It takes three to make a thing go wrong, apparently — at least when it
comes to "The X Factor USA." After three seasons of diminishing
returns/ratings/record sales, the fledgling Fox singing show has
officially been canceled, or, as Fox's press release words it, has "completed its domestic run."
Yes,
producer/judge Simon Cowell has tried to put a positive spin on all
this: It was announced with great fanfare Friday that he's returning to
the judges' table at "The X Factor U.K.," a far more successful series
that has spawned actual superstars like Leona Lewis and 2013's
top-selling British act, One Direction. With a full schedule in England
(not to mention a
baby on the way), he can now conveniently explain that he simply doesn't have time to simultaneously helm an American version of the show.
But let's face it, long ago, even before Season 1 of "The X Factor
USA" debuted in September 2011, there were signs that the show was
headed in, shall we say, one direction: downward. What went wrong? Oh,
lots of things. Here's a handy timeline…
That time when Simon hired Paula Abdul.
Longtime "American Idol" fans rejoiced when they learned that "Idol's"
original buddy act would reunite on "The X Factor." But somehow, that
old chemistry wasn't there anymore. And when Paula lost all of her
contestants very early on in the live shows, it was clear that her
involvement just wasn't going to work out.
That time when Cheryl Cole was fired after only two weeks.
Cheryl was already a national treasure over in Britain, due to her
tenures in pop group Girls Aloud and as a judge on "The X Factor U.K."
And Simon reportedly lobbied hard to have her judge the U.S. version of
the show. But after only a few audition tapings, she was unceremoniously
sacked. Was it because producers were worried that her thick Geordie
accent would be difficult to understand? Was it due to her rumored lack
of camaraderie with Paula? Whatever the reason, her sudden firing
indicated that even early on, there was chaos behind the scenes of this
show.
That time when Simon hired host Steve Jones. Steve, a
former underwear model, was easy on the eyes, but he sure had a hard
time dealing with the pressures of live TV. He often seemed so concerned
with preventing the show from running long and preempting "Bones" that
he came across as utterly un-empathetic, almost autistically unable to
get an emotional gauge on certain onstage situations. And on a show with
many young, sensitive contestants who needed to be handled with care
(more on that later), this quickly became an image problem.
That time when Nicole Scherzinger took Cheryl Cole's place.
The Pussycat Doll was originally tapped to co-host the show with Steve,
but was enlisted at the last minute to fill Cheryl's vacant seat. She
proceeded to be a rather useless judge and an even worse mentor (
remember that time she put Josh Krajcik in a cage? surrounded by firedancers?),
and when her unwillingness to make a decision on one controversial
results show led to the shocking elimination of sobbing tween Rachel
Crow, she temporarily became the most loathed woman on American
television. Soon, Simon was shipping Nicole over to the U.K. series,
where she fared much better.
That time when Fox bizarrely dissed "American Idol."
Simon became a household name thanks to his nine seasons on "Idol," so
when the first Fox promo for "The X Factor" aired in July 2011 and it
was basically a 180-second "Idol" smear campaign, that seemed rather
ungracious. And the fact that Fox, the same network that broadcasts
"Idol," would allow such a spot to run just seemed ludicrous.
That time when Simon told The Hollywood Reporter that an audience of less than 20 million would be a "disappointment."
Simon was never able to live this one down. "The X Factor's" series
premiere only drew 13 million. And by Season 3, he would have been
thrilled with 13 million, since the show's audience was now about half of that. Ouch.
That time when the show failed to mention Stacy Francis's professional past. Over the course of Season 1, the fortysomething single mom went from being America's sweetheart to
America's most hated,
when her professional past (a stint in the Warner Bros. R&B girl
group Ex-Girlfriend, appearances in various Broadway and West End
musicals) was "outed" by anti-fansite Vote for the Worst, and later by
Radar Online and Perez Hilton. Of course, none of these gossip sites
actually exposed anything that couldn't be easily uncovered via a
regular query on YouTube, Wikipedia, or IMDB. But the inflammatory
articles still elicited public outrage over the show's lack of
transparency, and this definitely hurt the former frontrunner's chances
as well as the series' overall credibility. Sadly, producers didn't
learn from this incident, and the same thing
happened all over again with Season 3's Lillie McCloud.
That time when Melanie Amaro's album never came out. The Season 1 winner's debut disc,
Truly,
was initially slated for a December 2012 release. December came and
went. Then it was supposed to come out in March 2013. It didn't. Now the
album has been shelved indefinitely, probably permanently, after her
two singles failed to chart. For a show based entirely on the premise of
launching superstar careers, this was an inauspicious start.
