BB FANS

UK Big Brother Forums






Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 119 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ... 8  Next
Author Message
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 02 Jun 11, 15:43 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Enter the X Factor judges, singing Cheryl's praises... how gullible do they think we are?

By Paul Revoir Mail


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 02 Jun 11, 21:11 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Simon Cowell: I moved heaven and earth for Cheryl Cole
Guardian


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 16 Jun 11, 0:33 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
'Bring back Cheryl,' Tulisa is jeered at X Factor auditions as audience chant for Cole's return

She may have turned her back on The X Factor, but loyal fans are still rooting for Cheryl Cole's return to the reality show.

At the Manchester auditions yesterday, audience members chanted, 'Bring back Cheryl, bring back Cheryl,' in support of the Geordie judge.

Newbie Tulisa Contostavlos was close to tears as the rowdy crowd started shouting before the new panel even had a chance to take their seats.


DailyMail


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 01 Jul 11, 19:04 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Gary Barlow Tough X Factor Judge

Gary Barlow has admitted he is a very "tough" X Factor judge.

The Take That singer has joined the panel of the TV talent show alongside Louis Walsh, Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland and believes he has a duty to give a realistic picture of how hard it is to establish a music career, and will reject hopefuls he doesn't think have the mental strength to cope.

He said: "If they're no good I'll say I'm not interested. But I'm going to be tough on everyone, especially the acts I'll be looking after because it's serious, this. It's bloody hard to make a living in music and I don't want to dress it up for anybody.

"Our responsibility is to mentor these people properly and we put through the ones that not only deserve a place but are also mentally prepared to take it on.

"They're plucked from nowhere and The X Factor spotlight is bigger than any other. You see the slightest sign they can't deal with that… well you can't use them."

Gary is currently juggling his X Factor schedule with Take That's tour but insists he won't ever complain about his heavy workload because of his previous years in the pop wilderness when his solo career failed.

He added to Time Out magazine: "Workwise, they're pretty tough those days, but from a mental situation – which I'm often driven by – as I'd sit there in the helicopter being taken from The X Factor to a gig, I'd think, 'This is life at the top, as big as it gets.'

"You won't find me complaining about that because I know what it's like to be out of work with nobody interested in you, and it's s**t."

waveguide.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 04 Jul 11, 22:33 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
Tulisa Contostavlos: Louis Walsh and I are X Factor BFFs


Metro


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 26 Jul 11, 21:30 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
X Factor Hopefuls Caught Stealing!

It looks as though this year's X Factor is going to be quite interesting after reports have revealed that many of the hopefuls who auditioned were caught stealing!

According to the Sun, the producer's of the hit show, which have seen Gary Barlow, Tulisa Contostavlos and Kelly Rowland replace Simon Cowell, Cheryl Cole and Dannii Minogue on the judging panel, have caught hundreds of auditionees nabbing make-up and perfume from the rehearsal rooms.

EntertainmentWise


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 26 Jul 11, 21:34 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
Louis Walsh: 'Kelly And Tulisa Will Clash Big Time'

PRESS ASSOCIATION -- Louis Walsh is predicting new X Factor judges Kelly Rowland and Tulisa Contostavlos will clash "big time" on the show.

The veteran panel member revealed to Closer magazine the Destiny's Child star and the N-Dubz frontwoman have already disagreed during The X Factor auditions over acts, and thinks there will be more to come.

Louis said: "Kelly and Tulisa have had disagreements on camera over different acts. It's brilliant because they aren't being fake and pretending to agree about everything and being all nicey nicey. It's so refreshing."

He added: "I can definitely see them clashing big time when the live shows start. They're both very determined and strong in their views, which is exactly what The X Factor needed."

HuffingtonPost


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 28 Jul 11, 20:25 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
X Factor goes all Big Brother this year

X Factor bosses are hoping for a bit of sexy times as they go for a bit of a Big Brother-style Boot Camp stage.

After the initial auditions round, we have Boot Camp - which sees X Factor hopefuls put through a series of even tougher auditions on a big London stage.

But this year, bosses are reportedly hoping to 'sex up' Boot Camp and the hopefuls will be filmed round-the-clock - just like Big Brother.

