with his debut album peaking at No. 31 in NZ.
[67]
[68]
Paulini
who came fourth has released two albums as a solo artist,
One Determined Heart
which reached No. 1 and gained platinum certification, and
Superwoman
which peaked at #77. She has also released four top 50 singles including the No. 1 "
Angel Eyes
", a platinum seller which was nominated for highest selling single at the 2004 ARIA Awards. In 2007,
Paulini
was nominated for "Urban Music Awards" for "Best R&B Album" & "Best Female Artist" for
Superwoman
. Paulini was also a member of The Young Divas, who released two Top 10 albums and four Top 50 singles.
The other top 5 contestants in season one were
Cosima De Vito
who came 3rd, &
Rob Mills
who finished in 5th place. After Idol it was these five, the Final 5, who were the most successful out of the Top 12. Other Idol contestants from Season 1 to release music were
Levi Kereama
,
Rebekah LaVauney
,
Peter Ryan
and
Courtney Act
. All of these independent acts achieved limited success.
Season 2
[
edit
]
As well as the five larger cities, the judges also visited
Canberra
,
Hobart
,
Darwin
and
Tamworth
this year. Of the twelve finalists, three were from Sydney, two were from Melbourne, and one each from
Brisbane
, the
Gold Coast
,
Hobart
,
Perth
,
Canberra
,
Adelaide
and
Bega
.
The winner was
Casey Donovan
. The runners up (in descending order) were
Anthony Callea
,
Courtney Murphy
,
Hayley Jensen
&
Chanel Cole
. The final two, as well as
Ricki-Lee Coulter
(7th), were the only contestants from the Top 12 to be signed to a record company. Callea was the highest seller of the three, with his first release "The Prayer" spending five consecutive weeks at No 1, and becoming the second highest selling song in Australia last decade overall and for an Australian artist.
[28]
Chanel Cole and Daniel Belle teamed up under the name
Spook
to release an album in October 2005; a bootleg album for Chanel was also released in November 2005. Top 30 contestants
Ngaiire Joseph
and Marty Worrall each released a single in late 2005, and Hayley Jensen an album in September 2007.
Daniel O'Connor
, another of the Top 12, gained a role on
Neighbours
.
The Grand finale of this series remains the highest rated show out of all broadcast over the five seasons.
On a darker note,
Telstra
, a major
sponsor
of the series, made an embarrassing error when they issued a series of half-page advertisements in major newspapers congratulating Donovan on her victory, with a reference to her website. However, the address was incorrect, leading to a website about
gay
porn star
Casey Donovan
, rather than the singer's. The company issued a prompt apology upon realising their mistake.
[69]
After this season, judge
Ian Dickson
left the series, later to appear in the
Seven Network
reality TV shows
My Restaurant Rules
,
Dancing with the Stars
and most recently,
Australian Celebrity Survivor
. The 2004 season was also notable for an Asian contestant named "Flynn", who sang the
Freestylers
song "Push Up" after being found from a terrible audition, in the same vein as
William Hung
.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
6 September
|
Australian Made
|
Angeline Narayan
|
Emelia Rusciano
|
Amali Ward
|
13 September
|
Pop
|
Dan O'Connor
|
Hayley Jensen
|
Marty Worrall
|
20 September
|
1960s
|
Amali Ward (2)
|
Hayley Jensen (2)
|
Marty Worrall (2)
|
27 September
|
Disco
|
Emelia Rusciano (2)
|
Marty Worrall (3)
|
Casey Donovan
|
4 October
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Daniel Belle
|
Chanel Cole
|
Hayley Jensen (3)
|
11 October
|
The Beatles
|
Ricki-Lee Coulter
|
Chanel Cole (2)
|
Marty Worrall (4)
|
18 October
|
1980s
|
Marty Worrall (5)
|
Casey Donovan (2)
|
Hayley Jensen (4)
|
25 October
|
R&B
|
Chanel Cole (3)
|
Courtney Murphy
|
1 November
|
Big Band
|
Hayley Jensen (5)
|
Casey Donovan (3)
|
8 November
|
1970s
|
Courtney Murphy (2)
|
21 November
|
Finale
|
Anthony Callea
|
Casey Donovan
(3)
|
Season 3
[
edit
]
For the first time in '
Australian Idol'
history there were 13 finalists. This came about during the Wildcard Verdict show on 5 September 2005. The judges initially chose James Kannis and Emily Williams to go through to the final. This left one spot which was chosen by the Australian public. Out of the remaining contestants the two that received the highest votes were Daniel Spillane and Roxane Lebrasse. With only 1% between them, Dan was announced as the final member of the Top 12. This meant Roxane had missed out yet again. The judges decided however that Roxane was too good to be left out of the Top 12 so they made it a Top 13. The catch was that two contestants were eliminated in the first round of the finals.
