Why Paula Abdul is forever âAmerican Idolâsâ girl
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Paula Abdul has been telling people that the producers of âAmerican Idolâ have failed to protect her.
If this is true, itâs shocking. Shocking that the producers would let a valuable asset like Abdul be in jeopardy for even one second. They should build a fortress around her and have it guarded by the most battle-hardened Marines. Because every time Paula opens her mouth (and sometimes she doesnât even have to expend the energy to do that), controversy is stirred. Celebrity reporters feel their pulses quicken. Stories erupt. And this makes the PR job much easier for her main employer, Foxâs âAmerican Idolâ (back for Season 8 next month, in what is surely just a coincidence). This woman is worth more gold than any Senate seat.
If you havenât followed the latest saga, last month a former âIdolâ contestant named Paula Goodspeed was discovered dead in a car outside Abdulâs house of an apparent suicide. Abdul was understandably unnerved by this news -- enough so, if reports are to be believed, that she has fled the house and put it up for sale.
The singer-turned-talent judge was also angry. She told Barbara Walters that the producers knew that Goodspeed had been stalking Abdul for years, but the producers decided to let her audition anyway because her Paula obsession was âfunny.â On âIdol,â Goodspeed proudly displayed to host Ryan Seacrest the many portraits sheâd drawn of the singer. Her audition was a flop, though, and Simon Cowell ridiculed her braces.
Nigel Lythgoe, the then-executive producer of âIdol,â said this week that he thought Goodspeed was merely a fan of Abdulâs and that he did not remember Abdul asking Goodspeed to be removed from the audition process. A rep for Abdul didnât return a call for this story; spokesman for Fox and Fremantle North America, the showâs producer, declined to comment.
Abdul told Walters that at Goodspeedâs audition, she was so mortified she âcouldnât even look up.â For the record, she seems calm if not chipper on the tape, but viewers can judge for themselves on YouTube.
But the more relevant issue is this: âIdolâ has featured many, many contestants with no talent and dubious mental stability. In fact, during the audition phase, thatâs really the programâs chief draw. (This season, producers have promised to change that.) Goodspeed is hardly the only eccentric given the grand âIdolâ treatment. But the reality-TV-as-humiliation-ritual style seems to trouble Abdul only as it relates to her own personal safety. That sheâs now turned the aftermath of Goodspeedâs death as the opportunity to point fingers at other people for not adequately protecting her -- Paula Abdul -- is ... well, whatâs the word? Unseemly, maybe? Delusional? Sad?
Or maybe just predictable. In the end, this really is all about Paula. Looking back, itâs astonishing to realize how much of the media coverage for âIdolâ is taken up with her. Does she hate Simon? Or secretly love him? Is she drunk? Crazy? Why does she cry so much? Does she sleep with âIdolâ contestants? Can she reboot her career? And then this, always this: Is she leaving the show?
Abdul, in short, is among a handful of current celebrities -- Angelina Jolie, Britney Spears and Paris Hilton also come to mind -- whose ongoing celebreality narratives, rich as any big fat novel, overtake whatever âprojectâ they happen to be working on. The projects, in fact, serve to promote the celebrity, not the other way around -- a fact the studios seem a bit late in recognizing. More people have been entertained by Jolieâs hectic âpersonal lifeâ -- a truly strange and epic tale of romantic intrigue balanced by altruistic exploits -- than will ever bother to see âA Mighty Heartâ or âChangeling.â Jolie knows story better than the storytellers.
And so it is with Abdul. Clearly, sheâs nowhere near Jolieâs league as a worldwide brand. But âAmerican Idolâ is, letâs not forget, the No. 1 show in television. How much of that is directly attributable to Paula is open to debate. But thereâs no doubt that with her around, âIdolâ fans get two big stories for the price of one. If that kind of value isnât worth protecting, what is?
-- Scott Collins
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(Photo: Paula Abdul and Ryan Seacrest at the ALMA Awards, courtesy Kevin Winter / Getty Images for NCLR)