Australian Idol is a Logie Award-winning Australian singing competition, which began its first season on July 27, 2003. Part of the Idol franchise, it originated from the reality program Pop Idol created by British entertainment executive Simon Fuller. Australian Idol is televised on Channel 10, and the Austereo Radio Network.
The program seeks to discover the most commercial young singer in the country through a series of nationwide auditions. The outcomes of the later stages of this competition are determined by public voting by phone. The format features three judges who give critiques of the contestants' performances in order to facilitate the voting: former record executive Ian Dickson; singer Marcia Hines; and radio presenter Kyle Sandilands. The show is hosted by Andrew G, James Mathison and former contestant Ricki-Lee Coulter as a backstage. The show airs on Sunday and Monday nights in Australia. In its five seasons, its five winners have been, in order of their season, Guy Sebastian, Casey Donovan, Kate DeAraugo, Damien Leith, and Natalie Gauci. The runners-up have been Shannon Noll, Anthony Callea, Emily Williams, Jessica Mauboy, and Matt Corby. The most successful contestants on sales, have been Sebastian, Noll and Leith respectively.
During auditions contestants perform a song of their choice before all three judges who then respond with either criticism or praise followed by a yes or no vote as to whether the contestant has been accepted. Contestants will only be accepted if at least two of the judges voted yes. Over the show's six year history there have been 185,000 people audition. Season 1 - 10,000 Season 2 - 50,000 Season 3 - 25,000 Season 4 - 25,000 Season 5 - 35,000 Season 6 - 40,000
At the beginning of an elimination show the remaining idols also take part in a group performance that relates to the previous night's theme. Then the contestants with the three lowest amounts of votes are taken into the 'bottom three', before being told first who is safe for another week and finally who has been eliminated. The eliminated competitor then presents a final song - usually the number they sang the previous night.
The final originally followed by a national tour involving at least the top twelve contestants, but from following the 2007 season, there will be a "Winners Journey Tour" involving the winner with some guest performances from the Top 12.
Even though Mark Holden does not appear in Season 6, touchdowns have been given to contestants by the other judges. Kyle Sandilands awarded a touchdown to Chrislyn Hamilton in the Top 12 for her rendition of Aretha Franklin's Think. Marcia Hines awarded a touchdown to Than Bui's performance of The Winner Takes it All in the Top 9.
The eventual winner of the competition was Guy Sebastian. He beat Shannon Noll who finished in 2nd place, Cosima De Vito who came in 3rd place, Paulini Curuenavuli who came in 4th place & Rob Mills who finished in 5th place. After Idol, it was these five, the Final 5, who were the most successful out of the Top 12.
Other Idol contestants from Season 1 to release music were Levi Kereama, Rebekah LaVauney, Peter Ryan and Courtney Act. All of these independent acts achieved limited success.
The winner was Casey Donovan. Runner up Anthony Callea (2nd), Courtney Murphy (3rd), Hayley Jensen (4th) & Chanel Cole (5th). The final 2, as well as Ricki-Lee Coulter (7th), were the only contestants of the Top 12 to score hits, with Anthony ending up the highest seller out of the three and holds the record of the highest and fast selling single by an Australian artist ever with his first release of The Prayer. Chanel Cole and Daniel Belle teamed up under the label Spook to release an album in October 2005, and a bootleg album for Chanel was also released in November 2005. Ngaiire Joseph (Top 30 contestant) and Marty Worrall released a single each in late 2005, and Hayley Jensen released an album in September 2007. Dan O'Connor also got a gig on Neighbours
For this second series of Idol, the Grand Finale remains the highest rated Idol show in the whole 5 series.
On a darker note, Telstra, a major sponsor of the series, made an embarrassing error when they issued a series of half-page advertisements in major newspapers congratulating Donovan on her victory, with a reference to her website. However, the address was incorrect, leading to a website about gay porn star Casey Donovan, rather than the singer's. The company issued a prompt apology upon realising their mistake.
After this season, judge Ian Dickson bowed out of the series, later to appear in the Seven Network reality TV shows My Restaurant Rules, Dancing with the Stars and most recently, Australian Celebrity Survivor. The 2004 season was also notable for an Asian contestant named "Flynn", who sang the Freestylers song "Push Up" after being found from a terrible audition, in the same vein as William Hung.