On 21 November 2005, the winner was announced and it was
Kate DeAraugo
. Kate was an outside chance to win throughout the whole season and after the show had ended Kate released a No. 1 single, a platinum selling album and a further Top 10 hit single through Sony BMG. Kate is currently working with all-girl group
Young Divas
, which is made up of past
Idol
contestants which include
Paulini Curuenavuli
,
Jessica Mauboy
and
Emily Williams
.
Runner up
Emily Williams
lost by 1% in the closest percentage ever in an
Idol
finale. She was originally signed to Sony BMG as a solo artist, but the agreement fell through. She is also a member of
Young Divas
and has had much success with them.
Lee Harding
finished in third position and was signed to Sony BMG and released a # 1 single and a platinum selling album. His second single from his debut album proved to be less successful and in mid-2006 Harding was released from his contract with the label. He is currently touring and performing with
Bedrock
.
Dan England
came 4th and didn't score a recording contract with a major label but recorded several independent releases and has toured with Season 2 winner
Casey Donovan
and Season 1 runner-up
Shannon Noll
.
Anne Robertson
who finished in sixth position was negotiating a deal with Sony BMG, but it was rumoured that Sony BMG was reluctant in signing her as they believed she was too similar to Season 1 contestant
Paulini Curuenavuli
who had been signed to the label for several years.
Other Idol contestants from Season 3 have released numerous independent material and have toured and performed with several bands and music groups.
Although averaging around the 1.5 million viewer mark, ratings were down by up to 40% on average during the third season compared to the first two seasons, which regularly drew more than 2.5 million viewers during the latter half of the competition. This created a serious situation for Ten, which was airing three
Australian Idol
shows every week at the time, and forced them to give away free commercial airtime to program sponsors expecting higher ratings. Commentators has theorised over the reasons why this has occurred, ranging from the viewing public being tired of the format due to Sandilands replacing the popular Dickson. This caused a major
Idol
revamp for Season 4 which meant Season 4 being one of the highest rating seasons yet.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
12 September
|
Australian Artists
|
Tarni Stephens
|
Chris Luder
|
Milly Edwards
|
19 September
|
1960s
|
Natalie Zahra
|
Laura Gissara
|
James Kannis
|
26 September
|
Rock Supergroups
|
Laura Gissara (2)
|
James Kannis (2)
|
Daniel Spillane
|
3 October
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Roxane LeBrasse
|
Milly Edwards (2)
|
Daniel Spillane (2)
|
10 October
|
Big Band
|
Milly Edwards (3)
|
Dan England
|
James Kannis (3)
|
17 October
|
1980's
|
James Kannis (4)
|
Emily Williams
|
Daniel Spillane (3)
|
24 October
|
Motown
|
Anne Robertson
|
Daniel Spillane (4)
|
Dan England (2)
|
31 October
|
1970's
|
Daniel Spillane (5)
|
Lee Harding
|
7 November
|
Elvis Presley
|
Dan England (3)
|
Lee Harding (2)
|
14 November
|
Number Ones
|
Lee Harding (3)
|
21 November
|
Finale
|
Emily Williams (1)
|
Kate DeAraugo
|
Season 4
[
edit
]
Changes for the fourth season of
Australian Idol
included the cancellation of "Inside Idol"; a "streamlined" semi-finals (replaced with a variant of the 12 females, 12 males format popularised by
American Idol
); and the contestants will be able to bring instruments with them on stage for at least one of the final shows. Also, the fourth season's television promos promised a change in the viewer's role in the show, revealed to be an SMS service called 199-JUDGE which allows viewers to SMS their opinions on the judges' reactions.
