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Lack of ‘Idol’ vote information frustrates fans

But will viewers still call in if they know one candidate is far ahead?

Fox
On the show where Elliott Yamin was eliminated, "American Idol" host Ryan Seacrest revealed the vote percentages for each singer, and said they were very close. Some want the vote totals to be revealed each week, others think it would give too much away.
COMMENTARY
By Andy Dehnart
MSNBC contributor
updated 11:05 a.m. ET May 23, 2006

As three “American Idol 5” contestants became two last week, the show’s host did something he rarely does: Ryan Seacrest revealed how many votes each contestant received.

Well, sort of: While he didn’t mention the specific number of votes, he did show the exact percentage difference between each of the final three competitors. Earlier, he said that a record 50 million votes had been cast the night before, and immediately viewers everywhere pulled out calculators to do the math and discover the vote totals.

The percentages alone were stunning because they were so close. Elliott Yamin, who was eliminated, received 33.06 percent of the votes cast, while the top vote-getter (who wasn’t named) received 33.68 percent of all the votes cast. Doing the math, that’s a difference of 310,000 votes between the most and least popular performers.

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Of course, the idea the show received exactly 50 million votes is about as likely as Paula Abdul having actual Coca-Cola in her red cup on the judges’ table. Still, that number plus the percentages were more information than “American Idol” usually provides.

And that is profoundly frustrating. Except for revealing the two or three contestants who received the fewest number of votes each week, the producers generally refuse to identify the results of each week’s vote. Sometimes Seacrest doesn’t even say how many votes were cast the previous evening.

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May 23: Katie Couric reports on whether fans will choose Katharine McPhee or Taylor Hicks as the next "American Idol."

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As a result, some viewers come up with elaborate theories to explain why their favorite “Idol” contestant was eliminated. If someone calls to vote for their favorite Idol and hears heavy breathing instead of a “thank you,” it’s a safe bet that they’ll start a Web site about a conspiracy instead of blaming their own inability to dial 11 numbers correctly.

Do viewers really want surprise spoiled?
Other, more rational fans try to figure out the results on their own. This season, a Web site and software application called DialIdol was born to do just that. Jim Hellriegel’s program dials the phone numbers for its users based on their voting preferences, and then sends data about the number of busy signals back to the Web site.

That results in (nearly always accurate) predictions about who’s going home. The site correctly predicted, for example, that Chris Daughtry would leave the competition, and thus his elimination was not a surprise to those who follow its predictions.

DialIdol’s accuracy was apparently so threatening to the show that its production company, FremantleMedia, ordered Hellriegel to cease and desist earlier this season. After making some cosmetic changes such as removing the show’s official logo, DialIdol relaunched and hasn’t faced problems since.

All of this would be unnecessary if FOX and the show’s producers would just reveal the exact vote totals every Wednesday night. Is knowing how people voted really that much of a threat to the show? Actually, it is.

According to DialIdol’s statistics, Taylor Hicks has had a commanding lead since the top 12 finalists were named, and has received the most votes every single week, although a few weeks the second-most popular contestant has been somewhat close to Hicks.

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Who Will Win?
May 22: Can silver-haired Taylor beat out his competition, Katharine McPhee? Former contestant Constantine Maroulis gives his opinion.

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Had Ryan Seacrest told viewers starting more than two and a half months ago that Taylor Hicks was going to gyrate his way into the final two, his fans would have been energized but everyone else may have been turned off, especially as he continued to dominate week after week. His victory would have seemed so assured that those who weren’t part of his “Soul Patrol” might have just given up and turned off the TV.

Just as the Kentucky Derby would be kind of boring with one horse running a furlong ahead of the rest, “American Idol” would lose a lot of its appeal if the votes weren’t close and they were revealed every week. In other words, being forthcoming about the number of votes received might just ruin the show.

That would explain why Ryan Seacrest reveals vote totals only when such information helps “American Idol,” as it did last week, when the percentages reportedly indicated that the competition was now anybody’s game.


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