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By Luke Lewis

Posted on 10/11/09 at 04:28:02 pm

Did you notice? In last Saturday's X Factor, there was a subtle plug, barely perceptible, almost subliminal really, for Disney's new film, Disney's A Christmas Carol™. It's entirely possible you missed it, because Dermot O'Leary only mentioned it, oh, 30 or so times, before every single bit of VT.

The contestants had all been to the premiere of Disney's A Christmas Carol™ during the week, see, and their red-carpet exploits were dropped into the show in a bid to break up the performances and build some emotive backstory.

Meanwhile, this was 'songs from the movies' week, so of course we were treated to such entirely random track selections as, er, 'This Is Me' (from Disney's Camp Rock) and 'Circle Of Life' (from Disney's The Lion King).

continued...

Do you notice a Disney emerging? Sorry, pattern emerging? I don't begrudge ITV taking sponsorship (or, more likely, 'cross-promotion opportunities') wherever it can – everyone in the media right now needs to do whatever it takes to survive.

But when the hard sell bleeds through from the ad breaks, and then skews the show itself in a way that's baffling to its own core viewers (how many of the 15million-strong audience had ever heard of Camp Rock?), something is deeply wrong.

Indeed, the only way the last episode could have been any more nakedly commercial was if John and Edward had bounded on stage dressed as the Churchill Insurance dog and stood there nodding their heads and going, 'Oooh yaaars' for 10 minutes.

Which, by the way, would've been a good deal more entertaining than their gormless rendition of the Ghostbusters theme (another auspiciously timed song-choice, given that the Ghostbusters video game came out on Xbox and Wii the following Monday).

This is only the beginning. The power-brokers behind The X Factor have lobbied the government, apparently successfully, to change the law regarding product placement - which means, in the not-too-distant future, we're likely to witness Louis Walsh turning to Cheryl Cole mid-show and saying, apropos of nothing, "I don't know about you, Cheryl, but I could just go for a [cue ring-pull] refreshing Diet Coke break." It's a dispiriting prospect.

This ugly, turbo-commercialism has also infected The X Factor's unofficial media partners. A curious Disney obsession gripped 'The Sun' in the run-up to last weekend's show, as demonstrated by this weirdly cryptic press release, sorry, news story.

"Lucie to sing Disney track", blared the headline. We weren't told what the track would be, but that was OK, because Lucie assured us that the song's all-important Disneyness would be beyond question: "Everyone who likes Disney is going to love it because it's from a Disney film."

What studio was that again? More to the point: who talks like this, anyway? Have you ever described anything as a "Disney track"? Equally, though, it's unclear why show bosses limited themselves to a few quick plugs.

They should have gone the whole hog, called it 'Disney Week' and had Jedward debase themselves by singing 'I Wanna Be Like You' from The Jungle Book. While dressed as Baloo. And hanging from a tree. Surrounded by wild pythons and panthers. Although they'd still probably have been saved by the public vote, more's the pity.

Why does everyone watch The X Factor? It’s hideous. It's not a singing competition - it's a gigantic sales push. The world's biggest, glitziest shop window, bankrolled by the richest swinging dicks in the global entertainment industry.

Note how special guest performances – once a rare occurrence – happen almost every week, now that record companies have twigged the colossal power of The X Factor to place an act front-and-centre in the national conversation. The pinnacle of any marketing campaign, the show has been exploited to herald the comebacks of such old-school unit-shifters as Robbie Williams, Whitney Houston and Bon Jovi.

Indeed, it's possible to see The X Factor as the last stand of the old music industry, a desperate rearguard action against the last decade of musical democratisation, and a ruthless affirmation - by a super-rich elite - of the easy certainties that saw the music biz coin it in throughout the 80s and 90s.

It's the brainchild of Simon Cowell, a man who got rich as an A&R by grasping a simple idea, namely that you can hype any old shit in to the charts – Zig And Zag, Robson And Jerome, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers – as long as it's As Seen On TV.