Damien Leith
was named the winner of Australian Idol 2006 on 26 November, beating
Jessica Mauboy
for the title. Leith is the fifth most successful Australian Idol contestant behind
Guy Sebastian
,
Shannon Noll
, Mauboy and
Anthony Callea
. He has been awarded 7 platinum and one gold certification and achieved sales of 525,000+. He has the third highest album sales for a contestant. He achieved two No. 1 albums,
The Winner's Journey
which sold 4× platinum and
Where We Land
which gained platinum certification. His first single,
Night of My Life
stayed at No. 1 for four consecutive weeks and was certified platinum after one week of sales. It was the fastest selling debut single for 2006. Leith won 4 ARIA No. 1 Chart Awards, and the 2007
ARIA Award
for Highest Selling Album for
The Winner's Journey
. His third studio album
Catch the Wind: Songs of a Generation
peaked at No. 2, reaching gold status. His fourth album
Remember June
released in 2009 peaked at No. 25. In 2010 Leith released a covers album of
Roy Orbison
songs titled
Roy
which reached No. 2 and platinum certification. His sixth album
Now and Then
released in 2012 peaked at #12. He has also released two novels and hosted Network Ten's television series "Saving Kids".
Jessica Mauboy went on to join ex-Idol girl group
Young Divas
, after member from season 2,
Ricki-Lee Coulter
, left the group. Mauboy has since gained much success as a solo artist. Her first studio album
Been Waiting
peaked at No. 11, spent 59 weeks on the charts and achieved 2× platinum status. Mauboy has also enjoyed success with her singles "
Running Back
" which was certified 2× platinum and second single "
Burn
" which reached No. 1 and achieved platinum status. Her third single "
Been Waiting
" peaked at No. 12, fourth single "
Because
" peaked at No. 9 and her 5th single "
Up/Down
" peaked at #11. These three singles all reached gold certification. Her second studio album
Get 'Em Girls
peaked at No. 6 and achieved gold certification. Five top 20 singles were released from the album, including 2 which achieved platinum and 2 double platinum certification. Mauboy has achieved 11 platinum and 5 gold certifications and received 12 ARIA Award nominations, including one win during her career as a recording artist. Third place getter
Dean Geyer
later released his debut album
Rush
and top ten single "If You Don't Mean It" and starred on the Australian long-time running soap
Neighbours
from 2008 to 2009.
[70]
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
11 September
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Joseph Gatehau
|
Lavina Williams
|
Reigan Derry
|
18 September
|
Rock
|
Reigan Derry (2)
|
Ricky Muscat
|
Guy Mutton
|
25 September
|
Number Ones
|
Klancie Keough
|
Dean Geyer
|
Lavina Williams (2)
|
2 October
|
Birth Year
|
Guy Mutton (2)
|
Lisa Mitchell
|
Jessica Mauboy
|
9 October
|
Disco
|
Lavina Williams (3)
|
Chris Murphy
|
Ricky Muscat (2)
|
16 October
|
Acoustic
|
Bobby Flynn
|
Lisa Mitchell (2)
|
Ricky Muscat (3)
|
23 October
|
Rock Swings
|
Lisa Mitchell (3)
|
Dean Geyer (2)
|
Ricky Muscat (4)
|
30 October
|
ARIA Hall of Fame
|
Ricky Muscat (5)
|
Dean Geyer (3)
|
Damien Leith
|
6 November
|
Audience Choice
|
Chris Murphy (2)
|
Dean Geyer (4)
|
13 November
|
Judge's Choice
|
Dean Geyer (5)
|
26 November
|
Finale*
|
Jessica Mauboy
|
Damien Leith
|
Season 5
[
edit
]
Ian "Dicko" Dickson
rejoined the show as one of the judges, along with
Mark Holden
,
Marcia Hines
and
Kyle Sandilands
from 2006. The series was again hosted by
Andrew G
and
James Mathison
. The show continued with the format from Season 4 where contestants could use instruments throughout the show and for their audition they could perform original material rather than covering other artist's work.
Natalie Gauci
went on to win the series, beating
Matt Corby
for the title. Natalie released her debut platinum selling album "
The Winner's Journey
". After the winner's single "
Here I Am
" debuted at No. 2 on the
ARIA Charts
, and the album debuted at No. 11. Natalie released her second album in 2012.
