This article needs additional citations for verification .(September 2008) |
New Zealand Idol | |
---|---|
Season 3 | |
Hosted by | Dominic Bowden |
Judges | Iain Stables Megan Alatini Frankie Stevens |
Winner | Matthew Saunoa |
Runner-up | Indira Moala |
Finals venue | St. James Theatre, Wellington |
Release | |
Original network | TVNZ |
Original release | July 2006 – 29 October 2006 |
Season chronology |
New Zealand Idol (season 3) | |
Finalists (with dates of elimination) | |
Matthew Saunoa | Winner |
Indira Moala | 29 October |
Aroha Robinson | 16 October |
Ben Hazlewood | 8 October |
Kali Kopae | 2 October |
Toni Baird | 25 September |
Rebecca Wright | 18 September |
Clinton Randell | 11 September |
Ashlee Fisher | 4 September |
Victor Sulfa | 28 August |
The third season of New Zealand Idol commenced in July 2006. The judges were Iain Stables, Megan Alatini and Frankie Stevens.
The auditions were held at the following locations:
Those who were successful would proceed to the "Top 60" theatre rounds held at Sky City in Auckland.
The successful contestants who made it through to the "Top 60" rounds would spend three days of audition rounds at the Sky City theatre.
|
Following the final round, all remaining 27 were called on stage, to be told which nine were going home. After most of the contestants were either eliminated or told they were through, the remaining five – Toni, Lenken, Birgette, Ben and Emilie, were lastly given one more chance to sing for the 4 places left in the Top 18. The last contestant to be eliminated was Birgette, aged 21 from the Te Atatū area of West Auckland.
|
|
Advancing to the Top 10: Kali Kopae, Ashlee Fisher and Clinton Randell
Wildcard Contender: Lenken Isaac
|
|
Advancing to the Top 10: Indira Moala, Victor Sulfa & Toni Baird
Wildcard Contenders: Wiremu Hohaia
|
|
Advancing to the Top 10: Matt Saunoa, Aroha Robinson and Rebecca Wright
Wildcard Contender: Ben Hazlewood
Advancing to the Top 10: Ben Hazelwood
Date | Week | Theme |
27 August | Top 10 | Soul |
3 September | Top 9 | Rock |
10 September | Top 8 | Country |
17 September | Top 7 | Elton John |
24 September | Top 6 | Groove |
1 October | Top 5 | Pop |
8 October | Top 4 | Homegrown |
15 October | Top 3 | Love Songs |
22 October | Top 2 | Judges' / Music Team's Choice |
23 October | Top 2 | The Final Showdown |
Matt Saunoa (aged 21, from Levin) was the winner of the third series of "New Zealand Idol".
Indira Moala (aged 21, from Glen Eden, Auckland), was runner-up to winner Matt Saunoa.
Aroha Robinson (aged 18, from Mt Maunganui, Bay of Plenty), came third.
Ben Hazlewood (aged 17, from Papakowhai, Wellington), was placed fourth.
Kali Kopae (aged 21, from Christchurch), finished in fifth place.
Toni Baird (aged 29, from Upper Hutt), was placed sixth.
Rebecca Wright (aged 24, from Mt Albert, Auckland), finished in seventh place.
Clinton Randell (aged 20, from Mt Roskill, Auckland), placed eighth. He hosted The Edge Breakfast in the 2010s and 2020s.
Ashlee Fisher (aged 16, from Hamilton), finished ninth.
Victor Sulfa (aged 19, from Papatoetoe, Auckland), was placed tenth.
The final was held on 29 October, with the following performances:
Did Not Perform | Top 18 | Wild Card | Top 10 |
Stage: | Semi-Finals | WC | Finals | |||||||||||||
Week: | 7/8 | 14/8 | 21/8 | 21/8 | 28/8 | 4/9 | 11/9 | 18/9 | 25/9 | 2/10 | 9/10 | 16/10 | 23/10 | 29/10 | ||
Place | Contestant | Result | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Matt Saunoa | Top 10 | Winner | |||||||||||||
2 | Indira Moala | Top 10 | Btm 2 | Runner-up | ||||||||||||
3 | Aroha Robinson | Top 10 | Btm 2 | Btm 2 | Elim | |||||||||||
4 | Ben Hazlewood | Elim | Top 10 | Btm 2 | Elim | |||||||||||
5 | Kali Kopae | Top 10 | Btm 2 | Btm 2 | Elim | |||||||||||
6 | Toni Baird | Top 10 | Btm 3 | Elim | ||||||||||||
7 | Rebecca Wright | Top 10 | Elim | |||||||||||||
8 | Clinton Randell | Top 10 | Elim | |||||||||||||
9 | Ashlee Fisher | Top 10 | Btm 2 | Elim | ||||||||||||
10 | Victor Sulfa | Top 10 | Elim | |||||||||||||
Wild Card | Lenken Isaac | Elim | Elim | |||||||||||||
Wiremu Hohaia | Elim | |||||||||||||||
Semi- Final 3 | Emilie Harwood | Elim | ||||||||||||||
Cameron Clayton | ||||||||||||||||
Semi- Final 2 | Stephen Wilton | Elim | ||||||||||||||
Vicki Eaton | ||||||||||||||||
Semi- Final 1 | George Gates | Elim | ||||||||||||||
Alyce Burr | ||||||||||||||||
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) |
Idols was a television show on the Dutch television network RTL 4, which is part of the Idols series based on the popular British show Pop Idol. The show is a contest to determine the best young singer in the Netherlands.