New


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 02 Aug 11, 19:08 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
Dressing room cam traps snort pair

TWO X Factor hopefuls were axed after hidden cameras filmed them snorting cocaine.

They were in a dressing room getting ready to perform for judges Gary Barlow, Kelly Rowland, Tulisa Contostavlos and Louis Walsh in round five of the contest.

But they were caught in the act by cameras that have been installed behind mirrors in an effort to capture amusing moments.

Instead of eavesdropping on gossip or embarrassing warm-up routines, the pair were filmed snorting the drug. A source said: "This was jaw-dropping stuff. No one knew what to do."

The two would-be stars were marched off the Liverpool set on the orders of producers Mark Sidaway and Cat Lawson. Police were not called.

The Sun


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 11 Aug 11, 15:23 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
The X Factor Returns

The X Factor returns to ITV1 for its eighth series on Saturday, August 20 with Gary Barlow, Kelly Rowland, Tulisa and Louis Walsh forming a new judging panel, it has been confirmed.

The series will see the four judges hit the road and trawl the length and breadth of Great Britain in their quest to find the next singing superstar.

ITV said the new series would feature the biggest ever Bootcamp, where contestants will perform in front of an audience of thousands and more fly-on-the-wall action as contestants are filmed living together for the first time.

Presenter Dermot O’Leary will return to host proceedings.

Caroline Flack and Olly Murs will host The Xtra Factor on ITV2.

waveguide.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 17 Aug 11, 23:33 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
New X Factor Bigger and Better

The new judges in the X Factor have given the show "a whole new energy" according to veteran Louis Walsh.

The Irishman, who described himself as "the last judge standing", has been joined by Tulisa Contostavlos, Gary Barlow and Kelly Rowland on the judging panel on the hit ITV1 show.

The trio replaced Cheryl Cole, Dannii Minogue and Simon Cowell who is busy with his US version of the show.

Speaking at a press preview for the show at the O2 in Greenwich, south London, Walsh said: "I couldn't do a real job, I love this job and this year is different - there is a whole new energy to the show.

"It's like having a brand new car with a whole new engine. It's bigger and better.

"I can't explain, yes I miss Simon and Dannii and Cheryl but these guys have brought something new."

Walsh has also struck up an unlikely friendship with Tulisa.

She said: "It's a strange relationship - kind of like a father/daughter relationship, but we're best friends, so it's quite funny. I don't think there's any way to describe it properly because the chemistry is rather strange."

The show starts on ITV1 at 20:00 on Saturday.

waveguide.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 19 Aug 11, 21:25 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
Broken Britain! Your reality TV fix awaits

Riots? What riots? Sally Bercow and Simon Cowell return us to normal service


Meanwhile, has anything about the riots made you feel more unsettled than the X Factor supremo's silence on them? Aside from donating to the Reclaim Our Streets fund, Cowell has not been persuaded to make a public statement explaining how to fix things, and this in itself feels the most glaringly unfamiliar of oversights. After all, in recent years, it has felt almost as though we were living in a Cowellocracy, with Simon invested with a near-messianic quality by politicians, and leaders of every stripe gibbering witlessly about what they could learn at his knee. Cowell appeared to be post-Blairism's maharishi, with Gordon Brown announcing he had a vision of "an X-Factor Britain", claiming the programme displayed "the value of ambition, how anyone can achieve things". Then leader of the opposition David Cameron hailed Cowell as "incredibly talented", agreed politicians could learn from him, and declined to dismiss the idea of a place for him in a Tory administration. At one point Cowell was invited on to Newsnight to discuss his idea to revolutionise UK politics – a TV show in which the public would debate issues with a red phone on stage, allowing Downing Street to call in and explain its position.

So are we witnessing a sea-change? In the riots, have today's politicians finally run up against the policy problem that they don't at some intellectually and ideologically bankrupt level believe could actually be solved by Simon Cowell? After all, if what we shall euphemise as "recent events" have shown us anything, it is that The X Factor is merely a light entertainment show, and is the answer to precisely nothing, unless it's the inquiry: "What apocalypse-hastening reality format shits a gazillion quid into Simon Cowell's bank account every week?"