And the other judges? There's Cheryl Cole, undoubtedly a lovely person, but blessed with so little natural singing talent she mimed her own X Factor appearance - breathtaking hypocrisy, given that the whole point, the only point, of the entire show is the ability to sing live.

Then there's Dannii Minogue: how many of her hits can you name? Not forgetting, last and least: Louis Walsh, that grinning Pillsbury Doughboy, the formidable Svengali behind such pop goliaths as Bellefire and Samantha Mumba.

Why does anyone value the opinion of these jokers? The standard response to X Factor haters is: Don't be a killjoy, don't spoil our harmless fun.

But it isn't harmless. On the contrary, the show exposes, even delights in, the ruthlessness and cold-heartedness of the industry: for every Leona Lewis there's a Shayne Ward or a Steve Brookstein, dead men walking, brutally dropped by Cowell after one album, banished to oblivion - or, worse, a role in a long-running West End musical.

Apologists will say, But that's pop, it's supposed to be fleeting, there's always going to be cruelty and disappointment. I disagree. Pop is about escapism, about joy, about celebrating outsider-ness and otherness, and facing down the big bad world.

The X Factor is the opposite of that. It's the anti-pop. Far from offering escape, it's a confirmation of all those grimly inescapable forces that make pop such an essential release valve.

It's a remorseless juggernaut, crushing variety and difference and dissent under its wheels, leaving in its wake an inflexible, gaudily commercial world where the richest and most beautiful always win, and the judges are always right.

PS: Danyl to win!

