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Jennifer Lopez Leaving 'American Idol'
News comes a day after Steven Tyler announces his
departure from the show
Her representative, Mark Young, said Friday that Lopez is ending her time on
television's most popular show after two years. Aerosmith singer Steven Tyler
said the same thing on Thursday.
Lopez broke the news to "Idol" host Ryan Seacrest on his radio show.
"I really was dreading this phone call with you," she told him. "I honestly
feel like the time has come that I have to get back to doing the other things
that I do that I've put kind of on hold because I love 'Idol' so much."
That means the show's judging panel is down to one, Randy Jackson, and there are reports
that he may take a different role on the program moving forward.
It's an adolescent identity crisis for "American Idol," which has been TV's
most popular program for nearly a decade. Ratings for the FOX show have declined
as TV's talent show field has grown more competitive.
When the show returns for its 12th season next January, it will have to be a
re-engineered version of the once-powerhouse series that turned hopefuls such as
Jennifer Hudson into stars and gave
network rivals fits.
Tyler started the exodus with his announcement Thursday that he was putting
rock 'n' roll ahead of the show that he said had been "over-the-top fun."
"I strayed from my first love, Aerosmith, and I'm back — but instead of
begging on my hands and knees, I got two fists in the air and I'm kicking the
door open with my band," Tyler said in a statement. Aerosmith are on a
nationwide tour with Tyler and have an album due out in the fall.
In a phone interview Thursday with The Associated Press as the news about
Tyler broke, Lopez had said she was saddened to hear that Tyler was leaving and
that his departure would play a role in her decision.
"I can't even imagine anyone else there right now because I've just spent two
years sitting next to him," she said. "I love Steven, and we became close during
that time. We were a great support for each other, on an adventure that neither
one of us knew what it was going to be. So it's hard to hear that he won't be
doing it."
Jackson and his "dawg!" exclamations have been a stalwart part of "Idol." But
the show's multi-year contracts, such as the one Jackson signed, typically
include an escape clause that the network can choose to exercise or not.
A call to Jackson's representative was not returned. FOX declined to make an
executive available to discuss the show and its judges, but one expressed
measured regret over Tyler's decision in a statement.
"We are very sad that Steven has chosen to focus more on his music, but we
always knew when we hired a rock 'n' roll legend, he would go back to his
music," said Mike Darnell, the network's president of alternative
entertainment.
Speculation about potential new panelists has focused on Mariah Carey, with former "Idol"
runner-up Adam Lambert getting a shout-out from
his fans. Much is at stake for the show and for its judges: Lopez's contract
reportedly was worth $12 million and the stint proved a career-booster for
her.
Seacrest, the other original cast member, will provide a stable center. He
signed a two-year contract with "American Idol" producers this spring to
continue as host.
The FOX series, which began with Jackson, Simon Cowell and Paula Abdul as
judges, has made changes on the panel over the years. Ellen DeGeneres joined one
season, and songwriter Kara DioGuardi was added as a fourth judge to work with
Jackson, Cowell and Abdul.
The addition of Tyler and Lopez two years ago added fresh star power, and the
pair and Jackson clicked on-camera.
But "American Idol" ended up in a vulnerable position, coming off a May
finale that drew 21.5 million viewers as Phillip Phillips was crowned the newest
winner.
It was a record-low finish and followed a pattern of declining viewership for
the once-inevitably top-rated series, not to mention a pattern of "white guys
with guitars," as fans describe the show's recent string of similar winners.
The series ended the 2011-12 season as No. 2 with an average 20 million
viewers for the Wednesday performance episodes, just edging third-place "CSI" on
CBS (19.7 million) and ABC's top-rated "Sunday Night Football" (20.7
million).
"Idol" still rules among the most-watched talent shows, topping ABC's "Dancing With the Stars"
and NBC's "The Voice." But the FOX
show is fighting to keep advertiser-favored young viewers, with "The Voice"
nearly equaling its audience among adults 18 to 49.
FOX, which from the start has protected "Idol" by programming it just once a
year, has now diluted its uniqueness with a family competitor, Cowell's "The X
Factor," which debuted last fall. After a disappointing start, the show
underwent its own judging shake-up to add Demi Lovato and Britney Spears.
"American Idol" hasn't been helped by a run of champions who have failed to
achieve the career sizzle of Hudson, Carrie Underwood or Kelly Clarkson.
The winner, however, ultimately is up to the audience. The judges are in the
network's and producers' control, and their next moves are critical
ones.