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idolatry: Obsessive analysis of American Idol.

Idol Loves Idol

from: Jody Rosen

What Simon Learned From Imus

Posted Friday, April 20, 2007, at 12:14 PM ET
Sanjaya Malakar. Click image to expand.

Well, now what? Trickster-genius Sanjaya Malakar was finally voted off American Idol, ending a run that began inconspicuously, gathered steam when Antonella Barba was sent back to Jersey, and evolved into a festival of musical camp and fashion-forward hairstyling. Sanjaya played his role with such cheery, pitch-perfect irony, it was easy to forget that he was just a teenager, and a sensitive one at that. But when the results were announced Wednesday night, he collapsed sobbing into the arms of LaKisha. Reader, I cried with him. OK, I didn't—his performance of "Something To Talk About" really was a karaoke nightmare. But I did feel sorry for him, and I'm still mourning Idol's loss. The truth is, the show really needed Sanjaya—in a flat, monochrome season he was a splash of lurid magenta and orange. It'll be boring around here without him.

Simon will definitely be happy, though. He spent a good portion of the results broadcast licking his chops, sensing Sanjaya was about to get the ax. Of course, Simon's giddiness might also have been relief. The first minutes of Wednesday's program were devoted to defending Cowell against charges that he had rolled his eyes the previous evening during Chris Richardson's tribute to the victims of the Virginia Tech massacre. In fact, Simon had been yammering irritably to Paula about Richardson's nasal singing style—a totally legitimate complaint, by the way. In any case, Idol assembled video evidence, which was displayed in a split-screen montage, to prove that while Simon "might not be the nicest guy," he's not, you know, a hateful sociopath indifferent to the fate of slaughtered American college students. It was an extraordinary moment, TV's first major post-Imus rapid-response incident: You could sense that Cowell and the Idol producers feared a huge snowballing backlash if the rumors were allowed to fester unanswered on the Internet for another news cycle.

As for Tuesday's country-night performances, it was more of the same: ho hum. Melinda sang well (shocker). So did Jordin (ditto). Chris Richardson was shrill and nasally. The judges loved Phil Stacey, but I find myself cowering under the sofa pillows whenever he appears on screen. He must be stopped. We learned LaKisha is not the next Carrie Underwood. As for Blake Lewis singing Tim McGraw: Is there anyone on earth less like Tim McGraw than Blake Lewis? A big, rugged guy like McGraw can pull off soppy songs like "When the Stars Go Blue"; his sheer physical presence serves as a counterweight to the song's sentimentality. Little blond Blake in his little argyle Ben Sherman sweaters ain't quite cowboy, and he turned the song into yet another Anglophile emo ballad, a style that's paying diminishing returns for the greater Seattle metroplex's finest white beatboxer. He was in the bottom three this week, and he deserved it. Someone get that kid another Jamiroquai song, STAT.



With Sanjaya gone, our attention must turn to the dispiriting question of who is going to win this year's American Idol. I picked Blake way back when, but now I rate him a long shot. Phil, praise God, should go home next week. LaKisha, the week after. Chris Richardson will get sent packing in the Final Four round, freeing him up to begin dating Nicky, Lindsey, Hillary, et al., not necessarily in that order. Top Three week will be Blake's swan song. Which will leave us with a final of Jordin vs. Melinda: Dull vs. Duller. Jordin is talented and has been getting better every week; she's also very pretty and astonishingly poised, particularly for a girl of just 17. (I really dug her harmony vocals in the group singalong of "I'm Alright.") Melinda is obviously a technically flawless singer, but she has almost zero charisma. (Is there a Dinner Theater Idol?) Still, the smart money is on Doolittle, now as always. I can't help but wonder if Sanjaya would still be in the race if he'd gone with a different hair approach this week. I mean, the red kerchief? The stylists slip, the world weeps.

from: Jody Rosen

What Simon Learned From Imus

Posted Friday, April 20, 2007, at 12:14 PM ET
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Katherine Meizel is a lecturer in ethnomusicology at the University of California-Santa Barbara. She has written extensively on American Idol and the Idol franchise. Jody Rosen is Slate's music critic. He lives in New York City. He can be reached at .
Entry 4: Photograph of Martik Manoukian courtesy Fox Broadcasting Co. Entry 5: Antonella Barba courtesy Fox. Entry 6: Stephanie Edwards by Michael Becker/Fox. Entry 8: Antonella Barba courtesy Fox. Entry 9: Diana Ross by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images. Entry 10: Sanjaya Malakar by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry 11: Sanjaya Malakar with a faux-hawk by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry 12: Sanjaya Malakar by Michael Becker/Fox. Entry 13: Jennifer Lopez by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry 14: Sanjaya Malakar courtesy Fox. Entry 15: Ellen Degeneres by Ray Mickshaw/Fox. Entry 16: Phil Stacey and Ryan Seacrest by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry 17: Melinda Doolittle, Blake Lewis, and Jordin Sparks by Frank Micelotta. Entry 18: Melinda Doolittle by Michael Becker/Fox. Entry 19: Blake Lewis by Michael Becker/Fox. Photograph of Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis on Slate's home page by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry: 22: Jordin Sparks © 2007 Fox Broadcasting. Entry 23: Tony Bennett by Frank Micelotta/Fox. Entry 24: Smokey Robinson by Michael Becker/Fox.
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