73 comments

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Liam G [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 17:50
Finally something i can agree with. In my opinion a shit excuse for culture. Why watch a show thats completely fixed, in the process the pockets of complete nobodies (e.g. Simon Cowell) are being filled when they don;t deserve to be. In a few years the country should be smart enough to realize how stupid and pointless this show is.
Mark [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 17:52
The first 3 or 4 years only produced a mere handful of talent, ie Leona, G4 (as shortlived as they were, they had talent) etc... But this year and last year have had some genuinely talented people (Alexandra, JLS, Laura White, Diana Vickers, Ruth, Lucie, Stacy, Jamie, Danyl, Joe, Olly, and Rachel) and as someone who watches regularly, these contestants all get pushed into making music that clearly isn't them. Look at Ben Mills (the long haired fellow on the Leona series), he could've been a real rock star, and instead got pushed into the 40-something, Tesco-shopping Mum's category over shit pop-rock. It happens every year with the talented guests. They audition as themselves, and are then pressured into something completely different. And 99% of the time, it doesn't work. Shame. They need to cut the commercial crap, judging bullshit, and not have a show that needs a 'Winner', just a show where they search for people who they think are good enough, with no limit on who they can sign. But obviously that's taking a huge shit on the mass amounts of fun that 14million people have every Saturday night during Jedward's rendition 'Jump Around'. Rant over.
Dave [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 18:37
I was very suspicious about why so many auditioners were choosing to cover Oasis Stop Crying Your Heart Out. I thought it was a pretty random song for quite a few people to choose. A few weeks later we find out Leona Lewis is releasing a cover of it. Point proved, its just a massive marketing programme for Simon Cowell.
Hugh [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 19:12
This is possibly the best nme article ever, thankyou luke lewis.
Alex [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 19:42
Luke Lewis you truly are the voice of the people. X factor is a music show for people who know nothing about music (see descriptions of judges) and all about wanting to be famous. What fucks me off the most is that people are going to go out and mindlessly buy the black eyed peas shit new single just because they saw it on X factor. I just happened to look at the top ten the other day for the first time in a while and look whos on it – Cherly Cole, Alexandra Burke, JLS, Michael Buble, Westlife... what have they all got in common? Apparently the show is saving the world from declining record sales, but I say let the record sales fall if this is the kind of crap thats available. AND I DON’T WANT AN X FACTOR SONG TO BE CHRISTMAS NUMBER 1!!! I so badly wanted The Pouges to do it in 2005, but guess what, it was Shayne Ward. Is nothing sacred???
Ohnosis [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 19:48
I didn't realise there was an opposing argument for this question. But anything linked to Cowell is evil. Just remember Robson and Jerome, Ant and Dec. The list goes on..
Dave Arse [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 20:16
Evil? A karaoke show where a bunch of fame-hungry pretty(ish) arseholes sing tunes that if you heard them on TV/radio you'd change the channel cuz they're just plain awful? Evil? Because of product placement? I think you're somewhat misguided, NME.
michael [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 20:28
absolutely brilliant, nice one nme. x factor is everything that is wrong with music today, and television for that matter. spot on.
snake [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 21:36
cheryl cole a lovely person? is the same cheryl cole who attacked a toilet attendant whch was allegedly racially motivated?
Greg [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 21:59
of course it is who said it wasn't?
Mel [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 22:19
I totally agree. The programme was a fix. Simon states: 'This is what this show is all about' when seeing Leona Lewis perform. And earlier, hoping that the twins are not in the final, but yet, when given the power to vote them out; he sends it to deadlock. He is just in it for the money as well as not allowing his own acts to be sacrificed by a good act.
jo [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 22:26
Check out these great songs about Cheryl, Simon, and The X Factor at youtube.com/thisisjohnnyblack
Callum [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 23:13
I genuinely hope the twins win X factor. How could anyone justify making or watching another series after that?
Ninetyeightytwo [Visitor] //November 10 2009 at 23:20