Carl Riseley
, who finished third in the contest went on to release a swing-style album titled "
The Rise
", debuting at No. 5 on the ARIA Charts. Carl Riseley's 2nd cd "the stillest hour" was released 24 April 2009 and peaked at NO#1 on the ARIA jazz chart.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
9 September
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Holly Weinert
|
Lana Krost
|
Brianna Carpenter
|
16 September
|
Rock
|
Brianna Carpenter (2)
|
Marty Simpson
|
Jacob Butler
|
23 September
|
Disco
|
Lana Krost (2)
|
Tarisai Vushe
|
Daniel Mifsud
|
30 September
|
Acoustic
|
Mark Da Costa
|
Jacob Butler (2)
|
Daniel Mifsud (2)
|
7 October
|
Brit Pop
|
Jacob Butler (3)
|
Carl Riseley
|
Daniel Mifsud (3)
|
14 October
|
Birth Year
|
Ben McKenzie
|
Matt Corby
|
Marty Simpson (2)
|
21 October
|
Judge's Choice/Contestant's Choice
|
Daniel Mifsud (4)
|
Tarisai Vushe (2)
|
Marty Simpson (3)
|
28 October
|
Australian Made
|
Tarisai Vushe (3)
|
Natalie Gauci
|
4 November
|
Big Band
|
Marty Simpson (4)
|
Carl Riseley (2)
|
11 November
|
Audience Choice/Contestant's Choice
|
Carl Riseley (3)
|
25 November
|
Finale
|
Matt Corby (1)
|
Natalie Gauci
(1)
|
Season 6
[
edit
]
Changes to the Australian Idol format for season 6 include judge
Mark Holden
[71]
leaving the show and temporary absence of host
Andrew Gunsberg
, and auditions held for the first time in the United Kingdom.
[72]
This was also the first season where the Top 4 contestants were all male, and the second time with two male grand finalists, after Season 1 Finale with Guy Sebastian and Shannon Noll. On 23 November,
Wes Carr
was announced as Australian Idol for 2008, beating
Luke Dickens
.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
14 September
|
Idols' Idols
|
Jonny Taylor
|
Teale Jakubenko
|
Sophie Paterson
|
21 September
|
'80s Music
|
Brooke Addamo
|
Sophie Paterson (2)
|
Thanh Bui
|
28 September
|
Aussie Hits
|
Tom Williams
|
Teale Jakubenko (2)
|
Madam Parker
|
5 October
|
ABBA
|
Madam Parker (2)
|
Chrislyn Hamilton
|
Roshani Priddis
|
12 October
|
Rock
|
Thanh Bui (2)
|
Teale Jakubenko (3)
|
Sophie Paterson (3)
|
19 October
|
Motown
|
Sophie Paterson (4)
|
Mark Spano
|
Teale Jakubenko (4)
|
26 October
|
The Rolling Stones
|
Roshani Priddis (2)
|
Luke Dickens
|
Teale Jakubenko (5)
|
2 November
|
Michael Jackson
|
Chrislyn Hamilton (2)
|
Mark Spano (2)
|
9 November
|
American Hits
|
Teale Jakubenko (6)
|
Wes Carr
|
16 November
|
Contestants Choice
|
Mark Spano (3)
|
23 November
|
Finale
|
Luke Dickens (1)
|
Wes Carr
(1)
|
Season 7
[
edit
]
On 10 November 2008, it was announced that a seventh season of
Australian Idol
would be produced and aired in late 2009.
[73]
James Mathison announced on 31 March 2009 that he was leaving the show after six seasons. Andrew G continued hosting along with
Ricki-Lee Coulter
who was once again co-host.
On 1 June 2009, musical director John Foreman announced that he was also leaving the show after six seasons. Foreman's right-hand man, David Pritchard-Blunt, was announced as his replacement.
On 3 August, Kyle Sandilands was let go as a judge on
Australian Idol
, after an
on-air radio stunt went wrong
. "Australian Idol is very much a family program and its appeal is very much right across the board, and we'd like to think that all families can enjoy the program in front of the TV,"
Idol
Executive David Mott stated on the daily news.
It was announced on 3 August 2009, via a press statement from
Network Ten
, that Sandilands had been sacked from
Australian Idol
due to this incident. He was replaced by Jay Dee Springbett,
[2]
a Sony music executive.