New Zealand Idol, also known as NZ Idol, was the New Zealand version of the Idol series originated as the hit British TV series Pop Idol. New Zealand first saw the Idol format when TV2 aired American Idol 2, which garnered impressive ratings. After Australian Idol also received good ratings in New Zealand, TVNZ decided to order the first season of NZ Idol, which was broadcast on TV2. After the third season in 2006, TVNZ made a decision not to fund or broadcast a fourth season, thus placing New Zealand Idol on indefinite hiatus, with no plans to run a fourth season.
The fourth season of American Idol premiered on January 18, 2005, and continued until May 25, 2005. It was hosted by Ryan Seacrest. Randy Jackson, Paula Abdul and Simon Cowell also returned as judges. Carrie Underwood won the season with approximately 500 million votes cast in the season and 37 million for the finale, while Bo Bice was the runner-up. Underwood has since gone on to become an eight-time Grammy-winning country megastar. It was also the first season of the series to be aired in high definition.
Philippe Bühler a.k.a. Philippe Heithier is a German singer, songwriter, dancer, record producer and manager. He came to fame as a contestant on the second season of Deutschland sucht den Superstar, the German version of Pop Idol. Bühler was eliminated in the top 3 after receiving 29.12 percent of the vote.
The first season of Canadian Idol debuted on June 9, 2003. Ryan Malcolm of Kingston, Ontario was the eventual winner. On July 15, 2003, CTV and INSINC announced that broadband video of the program would be available over the Internet.
Matthew Saunoa is a New Zealand pop singer who rose to musical fame as the winner of the third season of New Zealand Idol in 2006. After winning the third season, his winner's single, "Hold Out" topped the New Zealand Singles Chart, however it did not secure Saunoa an album contract with Sony Music. In 2007 he appeared on Pop's Ultimate Star. He has experienced drug and alcohol addiction, and in 2023 he was imprisoned for over six years for injuring a police officer in a deliberate hit-and-run.
The fifth season of Australian Idol premiered on 5 August 2007 on Network Ten. It concluded on 25 November.
The fourth season of Australian Idol began on 6 August 2006 and concluded on 26 November.
The third season of Australian Idol debuted on 26 July 2005. The first of three semi-finals was held on 16 August 2005 with three of the Top 12 contenders announced the following night on 17 August 2005. 2Day FM radio host Kyle Sandilands replaced former judge Ian Dickson.
The first season of Australian Idol was produced by Fremantle Media subsidiary Grundy Television in association with UK company 19TV, and was broadcast on Network Ten for 19 weeks in the latter half of 2003. The judges were Mark Holden, Marcia Hines and Ian "Dicko" Dickson.
The second season of Australian Idol debuted on 13 July 2004. Over 50,000 people throughout Australia auditioned.
The sixth season of Australian Idol premiered on Sunday, 24 August 2008, on Network Ten. The season finale aired live on Sunday, 23 November 2008. The winner was Wes Carr with Luke Dickens as runner-up.
The seventh season of Australian Idol began on 9 August 2009, to determine who would succeed season 6 winner, Wes Carr. Beginning amid controversy, judge Kyle Sandilands was replaced by Sony Music record executive, Jay Dee Springbett. It was the only season where all four final contestants were eighteen years old or younger. Stan Walker was declared the winner on 22 November 2009.
The first season of New Zealand Idol was produced by Fremantle Media subsidiary Grundy Television in association with UK company 19TV, and was broadcast on TVNZ in the early half of 2004. The judges were Paul Ellis, Fiona McDonald and Frankie Stevens.
The second season of New Zealand Idol commenced on 3 July 2005. The judges were Paul Ellis, Jackie Clarke and Frankie Stevens.
Over the Rainbow is a British television talent series that aired on BBC One from 26 March to 22 May 2010. It documented the search for a new, undiscovered musical theatre performer to play the role of Dorothy Gale in Andrew Lloyd Webber's 2011 stage production of the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz and a dog to play Toto for a one-off performance.
The tenth season of American Idol premiered on the Fox television network on January 19, 2011, and concluded on May 25, 2011. The show underwent a number of changes from the ninth season, including the return of Nigel Lythgoe as executive producer. Randy Jackson returned as judge for his tenth season, while Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler joined the judges' panel following the departures of Simon Cowell, Ellen DeGeneres, and Kara DioGuardi.
Joshua Ledet is an American singer from Westlake, Louisiana. In 2012 he placed third in the eleventh season of American Idol. He is known for his "soaring, church-bred brand of old school soul music." In 2017, he released a self-titled EP.
The second and final series of the New Zealand television reality music competition The X Factor premiered on TV3 in February 2015. Pre-auditions began in October 2014. As well as again being open to singers aged 14 and over, the series was also open to bands, which had to contain no more than five members and have at least two singers. The contestants were split into the show's four traditional categories: Boys, Girls, Over 25s and Groups.
The seventeenth season of American Idol premiered on March 3, 2019, on the ABC television network. It was the show's second season to air on ABC. Ryan Seacrest continued as host, while Luke Bryan, Katy Perry, and Lionel Richie returned as judges. Bobby Bones returned as the in-house mentor, and acted as a guest host for the episode on April 8, 2019.