Don't have a go at Zig and Zag. They acted as "musical awakening" for far too many of us to be written off completely. http://ninetyeightytwo.blogspot.com/2009/08/impotent-prick-of-cowboy.html
charlie [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 02:40
it's entertainment. don't watch it if you don't like it, simple. a bit like i'll know to avoid any articles by you from now on.
Phil [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 08:15
Cheryl Cole a Lovely person, hmmm you seem to have forgotten the court case involving her battering a bathroom attendant! As if Shouting "Freshen Up!!" Isn't enough! Agree with everything else you've said.
Jo [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 09:16
If you're sick of the X Factor, then get this!!! (This is what it SHOULD be all about...): The one and only Sway Dasafo is giving up his time this Sunday 15th at St Mary's, Islington (Neighbourhood Centre) to be a 'judge' alongside Alex Boateng (aka DJ Twin B) and the mighty Thembisa Mshaka (the lady from NY who brought the world Beyonce, 50 Cent, Destiny's Child, Lauryn Hill and Will Smith!!!). These three industry gurus are dedicated to helping urban music talent get discovered - especially those from the streets who have no access to resource. You can come and watch for free!!! See up and coming acts perform in front of the mighty three in return for their CONSTRUCTIVE guidance. From 6pm. Respond to this if you want a flyer emailed!
Dan [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 09:19
@Liam G "In a few years the country should be smart enough to realize how stupid and pointless this show is. " I wouldn't hold your breath. You only need to take one look at the type of people that watch the X Factor to know that they're the easily brainwashed type that are too lazy to find music they actually like so just accept what's rammed down their throats instead. I agree with the entire blog, the last paragraph is great, and the worst part about it is that it's showing no signs of stopping.
Jack [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 09:19
i pretty much agree with all of this except that pop is not about outsiderness and otherness is it, its short for POPular, which is the complete opposite of outsiderness. Pop is about the mainstream, otherwise it would be called alternative.
Luke Lewis [Member] //November 11 2009 at 09:36
@Jack - you've got a point there. I suppose what I meant was, the pop music I like is about outsiderness and otherness.
Pete [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 10:48
As much as I agree in sentiment, and I hate the infuence the show has on the charts, you can't help but wonder if it's the music-buying effect the show has on people that is keeping the music industry afloat. While we turn our noses up at droves rushing out to buy Bon Jovi because they're on the X Factor results show, or see Sex on Fire bubble up the charts again because some bloke with a comedy afro does a karaoke version of it on the telly, istening to Wild Beasts and Miike Snow on Spotify surely isn't going to save the music industry...
Anto [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 10:49
Well said. Plenty of us couldn't care less about " Simons incredible charisma" or "Cheryls lovely smile" or "Leonas amayyy-zing success in America", but we're stuck with the blinkin' X Factor and being told that a foul combination of rudeness, arrogance, manipulative mawkishness, musical strait-jacketing and quasi-Thatcherite cynicism is all " a bit of fun". Give Luke Lewis his own TV show. By the way Pete Robinson Skin and Skunk Anansie wipe the floor with " Bleating" Love.
Steve [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 11:36
It's basically car-crash telly, as the cliche goes. I personally despise this cultural vacuum of a programme, which to me seems stuck in a time nearly 10 years ago when manufactured clone groups seemed to be all over the shop. Other than that, I guess it's seen in a way as some sort of glorified weekend karaoke on the telly. the downside is obviously cowell trying to dominate the charts with the soulless results of these shows.
Moptop [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 11:43
Give Luke Lewis his own TV show? I second that!
Irene [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 11:45
Cheryl Lovely?tell that to the toilet attendant, it scares me that young girl look up to her, she is emaciated and talentless, At least I had Courtney Love.....though that had its own down falls!
Moptop [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 11:51
Good twist on the standard X Factor backlash. No one seems to care about the cynical, dead-eyed money mania that sugar coats the show - yet it makes all pop seem so insincere. With X Factor, we're in danger of losing our ability to really enjoy pop music - something already under threat given the continued presence of The Saturdays...
Alan Woodhouse [Member] //November 11 2009 at 12:11
Completely agree with Luke here.