A Network Ten spokesman said of Sandilands' firing:
"Idol has remained a family-focused show, even more so this year with the 6.30 pm Sunday timeslot. His radio persona has taken on a more controversial position ... which is not in the interest of the show."
[74]
Of being fired from
Australia Idol
, Sandilands said in a statement that "I'm disappointed at Channel Ten's decision to remove me from Australian Idol. I have truly loved being a part of the show." Network Ten had held crisis talks with advertisers in the days prior to his firing amid concerns Sandilands would damage their brands. Idol creator
Simon Fuller
reportedly gave Ten his blessing to fire Sandilands. It was believed Sandilands earned $1 million of his estimated annual $2.8 million income from Idol.
[74]
The promotional commercial for the season featured various "Legends". It featured impersonations of Elvis, Madonna, Michael Jackson, the Supremes, Christina Aguilera, and Mariah Carey among others. The Australian Idol hopefuls were featured covering Mariah Carey's "Emotions" as the soundtrack to this commercial.
The 7th season began on 9 August at 6.30 pm. This was the first year that previously rejected contestants could return to audition again. The only ineligible contestants were those who previously made the Top 12/13. Semi-finalists (Top 24/30) had the opportunity to re-audition for the show.
Season 7 was also broadcast in New Zealand, five days after the initial airing in Australia.
[75]
This marked the return of the show to New Zealand screens after a 4-year absence.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Three
|
6 September
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Ashleigh Toole
|
Casey Barnes
|
Tim Johnston
|
13 September
|
Rock
|
Casey Barnes (2)
|
Sabrina Batshon
|
Kim Cooper
|
20 September
|
Top 10 Hits
|
Sabrina Batshon
(2)
|
Kim Cooper (2)
|
Nathan Brake
|
27 September
|
'80s
|
Tim Johnston (2)
|
Scott Newnham
|
4 October
|
Pink
|
Scott Newnham (2)
|
Nathan Brake (2)
|
11 October
|
Big Band
|
Kim Cooper (3)
|
Hayley Warner
|
Kate Cook
|
18 October
|
Movie/Theatre
|
Kate Cook (2)
|
Stan Walker
|
25 October
|
Contestant's Choice
|
Toby Moulton
*
|
Nathan Brake (3)
|
1 November
|
Noughties Week
|
Nathan Brake (4)
|
Hayley Warner
(2)
|
8 November
|
Power Anthems
|
James Johnston
|
15 November
|
Contestant's Choice & Winner's Single
|
|
|
22 November
|
Finale
|
Hayley Warner
(3)
|
Stan Walker
(1)
|
|
*
Toby Moulton withdrew hence keeping original eliminee in the competition.
Season 8
[
edit
]
In November 2020, the
Seven Network
announced that the show would be revived in early 2022, 13 years since it last aired. However, the revival was delayed to 2023.
On 28 September 2022,
Ricki-Lee Coulter
and
Scott Tweedie
were announced as the new hosts.
Harry Connick Jr.
alongside
Amy Shark
,
Meghan Trainor
and
Kyle Sandilands
were announced as the judging panel for the revived series. On 24 October 2022,
Marcia Hines
was announced as a guest judge for the season.
Filming for the auditions took place in October 2022 in Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, and the Gold Coast. Filming for the top 50 took place at the
Sydney Coliseum Theatre
.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Four
|
27 February
|
Global Number One Hits
|
Jasey Fox
|
Maya Weiss
|
Ben Sheehy
|
Noora H
|
5 March
|
Judges' Song Contest
|
Sash Seabourne
|
Harry Hayden
|
Ben Sheehy (2)
|
Anya Hynninen
|
12 March
|
Heroes & Tributes
|
Noora H (2)
|
Angelina Curtis
|
Amali Dimond
|
Phoebe Stewart
|
19 March*
|
Viewers' Choice
|
Anya Hynninen
|
Ben Sheehy (3)
|
Amali Dimond
|
Royston Sagigi-Baira
|
Phoebe Stewart
|
Josh Hannan
|
26 March
|
Grand Finale
|
Phoebe Stewart
|
Royston Sagigi-Baira
|
- 19 March - all singers were up for elimination that week.
