X Factor Indonesia

X Factor Indonesia
Genre Reality television
Created by Simon Cowell
Presented by Robby Purba (2012-2015)
Andhika Pratama (2017-present)
Judges
Country of origin Indonesia
Original language(s) Indonesian
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 45
Production
Executive producer(s) Fabian Dharmawan
Glenn Sims
Virgita Ruchiman
Ken Irawati
Location(s) Various (auditions)
Studio 8 RCTI (live shows)
Hall D2 JIExpo (grand finale season 1)
Ecovention (grand finale season 2)
Running time 120-270 minutes (incl. adverts)
Production company(s) FremantleMedia Asia
Syco Entertainment
Distributor FremantleMedia Enterprises
PT Dunia Visitama Produksi
Release
Original network RCTI (2012-2015)
SCTV (2017-present)
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
Original release December 28, 2012 – present
Chronology
Related shows The X Factor (UK)
The X Factor (U.S.)
The X Factor (Australia)
External links
Website

X Factor Indonesia is a talent show that was adopted from the The X Factor with the sponsorship of the FremantleMedia in cooperation with RCTI on December 28, since the third season moved to SCTV. This event is a singing talent search. Contains events related to music and the air for 200 minutes. Talent show is held every two years in odd-numbered years. X Factor Indonesia won the Panasonic Gobel Awards for the category 'Talent and Best Reality Show' in 2014.

As part of the British The X Factor franchise, the show's format has numerous differences from rivals such as Indonesian Idol. The competition is open to both solo artists and groups and has no upper age limit. Each judge is assigned one of four categories—boys between 15 and 25, girls between 15 and 25, individuals 26 and over, or groups (some of which may be formed from rejected soloists after the audition process). Throughout the live shows the judges act as mentors to their category, helping to decide song choices, styling and staging, while judging contestants from the other categories; they also compete to ensure that their act wins the competition, thus making them the winning judge.

The original judging panel was Ahmad Dhani, Rossa, Anggun, and Bebi Romeo,[1] with Robby Purba as the host. There have been two winners of the show to date: Fatin Shidqia and Jebe & Patty.

History

Although Indonesian Idol went on to become an enormous success and the number 1 show in Indonesia for seven consecutive seasons, the original United Kingdom version, Pop Idol did not fare so well. Cowell, who was a judge on Pop Idol, wished to launch a show which he owned the rights to. Pop Idol's first series was massively successful, and while the second series was also successful, the viewers figure for its finale dropped.[2] Some—including Pop Idol judge Pete Waterman[3] considered Michelle McManus an unworthy winner. In 2004, Pop Idol was axed and ITV announced a new show created by former Pop Idol judge Simon Cowell, with no involvement from Idol creator Simon FullerThe X Factor. Its ratings were average in the first couple of series, but by the sixth series in 2009, ratings were hitting 10 million each week.[4]

In March 2010, RCTI, the broadcaster of Indonesian Idol, signed the deal to launch the Indonesian version of The X Factor. Initially, X Factor Indonesia was planned as a replacement for Indonesian Idol in 2013, but due to the enormous success of the seventh season in 2012, RCTI and FremantleMedia decided to continue collaborating both the X Factor Indonesia and Indonesian Idol with each playing on alternate years.[5] To repeat the success of seventh season of Indonesian Idol, Fabian Dharmawan from RCTI was appointed to be the Executive Producer for RCTI for the first season of the X Factor Indonesia, Head of Entertainment of FremantleMedia, Glenn Sims together with Virgita Ruchiman and Ken Irawati serving as Executive Producers for FremantleMedia Indonesia.

In August 2012, RCTI began airing short commercials for the program, which displayed the text "Coming Soon in Indonesia". A second promo was shown during that night, featuring One Direction, Agnez Mo, Afgan, Iwan Fals, 3 Diva, Glenn Fredly, SM*SH, Ariel 'NOAH', Ayu Ting Ting, 7 Icons, Tria 'The Changcuters', and JKT48. This promo started speculation on who would be judges on the X Factor Indonesia.[6]

X Factor premiered in Indonesia on December 28, 2012.

Format and prize

Categories

The show is primarily concerned with identifying singing talent, though appearance, personality, stage presence and dance routines are also an important element of many performances. Each judge is assigned one of four categories: "Girls" (aged 15–25 females), "Boys" (aged 15–25 males), "Over 26s" (solo acts aged 26 and over), or "Groups" (including duos; some of which may be formed from rejected soloists after the audition process). Through the live shows, the judges act as mentors to their category, helping to decide song choices, styling and staging, while judging contestants from other categories.