Because of my girlfriend's obsession with it, I've been forced to watch the last couple, and I cannot believe how gullible the avid watchers are, that they can't see how they are being completely duped by Simon Cowell and his little gang.

How about when Alexandra Burke performed her new single? Cuts to Simon afterwards, and he describes her performance in glowing terms. Of course he does! he's going to make shit loads from it! Why even bother commenting?

'Rock week' - featuring songs by such great 'rock' acts as Katy Perry and Keane. Oh yes, and 'Stop Crying Your Heart Out'. A bland, almost forgotten Oasis single. Then Leona covers it. Ah, now it all becomes clear...

But the real nadir was when Louis and Simon were arguing about 'Twist And Shout'. First of all, Louis calls it a "great British song". It's not, it's American.

Than Simon calls it "one of The Beatles' biggest hits". Er, The Beatles didn't release it as a single. A version appears on the debut album 'Please Please Me' and they did play it live. That's it. But they clearly both thought it was a Beatles song. If you're getting paid that much, you could at least get that right, you pair of absolute cocks.

Cheryl Cole is about the only bearable member of the panel, despite her questionable past and taste in men. No one gives a toss what Dannii Minogue thinks about music, and why should we?

But the two blokes...they made millions peddling crap to the 'great' British public. It might as well have been tins of beans. They are taking all the viewers for a ride.
Smo [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 12:53
Pretty much why I've given up on following The X Factor. Really good article. Cheers, NME
k [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 13:30
All hail Luke!
[Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 13:37
Moaning about the X-factor is a bit old hat and this is a very long article to tell us what we already know. Pop music has always been bad btw but who cares most people like trash and don't spend there evenings reading Proust and listening to Tindersticks records. Lighten up. John and Edward to win!
BANG [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 13:48
Before I start this comment, I would like to make it fundamentally clear that I absolutely HATE the X Factor program, have no interest in any artist that's ever come out of the program and am not a regular watcher of the program... However, one big thing has been missed here. The great and unending irony of The X Factor is that it's actually a major thing keeping our alternative music alive. Not through some intangible notion that 'real' music is kicking out against it, but on a much more real and economic basis. Sony makes a lot of money from the X Factor; the winning artist is signed to them, published by them and promoted & managed by them. But Sony also owns LOTS of other record labels as subsidiaries and is also currently the only major record label not closing it's doors to A&R submissions. Think of some big alternative acts who're around/broken recently; Kings of Leon, Foo Fighters, Them Crooked Vultures, Glasvegas, The Ting Tings, Kasabian, MGMT, The Dead Weather, The View to name a tiny few. They're all Sony signings and in the last two years have all made huge achievements which, invariably, cost money. MGMT, Glasvegas and Ting Tings are actually very new acts. The point being, comparatively, the other majors and their moc indie labels haven't done nearly as well. That Sony is making money and still continuing to give us some exciting music is, in part, down to shows like X Factor and American Idol, which are the shameful marketing exercise and brain child of Sony's head, Simon Cowell. It is reasonable to assume that this mainstream success contributes in a big way to the financial security of Sony and therefore gives them a chance to work with riskier, less mainstream acts. Unfortunately, independant labels are finding it really tough at the minute, the whole industry is. And while it's not a good thing to have all your eggs in one basket, at least there IS a label making some money, albeit through filthy, close to subliminal, marketing techniques. In the interim period before somebody comes along and reinvents the wheel with the music industry, at least one record label is surviving.
BANG [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 13:52
@Alan Woodhouse - The Beatles DID release Twist & Shout as a single. It achieved No.2 in the USA. It was released as an EP over here the EP and Please Please Me were No.1 at the same time.
STUART PORTCH [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 13:55
X-Factor is evil, Kids are being Brainwashed by this crap and it's getting out of hand, I have to walk out my own living room to escape as my Kids are of the age this is aimed at, Simon Cowell is worse than any Pedo. He is thrusting this down everyones mouths and we sit there and take it. The charts has always had its pap - Bay City Rollers/Kajagoogoo/Snow Patrol but it was allowed to be mixed with other decent stuff. What chance of recent good songs by the likes of The Cribs/Maccabees/Mumford & Son getting into the publics heads, they would have had Top 20 hits 20 or so years ago and been on TOTP, Sadly those days have long gone. Download and cry
Jane [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 14:12
Not exactly the main oint of the article, I know, but Louis Walsh is also the 'brain' behind Boyzone and Westlife, who (however unexplicably and unfortunately) arn't entirely unsuccessfull, so he isn't completely clueless. Just mostly. Oh, and just for the record and with absolutely no intention to start that kind of debate here: ANYONE (and yes, that does include bloody 'Jedward') but Danyl to win - he is SO boring it actually HURTS to watch. (... fine, so I watch it too...)
Will [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 14:40
I've never watched it. It's one of the things that makes me glad I left the country nine years ago. Should be called the C factor from the sound of it.
Neil [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 14:50
The best article NME have done in a while - completely agree with this Luke!
Alan Woodhouse [Member] //November 11 2009 at 15:09
BANG - I hear what you're saying, but it was not released as a single proper in The UK. And as the show is in the UK, that's surely what counts. And in the US, The Beatles' catalogue was butchered beyond belief, so I'm not willing to give it any credence!

Anyway, my main point was that both of them thought it was actually a Beatles song. Which is quite insulting to those that wrote it and performed it before The Beatles.