Season 9
[
edit
]
In June 2023, Seven confirmed Australian Idol would return for a ninth season in 2024.
Ricki-Lee Coulter
and
Scott Tweedie
were announced as the returning hosts.
Harry Connick Jr.
and
Meghan Trainor
will not return as judges.
Amy Shark
and
Kyle Sandilands
were confirmed as returning judges from the previous season. It was also confirmed that
Marcia Hines
will return as a main judge for the series, after being a member of the original seven seasons of the show. On March 24,
Guy Sebastian
temporarily filled in for Hines, who was sent to hospital after collapsing, but returned for results night.
Filming for the auditions took place in October 2023.
Date
|
Theme
|
Bottom Four
|
27 February
|
Party Anthems
|
Imogen Spendlove
|
Ripley Alexander
|
TJ Zimba
|
Ivana Illic
|
5 March
|
Judges’ Choice
|
TJ Zimba (2)
|
Tyler Hammill
|
Kiani Smith
|
Ivana Illic (2)
|
11 March
|
Public’s Choice
|
Drea Onamade
|
Kiani Smith (2)
|
Dylan Wright
|
Denvah Baker-Moller
|
18 March*
|
Viewers' Choice
|
Ivana Illic (3)
|
Issac McCallum
|
Trent Richardson
|
Dylan Wright (2)
|
Amy Reeves
|
Denvah Baker-Moller (2)
|
25 March
|
Grand Finale: Aussie Classics
|
Denvah Baker-Moller (3)
|
Amy Reeves (2)
|
Dylan Wright (3)
|
- 18 March - all singers were up for elimination that week.
Controversies
[
edit
]
After a performance, judge Ian "Dicko" Dickson told
Paulini Curuenavuli
that to wear the dress she had chosen she would need to "shed some pounds". This caused outrage and heated debate. The TV show
20 to 1
named the controversy in an episode of its show titled "Aussie Scandals". Kyle Sandilands claimed that 2005 winner,
Kate DeAraugo
, had "tuck-shop arms".
Hillsong voting claims
[
edit
]
In October 2007, criticism was levelled at the fairness of the program's telephone voting system, where 50% of the remaining contestants were stated by the media to be members of the
Hillsong Church
. The 50% of remaining contestants dispute was put to rest- when Daniel and Ben both said they did not have any affiliations with the Assemblies of God,
[76]
[77]
and raising concerns of vote-stacking by the church congregation.
Revenue generation
[
edit
]
In October 2017, reporter Neil Wooldridge stated that although the producers are coy about how much was being made from SMS promotions that "some commentators estimate Telstra and Network Ten, partners in the 'Australian Idol' program, made up to $900,000 profit each episode."
In 2003, it was estimated that viewers cast 20 million votes. At 55 cents for each telephone call or text message, that equated to $11 million.
[78]
Network Ten paid around $13 million for each season.
[
citation needed
]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
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. 14 December 2016.
- ^
a
b
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.
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. Retrieved
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.
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,
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, 8 January 2010
- ^
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ARIA Charts - Accreditations - 2012 Albums
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b
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Archived
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Guy Sebastian Equals Abba For Number 1 Hits In Australia
. Noise11. Archived from
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b
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b
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.Charts.org.NZ. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
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.
Recording Industry Association of New Zealand
(RIANZ). Retrieved 17 September 2012.
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.aCharts.US. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
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.
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.
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. Retrieved
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. Tonlist. Archived from
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. Australian Recording Industry Association. 28 September 2010. Archived from
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.
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.
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.
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.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
Seasons
| |
---|
Winners
| |
---|
Winners' singles
| |
---|
Runners-up
| |
---|
Notable contestants
| |
---|
Other personalities
| |
---|
Related articles
| |
---|
|
---|
|
Main franchise
| Africa
| |
---|
Americas
| |
---|
Asia-Pacific
| |
---|
Europe
| |
---|
Middle East
|
- Arab League
- Iraq
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|
---|
|
---|
Junior franchise
| Americas
| |
---|
Asia-Pacific
| |
---|
Europe
| |
---|
|
---|
Specials
| |
---|
|
---|
Primetime
| | |
---|
Daytime
|
- The Chase Australia
(since 2015)
- The House of Wellness
(since 2017)
- Melbourne Weekender
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