But perhaps I am too hasty. The eye is caught by reports this week revealing that the venue for the X Factor bootcamp is the Selsdon Park hotel in Croydon. My dear! Forgive the lapse into anoraky areas of interest, but what a history-laden choice. As Tulisa never tires of pointing out, the Selsdon Park hotel's claim to fame is as the location for the 1970 conference of Edward Heath's shadow cabinet, which gave birth to a radical free-market agenda. Though denounced as "the work of Selsdon Man" by Harold Wilson, and largely abandoned by Heath under pressure, the flame was kept burning on the right, and when its advocates formed the Selsdon Group, it was at the Selsdon Park that they met again. Goodness, what tales those walls could tell. 1973: they bear witness to Nicholas Ridley et al enshrining economic theories that will dominate the Thatcher years. 2011: they stare mutely down at a cavalcade of X Factor contestants – hopped up on Cowell's free booze – who believe fame is a basic human right and are willing to murder any number of Westlife standards to prove it.

It's been a funny old journey, hasn't it? Naturally, it would take a media historian of the calibre of David Starkey to make some point about what has happened to Britain in the intervening four decades, and to declare some causal link between the ideals of Selsdon Man and the hellscape of the X Factor bootcamp and all it represents.

But given that Simon is an avowed free marketeer, who is on record as saying that he hero-worships Margaret Thatcher, Lost in Showbiz insists you regard his choice of the Selsdon Park as a clarion call indicating where our befuddled nation should go from here. Unless Cowell gets in touch to say otherwise, you may hereby assume that Simon's prescription for healing Broken Britain is not a craven, Heath-style abandonment of hardline free-market capitalism, but an even more rigid adherence to its principles.

Politicians, you have your instructions. It's time to face the music.
Marina Hyde guardian.co.uk


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 20 Aug 11, 20:44 
Offline
News Team Member
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 30 Dec 02, 18:50
Posts: 63927
Location: London
X FACTOR KICKS OF TONIGHT


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 21 Aug 11, 12:52 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
Millions tune in for X Factor show

The launch of the new series of the X Factor was watched by a peak audience of 12.6 million - matching the record for the highest viewing figures for the opening night.

ITV said the peak number was a combination of people watching on ITV1 and ITV1 +1, and 12 million tuned in to the 8pm ITV1 showing.

At its peak, more than half (51%) of those watching television were tuned in to the talent contest, the broadcaster said.

An average audience of 11 million (10.5 million excluding ITV1 +1) watched the new panel of judges, Gary Barlow, Tulisa Contostavlos, Kelly Rowland and Louis Walsh launch series eight of the show, which was a 47% share of the audience.

A peak audience of 1.6 million (7.2% share) watched The Xtra Factor on ITV2. There was an average audience of 1.5 million across the show.



Copyright (c) Press Association


Top
 
 Post subject: Re: X Factor 2011
PostPosted: 21 Aug 11, 15:11 
Offline
Moderator
User avatar
 Profile

Joined: 04 Jun 02, 19:40
Posts: 29944
Location: Middle England
Who’d have thought we’d miss Cheryl Cole?

I’m sick of people crying over nothing, I really am.

We lost Cheryl Cole to the hinterlands, but now we have Tulisa Contostavlos, who keeps threatening to dislodge her eyelashes with salty tears.

‘I’m young, I’m feisty,’ she tells us.

She’s supposed to give the show edge but she has all the charisma of a bored hotel receptionist. She rarely speaks.

We also have Kelly Rowland, formerly of Destiny’s Child. Let me tell you, Beyonce she ain’t. She is one of those American stars who keep thanking God. This woman has the personality of an ironing board and is incapable of being nasty to anyone.

Louis Walsh assures us he’s ‘got new batteries’.

And finally we have Gary Barlow: he is trying to be the new Mr Nasty, but he’s about as scary as an overweight labrador with cataracts.

DailyMail


Top
 
Display posts from previous:  Sort by  
Post new topic Reply to topic  [ 119 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ... 8  Next


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot post attachments in this forum

Search for:
Jump to:  
cron
Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Material breaching copyright laws should be reported to webmaster (-at-) bbfans.com. BBFans.com is in no way affilated with Channel4 or Endemol.