And it exposes how little Cowell and Walsh know about music.
BANG [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 15:31
@Alan Woodhouse - Indeed. The Isley Brothers weren't even mentioned - probably because they weren't signed to Sony! Sad thing is, Simon Cowell and Louis Walsh never have known anything about music really but they're brilliant businessmen. Unfortunately that's all the X Factor is - a business. One of the funniest things was when SC called one of the acts 'relevant'. Bob Dylan was relevant, The Beatles were relevant, Johnny Cash was relevant, Rage Against The Machine were relevant - some 18 year old girl singing a Jonas Brothers song is NOT relevant.
Matt [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 15:48
X factor truely is shocking, I'm not sure it's a huge evil but just something to occupy the minds of idiots, these kind of phenomena are always milked for all they're worth becuase their success is always fleeting. Give it a few years and I'm sure the whole thing will have died a death... unofrtunately there'll almost certainly be something just as rubbish in it's place.
xxx [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 16:23
luke lewis,you're a LEGEND! x factor is the worst tv 'entertainment' programme EVER.
Oscar [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 16:34
The fact that Jedward are even on the show are a perfect example of how this isn't even really a talent show, or even a competition. So many people audition for X Factor, and without doubt a large number of far greater singers got turned down in favour of those two jokers. This show is an insult to talent.
Fabien Oman [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 17:01
Would Nina Simone win the X Factor now if she was around to audition? The answer is a resounding 'no' and that says it all. I want NME and other good magazines to select a single that all its readers should buy and get to Christmas #1 and take their biggest cash-in away from them. Graet article btw
Alina [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 17:02
JLS are ruining the charts. burke isnt better. Bad Boys???!!! Is that the best you can do? Though I like Jedward, if they win, Simon'll quit the X factor and no more trashy pop will be in our lives.
WEBBONISBATMAN [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 18:22
You bunch of effing snobs. Xfactors just a bit of fun. I'm well up for a bit of tosh tv than watching some high brow Lou Reed documentary. Saturdays were made for Xfactor just because you lot can't see through the fridges of your Hitler haircuts to see it dosn't mean it's evil. Saddos.
Lexi [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 18:54
@ "Fabien Oman - I want NME and other good magazines to select a single that all its readers should buy and get to Christmas #1 and take their biggest cash-in away from them." Agreed! Lets do it!
State [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 19:12
Unfortunalty being 14 i have to spend most of my days having to hear people play and tlk about this crap. The x factor is an aboslute sham and most people my age just listen to whats on mtv ( Which is the real evil in the music industry) No-one seems to even care about music any more unless its on mtv which is really insluting. X factor is going to deal the final blow to the music industry and it will be a sad day when it does. Im not a big hipster or anything like that, i just like my music. Imagine people my age have no music knowlege that when i went up to my cousins house in my nations capital, Dublin he and his friends didnt even know who bloc party were!
MyShout09 [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 21:29
Jeez Luke! You sound like an indie-kid. Power to the people.... up the revolution and all that!
Ari from Aus [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 23:10
Argh did Simon Cowell and his cronies set out to ruin grassroots music all over the world and create a generation of tv zombies that wouldn't know music if it smacked them in their temples?! If he didn't (though I wouldn't put that kind of plotting past him) it must've just been a happy side-effect! The music industry used to be (and still is in most alternative circles) about doing hard work writing great tunes and playing toilet venues building a fan-base . . . now all of a sudden the industry's established system of weeding out those that aren't talented or committed enough to survive on their own has been obliterated - you want to sing? That must mean you want fame. Come on this show and fit into this mould and we can get you there . . . makes me feel rather ill . . . And about the whole 'pop' thing - there will always be mass-produced, synthed, formulaic bollocks because, let's face it, for one reason or another it does shift units. For people that look past the charts for music there will always be 'Proper pop' - those elegant, breezy, escapist tunes that existed in years gone by and has contemporary followers in small but bright corners of the alternative conglomerate.