On November 21 2005 the winner was announced and it was Kate DeAraugo. Kate was an outside chance to win throughout the whole season and after the show had ended Kate released a #1 single, a platinum selling album and a further Top 10 hit single through Sony BMG. Kate is currently working with all girl group Young Divas which is madeup of past Idol contestants which include Paulini Curuenavuli, Jessica Mauboy and Emily Williams. Runner up Emily Williams lost by 1% in the closest percentage ever in an Idol finale. She was originally signed to Sony BMG as a solo artist, but the agreement fell through. She is also a member of Young Divas and has had much success with them. Lee Harding finished in third position and was signed to Sony BMG and released a # 1 single and a platinum selling album. His second single from his debut album proved to be less successful and in mid 2006 Harding was released from his contract with the label. He is currently touring and performing with Bedrock. Dan England came 4th and didn't score a recording contract with a major label but recorded several independent releases and has toured with Season 2 winner Casey Donovan and Season 1 Runner Up Shannon Noll. Anne Robertson who finished in sixth position was negotiating a deal with Sony BMG, but it was rumoured that Sony BMG was reluctant in signing her as they believed she was too similar to Season 1 contestant Paulini Curuenavuli who had been signed to the label for several years. Other Idol contestants from Season 3 have released numerous independent material and have toured and performed with several bands and music groups.
Although averaging around the 1.5 million viewer mark, ratings were down by up to 40% on average during the third season compared to the first two seasons, which regularly drew more than 2.5 million viewers during the latter half of the competition. This created a serious situation for Ten, which was airing three Australian Idol shows every week at the time, and forced them to give away free commercial airtime to program sponsors expecting higher ratings. Commentators has theorised over the reasons why this has occurred, ranging from the viewing public being tired of the format due to Sandilands replacing the popular Dickson. This caused a major Idol revamp for Season 4 which meant Season 4 being one of the highest rating seasons yet.
Damien Leith was named the winner of Australian Idol 2006 on November 26th, beating Jessica Mauboy for the title. Leith is the third most successful selling Australian Idol contestant with 385,000 units, closely behind Guy Sebastian and Shannon Noll. He has achieved two #1 selling albums, The Winner's Journey which sold 4x Platinum and Where We Land which made Platinum certification. His third studio album Catch the Wind: Songs of a Generation peaked at #2, reaching gold status. His first single, Night of My Life stayed at #1 for four consecutive weeks and was certified Platinum after one week of sales. It was the fastest selling debut single for 2006, and was the most added song to radio. Leith also won 5 Australian Recording Industry Association Awards including Highest Selling Album of 2007. He has also released a novel titled One More Time and hosted Network Ten's heart-warming television series "Saving Kids". Third place getter Dean Geyer later released his debut album 'Rush' and top ten single 'If You Don't Mean It' and currently stars on the Australian long-time running soap Neighbours. Jessica Mauboy went on to join ex-Idol girl group Young Divas, after member from season 2, Ricki-Lee Coulter, left the group. Mauboy is set to release her first solo single in September 2008 and debut album later in October 2008.
In 2003 it is estimated that viewers cast 20 million votes for their favourite Australian Idol contestant. At 55 cents for each telephone call or text message, that equates to $11 million even before advertising revenue. In Season 2 it is estimated that 29 million votes were cast making $16 million. Season 3 saw a slight drop with 18 million votes cast making $10 million. In Season 4 26 million were cast making $14.3 million and in Season 5, 22 million were cast making $12.2 million. Network Ten pay around $13 million for each season.
