For 11 seasons, "American Idol" reigned supreme on
television but they have not been without their missteps - the Corey
Clarke/Paula Abdul debacle, Ellen DeGeneres' odd one season stint, Kara
DioGuardi's ouster from the show, allegations of phone line hacking and
power voting.
However, nothing has quite rattled the show like the addition of judge Nicki Minaj for Season 12.
What
started as an innocent PR move (likely released by someone within the
"Idol" camp) to get some publicity for the aging show, the Mariah
Carey/Nicki fight tape released during the auditions has instead turned
into a nightmare for "Idol." This misfire affected the entire season of
the show, not because it was wrong to release it, but because the two
women involved could never move past their anger toward one another.
The
fact is, if Nicki and Mariah had kissed and made up, the whole thing
would have blown over and the desired effect of the added publicity
would have most likely made people interested in the show. Instead of
moving on and having a great foursome, the tension between the two
ladies drove a wedge between the entire judging panel and set up a
season of uncomfortable, cringe-worthy moments.
Despite
the fact that most of the time Nicki actually does give good critiques,
the show didn't' need Nicki. Randy Jackson on the left side. Mariah in
the middle. Keith Urban on the right side. That's a panel that would
have worked. Randy and Mariah have a long standing relationship and
Keith is so kind-hearted, there would have been a good chemistry set up
between the three. If "The Voice" has taught us anything, it's that
reality competition shows have evolved. Cutting people down isn't what
audiences are connecting to anymore. Nicki's special brand of snark may
no longer fit in the world of reality TV mentors.
Ever
since Executive Producer Nigel Lythgoe commented that the ratings
decline certainly had to do with the lack of chemistry with the judges,
the situation took a turn for the worse. Up until that point, the ladies
simply ignored each other or rolled their eyes when they disagreed
while the other talked. It was clear after Nigel's comments came out,
someone told the panel they needed to interact more. Another misfire.
Nicki
and Mariah's not-so-charming banter has included Nicki calling Mariah
"sir" two weeks ago after a spat and Wednesday night referring to her as
"Honey Boo Boo" as a final slam. For the record, Mariah never heard
Nicki's "sir" comment until after the show aired. When asked about it
backstage, she wanted to respond but her publicist smartly told her not
too. You see, Mariah is a professional who understands her reputation is
everything. She has class. Nicki is another story.In my 20 years in entertainment news, I have interviewed close to 5,000 celebrities -- people who have bigger bragging rights than Nicki. Men and women who have Oscars , Grammys and Emmys. Yet, by far, she is the most ungracious of anyone I have met.
Each
week, she comes backstage for interviews and we are told "two questions
only" while her people hover over you and even, at times, have their
hand on your arm as you end your interview to make you stop. Waiver from
the two-question rule and Nicki herself will walk away. She makes zero
eye contact and has no connection to whomever is interviewing her. If
she likes your question, she may give you a proper answer. If she
doesn't, she may give you a dirty look and walk off. After she posted
mean comments about Mariah on Twitter yesterday calling her "bitter" and
"insecure," I wanted to give her the opportunity to redeem herself or
perhaps apologize. I phrased my question that her comments had caused
quite a stir online and asked if she had anything to say about it. She
looked at me and told me my question made no sense and when I tried to
explain it further she just said "goodnight" and walked off in a huff.
In my 12 years covering "Idol," I have never seen someone with such a disconnect to the media.
Mariah
may have her quirks, but she is always very gracious in her answers and
perfectly willing to poke fun at herself. Simon Cowell sure knows how
to sling a good insult on stage, but backstage during his tenure with
the show, he was always funny and charming. Randy is a master deflector
when it comes to questions about any strife within the show but he will
always give you an answer with a smile and a laugh. Even Paula Abdul --
who had her share of controversial moments during her time on "Idol" --
knew how to face the tough questions. Jennifer Lopez went through a
divorce during her time on the show and started dating a much younger
man, Casper Smart, yet managed to smartly massage her answers about her
personal life so she answered them, but not really. That's the mark of a
true professional. In the world of celebrity, especially right now,
this is part of the job. Poor Reese Witherspoon knows this all too well
right now.
Nicki's comments
yesterday on Twitter show who she really is - a mean girl, a cyber-bully
who is just perpetuating the problems of social media. When will
society finally take a stand and say 'Enough!' with all of the hateful,
spiteful things people say about each other? We are more connected than
ever online but more willing to hide behind our anonymous avatars and be
nasty to people we barely know. As a celebrity, I would hope that Nicki
would understand her fans look to her as a role model and she should
choose her words more wisely. From what I have seen of her behavior
since "Idol" began, I'm not sure she is capable of this. She's a female
rapper who should be proud of her accomplishments as a woman not cutting
other women down.
The truth
is that 20 years from now, Mariah Carey will still be known as one of
the best female vocalists of all time. Nicki Minaj - well, I will let
you decide that.

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