That time when Simon thought hiring Britney Spears would solve everything.
Following Simon's mass firing spree at the end of Season 1, Fox paid
Brit Brit a whopping $15 million to judge Season 2. I'd say she laughed
all the way to bank, but that would be an inappropriate turn of phrase,
considering how completely un-emotive she was on the show. All Britney
brought to the judges' table was her name and her fame. Her glassy-eyed
demeanor, limited vocabulary ("amazing" was really her only go-to
adjective), lack of spontaneity, and even greater lack of interest in
her own contestants undoubtedly contributed to the series'
sophomore-season slump.
That time when Khloe Kardashian was hired to co-host.
Khloe was a better host than Steve Jones, but she was still totally out
of her depth trying to present on live television. Her most annoying
quality was her tendency to shout every word with about as much
voice-modulation control as
Will Ferrell's "SNL" character Jacob Silj,
seemingly unaware that a hot microphone was only about half an inch
away from her lips. It was like her teleprompter dialogue was written in
ALL CAPS or something. Apparently spending the past few years of her
life with a mic-pack strapped to her back, on her various E! reality
shows, in no way prepared Khloe for a job that involved operating an
actual microphone. She was not asked to return for Season 3...but Season
2 fourth-placers
Emblem3 did write a song about her.
That time when there was crying in baseball.
It was never a good idea to try to schedule this show around the World
Series. One night during the Judges' House rounds, a rained-out baseball
game delayed, then suddenly interrupted, and then totally preempted,
one the most important episodes of Season 2: the reveal of the top 16
contestants. Midway through the show came the announcement that the rest
of the episode would instead air NEXT Tuesday (up against "The Voice").
Meanwhile, the episode still aired in its entirety on Canada's CTV,
making spoilers impossible to avoid. Season 2 never really recovered.
That time when L.A. Reid quit. Despite
his impressive résumé as the co-founder of LaFace Records and
chairman/CEO of the Island Def Jam Music Group, L.A. never brought much
to "The X Factor" except a bad attitude. Most of the time he looked like
he'd rather be sitting in a dentist's chair than behind the judging
desk, and that showed in his rude interactions with both the contestants
and his fellow judges. But anyway, while no one seemed to miss him
after he quit at the end of Season 2, his decision did seem like an
attempt to hop off a sinking ship.
That time when Tate Stevens's album totally tanked. Season 2's winner actually got to release an album, but it went largely unnoticed, stalling at number 18 on the Billboard
album chart and selling only about 45,000 copies to date. Tate wasn't
ever invited back to "The X Factor" to perform — something even Melanie
Amaro got to do once.
That time when Simon hired Paulina Rubio.
Paulina just may have been the worst judge in reality TV history. She
made even Nicole Scherzinger and Britney Spears look astute. Her lowest
moment? When she announced that her contestant "Carlito Olivero" was in
the bottom two…when she really meant to say "Josh Levi." Those names
sound nothing alike. The contestants looked nothing alike. Was she even
watching her own show?
That time when the contestants were forced to play the Hunger Games. In Season 3, with the Judges' Houses segment unexpectedly canceled, the top 40 singers faced a new round…the (cue ominous music)…FOUR-CHAIR
CHALLENGE. The semifinalists performed on a scary X-shaped stage in
front of an unruly crowd of egged-on spectators who seemed like they
belonged in the audience at a UFC match, and it was basically the most un-fun game of musical chairs ever.
That time when Demi Lovato gave her heart a break...and quit the show.
At first, Simon and the youngest judge's big brother/bratty little
sister act was cute. But by the end of Season 3 (a season that featured
Simon making a
joke about cutting
right in front of Demi, despite her history of self-harm), it was
obvious that they kind of hated each other. Demi's send-off, after
turning in her resignation towards the end of Season 3? A nasty finale
skit about her addiction to "Annoying Juice" that was probably
ill-advised since, you know, she's been to rehab and is sober now. Demi
did not seem amused.
All is not lost for the "X Factor" franchise, however. Talented Season 3 winners Alex & Sierra are currently
working with John Legend on their debut album, and Season 2 finalists Fifth Harmony are doing well, touring with Demi Lovato and
partnering with Barbie.
And of course, there's always "The X Factor U.K.," where Simon may find
the next One Direction or Cher Lloyd when he returns to that show in
the fall.
But when fall comes around, there
will sadly be no "X Factor" for singing-show fanatics on this side of
the pond. I guess they'll have to watch "The Voice" instead.
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