Last summer season, once the country’s TV critic meets for their biannual press tour, the main conversation was regarding a leaving of Simon Cowell from “American Idol” and the way would the Fox television network handles to remain its signature show important, entertaining and compelling.
The 10th season of “American Idol” just announced, with new juries Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler.
From a talent viewpoint, Aerosmith frontman Tyler also the famous singer Lopez are a superior fit to get a show that seeks out new musical stars.
Nonetheless, it nonetheless cannot find out why Ryan Seacrest is the anchor. His production business is accountable for foisting “Keeping up using the Kardashians” upon us, and this alone should lead to his long term ban from any spot on TV.
At the press tour in January, Kevin Reilly, Fox’s President of Entertainment, had minute to say of his network’s huge famous shows, “American Idol” or “Glee,” for that make any difference.
Nicely, Fox’s chairman of Entertainment, Peter Rice, answered to a question regarding whether Jennifer Lopez have selected to become an “Idol” judge due to her worldwide subsequent that would support tap into the Hispanic market.
After declaring “no,” he added that the network believed “Jennifer could be fantastic.”
To elaborate a bit far more, Rice noticed that due to the fact “Idol” is really a new music present in which “there’s real chemistry there and excellent audio credibility” in between Steven Tyler and Jennifer Lopez.
Oddly adequate, Rice as well as Reilly replied a good deal far more questions, approximately it appeared, about the dismal collapse of “Lone Star,” that everyone besides a handful of Television critics has already forgotten.
Beginning off the midseason for the Fox routine is “Bob’s Burgers,” an animated series that fits inside the network’s realm of this kind of shows as “The Simpsons” and also the now-departed “King with the Hill.”
Bob is spoken by H. Jon Benjamin, whose unique speech is quickly recognized for providing voice towards the so-called character in “Archer,” an animated collection about the FX network.