Although still the number one show on network TV, American Idol has seen a steady rating decline this year to it’s lowest totals in five years. Many theories have been offered - lackluster contestants, people growing tired of the format, a general post-strike decline in viewership to name a few. I would suggest another reason why the show has generated almost no buzz this year and people are tuning out.
In the past AI has been a masterful example of combining content and sponsorship. In this age of permission based marketing, they came up with a formula that was compelling to fans while providing companies like Coke, AT&T and Ford a great marketing vehicle. Once this show became a huge hit – the producers and FOX amped up the tie ins and revenue opportunities. They produce records, concerts tours and TV shows. The voter results show was expanded from 30 minutes to an hour to sell more commercials. And, they added more promotional deals with iTunes and with “guest mentors” who had new albums to hawk. Slowly but surely, the marketing and advertising overwhelmed the content portion of the show and this year was the tipping point. For example, the addition of an AT&T sponsored segment where “random” fans call in to ask questions is nothing but filler and painful to watch. You almost expect Ryan Seacrest to come out one night wearing a sandwich board with an ad for Maaco Auto Body shops.
I am a fan of the show, but felt like I just spent two hours a week watching an infomercial. The desire for promotion really hurt the perception of this year’s contestants by forcing them to sing songs by artists who are not relevant to today’s audience. Two weeks of Beatles songs were a bore – for today’s kids, it does not mean that much, and for those of us over 35, we have heard them a million times. Then they moved on to Dolly Parton, Mariah Carey and Neil Diamond –who shockingly, all had new albums and tours to promote. Can anyone name me three Dolly songs? Mariah has more #1 hits than anyone – but are any of them remotely memorable. However, the highest rated show on the unintentional comedy scale was “show tunes” week with Andrew Lloyd Webber.
You get the feeling it all about driving sales and playing it safe for the sponsors. It is just a little coincidental that contestants who are different (i.e. possibly gay) or edgy (tattooed) find themselves gone early and the bland survive. The success of the incredibly boring and cloying David Archuleta (known as the “Gasper” on Idol fan site Vote for the Worst.com) is symbolic of that trend. He may be the single least entertaining person on television.
For the show to be successful past next year, the producers really need to examine the balance between content and marketing. While we often profess that content based permission marketing is the wave of the future, AI is a cautionary tale of what happens when the mix gets out of balance. I know we are all in business to make a buck, but guys, take it down a notch or you will kill the golden goose.

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