wow [Visitor] //November 11 2009 at 23:30
a well written article, even if i didn't necessarily agree with all its points. obviously there are a lot of people who will bum this article purely cause they hate x factor, but i'm just saying its well presented, humorous and you don't seem like a prick in it like all the other NME bloggers these days. nice one.
Just a Yankee who got here via Google search [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 00:13
As a Yankee, I have to say that we can more than relate to you guys. Two words: American Idol. And the same man behind X Factor is behind Idol.
Billy [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 00:36
LAURA WHITE has managed to independently release a single into the charts without any support of X factor. The song is okay. Obviously she has a strong fanbase to get her into the charts. Personally, I think its admirable to see her achieve success with some integrity. I download her song for only 69p knowing full well that Simon would not see one penny of it. It felt great!! I cannot think of any other artist who has had a hit after X-factor without being signed to Simon's record label?? Anyone know?
Dale [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 03:08
Great article. I utterly agree!
Nick [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 09:07
No offence to anyone whos commented on this or the writer of this article, but i dont think we should be even acknowledging the existence of The X Factor on an NME page. I know its out there to take people's money (think the people are realising now too) but NME is about NEW MUSIC. Even if you consider these acts as new, i certainly dont think they should be considered as music.
Kev [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 10:35
@Nick: I see your point, I don't think anyone should give X-Factor the time of day. If you acknowledge it, you somehow validate it. But I agree with everything Luke has said in the article.
Kev [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 10:42
Oh... and vote for John and Edward everyone! If they win it will show this TV circus up for the farce that it really is!
Spanglepuss [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 19:09
If you don't like it there's a button on your tv that says 'off'. Push it and then go to the pub.
Rob [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 19:34
X factor is a disgrace to music ever since Cheryl Cole joined in as many people prefer to watch the 'attention seekers' to become the faces on heat magazine which shows how X factor isn't a singing contest anymore as it is now the 'most popular attention seeker' contest.
Emma [Visitor] //November 12 2009 at 21:41
Shayne Ward released two albums on the Syco label in 2006 and 2007 (both sold over 45o,ooo copies) and he has a third coming out early next year!
Steve B [Visitor] //November 13 2009 at 10:43
Take it from me, it's complete and utter GUNT!
Jack [Visitor] //November 14 2009 at 16:52
I must say, despite being a fan, that I agree with the article. What I don't agree with however, is the strand of though in these messages that say people who watch and enjoy The X Factor are too lazy to pursue music they like and just accept what is being 'rammed down their throats'. I am an avid NME reader, and I pursue a lot of music I like beyond what is readily available, but I also appreciate that there is some feasible talent on The X Factor who i enjoy to watch. So, some great points raised, but guys, lets not undermine them through ignorance or generalisations!
[Visitor] //November 14 2009 at 19:04
"If you don't like it there's a button on your tv that says 'off'. Push it and then go to the pub. " That's exactly what i did last Saturday night, but guess what was on every TV in every pub in town? As I write this I'm struggling to find a pub that's showing the world cup qualifiers as X Factor has seeming taken over as the default program choice for pubs. I agree that if you don't like the X Factor, you don't have to watch it, but that's easier said then done.
Paul McDougall [Visitor] //November 14 2009 at 22:36
There's not one point that anyone can argue about in this post, its spot on! it appears that the entire audience, judges and performers are on some sort of hallucinogenic drug that makes them enjoy each performance.
Andy [Visitor] //November 15 2009 at 12:15
A few people so far have made comments saying that the TV is just a bit of fun. Even one person comparing 'anti-factors' to Nazi's! Surely being force-fed garbage that only serves to promote other products is closer to facism than a few people saying no to watching it? But its not the show i have a problem with. Its the acts it produces, and people, who couldn't give a flying funk being forced to hear, see or read about them in almost every form of media in circulation. Keep the TV on a saturday if people enjoy it, just Offer a cash prize instead of a record deal. Then we little 'hitlers' can crack on with our world domination of decent music.