| Idol Contestant Total Sales | Debut Album | Second Album | Third Album | Fourth Album | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Guy Sebastian (Season 1, Winner) 770,000 | Just As I Am (15 December 2003) Sony BMG 420,000 6x Platinum Peak: #1 | Beautiful Life (18 October 2004) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #2 | Closer To The Sun (28 October 2006) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #4 | The Memphis Album (10 November 2007) Sony BMG 210,000 3x Platinum Peak: #3 | |
| 2. | Shannon Noll (Season 1, Runner-Up) 630,000 | That's What I'm Talking About (8 February 2004) Sony BMG 350,000 5x Platinum Peak:#1 | Lift (16 October 2005) Sony BMG 210,000 3x Platinum Peak: #1 | Turn It Up (15 September 2007) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #3 | ||
| 3. | Damien Leith (Season 4, Winner) 385,000 | The Winner's Journey (9 December 2006) Sony BMG 280,000 4x Platinum Peak: #1 | Where We Land (18 August 2007) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #1 | Catch the Wind: Songs of a Generation (26 April 2008) Sony BMG 35,000 Gold Peak: #2 | ||
| 4. | Casey Donovan (Season 2, Winner) 210,000 | For You (13 December 2004) Sony BMG 210,000 3x Platinum Peak: #2 | ||||
| 5. | Anthony Callea (Season 2, Runner-Up) 175,000 | Anthony Callea (25 March 2005) Sony BMG 140,000 2x Platinum Peak: #1 | A New Chapter (25 November 2006) Sony BMG 35,000 Gold Peak: #9 | |||
| 5. | Young Divas (Group of previous Idol Contestants; Kate DeAraugo, Emily Williams, Paulini Curuenavuli, Jessica Mauboy, Ricki-Lee Coulter) 175,000 | Young Divas (18 November 2006) Sony BMG 140,000 2x Platinum Peak: #4 | New Attitude (24 November 2007) Sony BMG 35,000 Gold Peak: #10 | |||
| 6. | Paulini Curuenavuli (Season 1, 4th Place) 80,000 | One Determined Heart (23 July 2004) Columbia Records 70,000 Platinum Peak: #1 | Superwoman (5 August 2006) Columbia RecordsN/A Peak: #72 | |||
| 7. | Kate DeAraugo (Season 3, Winner) 70,000 | A Place I've Never Been (12 December 2005) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #10 | ||||
| 7. | Natalie Gauci (Season 5, Winner) 70,000 | The Winner's Journey (8 December 2007) Sony BMG 70,000 Platinum Peak: #11 | ||||
| 7. | Ricki-Lee Coulter (Season 2, 7th Place) 70,000 | Ricki-Lee (3 October 2005) Shock RecordsGold Peak: #30 | Brand New Day (11 August 2007) Public Opinion 35,000 Gold Peak: #37 | |||
| 8. | Jessica Mauboy (Season 4, Runner-Up) 50,000 | The Journey (24 February 2007) Sony BMG 50,000 Gold Peak: #4 | Been Waiting (October 2008) Sony BMG | |||
| 8. | Cosima De Vito (Season 1, 3rd Place) 50,000 | Cosima (11 October 2004) CDV RecordsGold Peak: #2 | This Is Now (29 September 2007) IndependentN/A Peak: Did Not Chart | |||
| 9. | Lee Harding (Season 3, 3rd Place) 35,000 | What's Wrong with This Picture? (20 February 2006) Sony BMG 35,000 Gold Peak: #3 |
| Year | Idol Contestant | Single | Peak position | Weeks in Charts | Album | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | Guy Sebastian | "Angels Brought Me Here" | #1 | 12 | Just as I Am | 4x Platinum |
| 2003 | Guy Sebastian | "All I Need Is You" | #1 | 12 | Just as I Am | Platinum |
| 2004 | Shannon Noll | "What About Me" | #1 | 20 | That's What I'm Talking About | 4x Platinum |
| 2004 | Paulini | "Angel Eyes" | #1 | 26 | One Determined Heart | Platinum |
| 2004 | Shannon Noll | "Learn To Fly" | #1 | 16 | That's What I'm Talking About | Gold |
| 2004 | Guy Sebastian | "Out With My Baby" | #1 | 14 | Beautiful Life | Platinum |
| 2004 | Cosima De Vito | "When the War Is Over" | #1 | 22 | Cosima | Platinum |
| 2004 | Casey Donovan | "Listen With Your Heart" | #1 | 15 | For You | 2x Platinum |
| 2004 | Anthony Callea | "The Prayer" | #1 | 25 | Anthony Callea | 4x Platinum |
| 2004 | Joel Turner | "These Kids" | #1 | 31 | Joel Turner and the Modern Day Poets | Platinum |
| 2005 | Anthony Callea | "Rain/Bridge over Troubled Water" | #1 | 21 | Anthony Callea | 2x Platinum |
| 2005 | Shannon Noll | "Shine" | #1 | 27 | Lift | Platinum |
| 2005 | Kate DeAraugo | "Maybe Tonight" | #1 | 21 | A Place I've Never Been | Platinum |
| 2005 | Lee Harding | "Wasabi" | #1 | 27 | What's Wrong With This Picture? | Platinum |
| 2006 | Damien Leith | "Night Of My Life" | #1 | 22 | The Winners Journey | 2x Platinum |
Idol Backstage comprised roughly one commercial half-hour per week (22-24 minutes) over four episodes. There were 54 episodes in total, with additional content available on mobile phones and on BigPond's Idol Backstage Online website.
During the 2006 production of Idol Backstage, total Idol web video downloads reached a record 2.5 million. Traffic to the Idol website increased 40% on the previous year with more than 26 million page impressions, and Australian Idol became the most popular television program website in the country.