American Idol's New judge: Mariah Carey
BEVERLY
HILLS, Calif. (AP) — Mariah Carey will join "American Idol" as a judge
next season, Fox announced Monday, bringing her star power to the show
that remains a ratings leader but has seen its viewership and pop
culture status diminish.
"I am so excited to be joining 'Idol,'"
said Carey, addressing the Television Critics Association via Fox
entertainment chief Kevin Reilly's cell phone, which he put on speaker
for the hotel ballroom meeting.
She couldn't be on hand with the
group because "this kind of all just happened really quickly," Carey
said in her brief remarks. "I can't wait to get started in the fall.
.... and I will see you in January."
The show, which saw judges
Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez exit at the end of last season, will be
back on the air for season 12 in January.
Reilly called Carey "the
biggest recording artist that any of these (talent) shows has ever
had," adding that she was the "artist that many of these contestants
have tried to emulate, have tried some of the songs, have tried to hit
the notes."
Playing the drama up, Reilly dialed Carey's number and put her on speaker.
"Hi Mariah. How are you? It's Kevin," he said. "We do have the deal, don't we?"
"Yes!" Carey replied.
Reilly
said he was "thrilled" to confirm reports that Carey was being courted
by Fox and said the deal was freshly signed within the last few hours.
The
exit of Tyler and Lopez left original judge Randy Jackson and started a
guessing game about potential replacements, with Carey at the top of
the list.
As one of music's best-selling singers, she could
provide the clout "American Idol" needs to compete in an increasingly
crowded talent show field. Besides Fox sibling "The X Factor," which
recently added Britney Spears and Demi Lovato as judges, there's NBC's
"The Voice," which boasts Christina Aguilera among its big names.
"Not
being the only game in town now, we need to keep things fresh," Reilly
said. The search is on for a third judge, and he promised another
impressive pick. It could a star or someone like music executive and
"Idol" mentor Jimmy Iovine, who wasn't a household name when he joined,
Reilly said. But, he added, after 12 seasons "we need to have something
to talk about."
"We have the biggest names in the business, like
Mariah Carey, interested in doing this ... so for the next couple of
weeks it will be a matter of picking the right one, with the right
chemistry, making the deal, and finalizing this," he said.
Jackson's
value to the show was enhanced by Carey's signing, although Fox has yet
to say whether he'll judge next season. Ryan Seacrest will be back as
host.
"I can't confirm and don't want to talk about anyone" else
on the show, Reilly said. But he added that Jackson "has been working
with Mariah and is in fact her co-manager, and Randy was very
instrumental in doing this deal."
The series ended the 2011-12
season as the leading entertainment show and No. 2 overall, just behind
NBC's top-rated "Sunday Night Football."
But the
advertiser-favored young adult audience has been steadily shrinking, and
the show's cachet hasn't been helped by a run of champions who have
failed to achieve the career sizzle of past competitors Jennifer Hudson,
Carrie Underwood or Kelly Clarkson.
Earlier Monday, veteran
"Idol" executive producer Nigel Lythgoe said there's a slender
possibility that Lopez might return. His reasoning: Since she told
Seacrest she was 99 percent sure she was leaving, that means there's a 1
percent chance she won't, Lythgoe said.
He said he hoped that was
the case, although Lythgoe also told the critics' annual summer meeting
that he thought the show should be freshened each season with new
judges.
But Lopez's representative confirmed again on Monday that
she's leaving "American Idol." She originally made the announcement July
13, a day after Tyler said he was leaving.
Reilly also downplayed Lythgoe's remarks, saying lightly there was a "99 percent" chance Lopez wasn't returning.
"We
came to a mutual decision with Jennifer and Steven," he said, calling
it a "great experience with both of them. Creatively, we were all
happy."
But it was decided "it was the time for a change," Reilly said.
Lythgoe said his own contract is under negotiation, declining to comment further.
___
AP
Television Writer Frazier Moore and AP Global Entertainment and
Lifestyles Editor Nekesa Moody in New York contributed to this report.
Online:
http://www.fox.com
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