PELLEEY [Visitor] //November 16 2009 at 11:23
@ "Fabien Oman - I want NME and other good magazines to select a single that all its readers should buy and get to Christmas #1 and take their biggest cash-in away from them." Agreed! Lets do it! Thats a great idea, lets let some other form of the media choose who goes to number one rather then Simon Cowell..or maybe you could buy what you like and ignore what other people buy, since when has being No 1 become the b and endall!
Mike [Visitor] //November 16 2009 at 11:41
Completely spot on Luke, a perceptive snd refreshing article. People may think its typical of haters of the show to suspect that this really is the major labels last stand for shifting units for the classic artists, but i mean c'mon the evidence is all there!! The show is a major utility for this purpose, and the major labels are without a doubt more than happy that they dont need to seatch for new diverse acts or groups. anyways short anser: Yes the x-factor is evil, very evil indeed
Alex [Visitor] //November 16 2009 at 15:09
Wait, a Saturday night ITV entertainment show uses advertisement and isn't the most well-made TV show ever? THIS IS A SHOCKING REVELATION, YOU HAVE ACTUALLY BLOWN MY MIND. Srsly though, who gives a shit? It's like writing a massive article about Hole in the Wall.
Emma [Visitor] //November 16 2009 at 17:25
Jedward to win. Srsly.
Mike [Visitor] //November 16 2009 at 18:24
@Alex The article doesnt indicate its shocking or even surprising. Just that its subtle endorsements ruining music are well....not so subtle.
Mash [Visitor] //November 17 2009 at 01:46
Totally agree with everything in the article, and nice to see I'm not on my own with this view. It's actually scary just how many people watch this bullshit and think it's about talented people. It's sad that most of the British public are thick enough to watch, be absorbed and brainwashed this tosh. I am the only person in my workplace from 50+ ppl that doesn't watch it, and when I mention my favourite artists like Hot Chip, Passion Pit, Miike Snow, Maccabees etc I get a strange look like I've suddenly become some hideous goth with no taste (nothing against goths btw!). It's a big reason as to why I am looking at moving abroad next year. 'Jedward' being in is getting the show more attention that it has had for years, thats why it's been fixed that they stay in, I mean, even the media have given them their own J-Lo style nickname already. They are showing it for what it really is. I'm taking advantage of NME's Simon Cowell Q&A to ask him why there isn't a songwriting week in X Factor. If I wanted to watch a load of clones singing other people's dull songs, which I don't, I'd go to the pub, be a damn sight more entertaining anyway!
[Visitor] //November 18 2009 at 12:19
And there are so many local versions of Idol/X Factor. It's kind of sad in a small country where the market is small and the local artists are competing with foreign artists and now with the winners and runner-ups of these competitions.
Florence [Visitor] //November 18 2009 at 23:13
I have to admit, I watch x factor. but the amount of product placement etc is ridiculous. and it is so obviously a fix if "Jedward" is still in! however, any entertainment program on the television is going to have money hungry pricks behind it. I agree with every single point made in this article... cheryl cole not singing live on a show when the show is about people's ability to sing live was ridiculous... this is what really annoys me about the world I've grown up in. You could have absolutely no talent whatsoever but have above-average looks and the ability to mime and you could be a popstar. but if you still have even the smallest ounce of dignity, you will not get anywhere in the music world. you can either be a sell-out, or nothing. that is how the world works apparently. it's twisted and shallow.
Florence [Visitor] //November 18 2009 at 23:15
I have to admit, I watch x factor. but the amount of product placement etc is ridiculous. and it is so obviously a fix if "Jedward" is still in! however, any entertainment program on the television is going to have money hungry pricks behind it. I agree with every single point made in this article... cheryl cole not singing live on a show when the show is about people's ability to sing live was ridiculous... this is what really annoys me about the world I've grown up in. You could have absolutely no talent whatsoever but have above-average looks and the ability to mime and you could be a popstar. but if you still have even the smallest ounce of dignity, you will not get anywhere in the music world. you can either be a sell-out, or nothing. that is how the world works apparently. it's twisted and shallow.
steve [Visitor] //November 22 2009 at 11:04
so glad its not just me who thinks this my girlfriend also makes me watch this fake crap , its really starting to anger me how gullable the nation is to this, simon cowell is laughing at us

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