Stages

There are five stages to the competition:

Auditions

The show is open to solo artists and vocal groups aged 15 and above, with no upper age limit. The first set of auditions is held in front of the show's producers, which is not televised. Only candidates who successfully pass the producers' auditions are invited to perform to the judges. The judges' auditions are held in front of a live audience and the acts sing over a backing track. In that case, at least three out of four judges (two out of three, for the panel of three judges) have to say "yes" for the auditionee to advance to the next round, otherwise they are sent home. In addition, there is an online audition too in which the auditionees can upload their performance on the X Factor Indonesia website and the get the vote from viewers on YouTube. An auditionee with the most voted video will get the chance to meet the judges and awarded cash prize.

A selection of the auditions in front of the judges – usually the best, the worst and the most bizarre – are broadcast over the first few weeks of the show.

Bootcamp and judges' home visits

The contestants selected at auditions are further refined through a series of performances at "bootcamp", and then at the "judges' home visits", until a small number eventually progress to the live finals. In the bootcamp, contestants will have to go through a series of challenges until the number of contestants were trimmed down to 26 and divided according to their categories. At the end of bootcamp, the producers will also reveal which category the judges will be mentoring. The judges then disband for the "judges' home visits" round, where they further reduce their acts on location at a residence with the help of a celebrity guest mentor.

Live shows

The finals consist of a series of two gala live shows, with the first featuring the contestants' performances and the second revealing the results of the public voting. Celebrity guest performers will be featured regularly.

Performances

The performance show occasionally begins with a group performance from the remaining contestants. The show is primarily concerned with identifying a potential pop star or star group, and singing talent, appearance, personality, stage presence and dance routines are all important elements of the contestants' performances. In the initial live shows, each act performs once in the first show in front of a studio audience and the judges, usually singing over a pre-recorded backing track. Dancers are also commonly featured. Acts occasionally accompany themselves on guitar or piano.

Each live show has had a different theme; each contestant's song is chosen according to the theme. After each act has performed, the judges comment on their performance. Heated disagreements, usually involving judges defending their contestants against criticism, are a regular feature of the show. Once all the acts have appeared, the phone lines open and the viewing public vote on which act they want to keep. Once the number of contestants has been reduced to six, each act would perform twice in the performances show. This continues until only three acts remain. These acts go on to appear in the grand final which decides the overall winner by public vote.

Results

The two acts polling the fewest votes are revealed. Both these acts have to perform again in a "final showdown", and the judges vote on which of the two to send home. They were able to pick new songs to perform in the "final showdown". Ties are possible as there are four judges voting on which of the two to send home. In the event of a tie the result goes to deadlock, and the act who came last in the public vote is sent home. The actual number of votes cast for each act is not revealed, nor even the order. Once the number of contestants has been reduced to five, the act which polled the fewest votes is automatically eliminated from the competition (the judges do not have a vote; their only role is to comment on the performances).

After X Factor Indonesia

The winner of the X Factor Indonesia is awarded a recording contract from Sony Music Indonesia, which would include investments worth 1 billion rupiah, which is claimed as the largest guaranteed prize in Indonesian television history. Several cash rewards from the sponsors, including a new car, is also awarded for the grand finalists in the first season.[7]

Series overview

To date, two seasons have been broadcast, as summarized below.

     Contestant in (or mentor of) "Boys" category
     Contestant in (or mentor of) "Girls" category
     Contestant in (or mentor of) "Over 26s" or "Overage" category
     Contestant in (or mentor of) "Groups" category

Season Start Finish Winner Runner-up Third place Winning mentor Main host Sponsors Main judges Guest judges
One December 28, 2012 May 24, 2013 Fatin Shidqia Novita Dewi Nu Dimension Rossa Robby Purba Evercoss
Indosat Mentari
Kopi ABC
Oriflame
Wardah Cosmetics
P&G
Ahmad Dhani
Rossa
Anggun
Bebi Romeo
Mulan Jameela1
Two April 3, 2015 September 11, 2015 Jebe & Petty Clarisa Dewi Desy Natalia Rossa Oppo Smartphone
Teh Pucuk Harum
Indomie
P&G
GIV White Beauty
Ahmad Dhani
Rossa
Afgan
Bebi Romeo
Ayu Ting Ting
Three 2017
Notes
  1. ^ Mulan Jameela served as guest judge for one of the auditions to replace Anggun temporarily.

Judges and hosts

Anggun is one of the judges in the first season.

Many people were rumored to be in the running to join the judging panel, including Indra Lesmana, Titi DJ, Maia Estianty, Vina Panduwinata, Tompi, Anang Hermansyah, Sherina Munaf, Agnes Monica, Ruth Sahanaya, and Iwan Fals. Eventually, Dewa 19-frontman, musician, songwriter, and record producer Ahmad Dhani, singer, musician, and songwriter Bebi Romeo, pop diva Rossa, and international diva Anggun were confirmed to join this show as judges.[1] Pop sensational singer Mulan Jameela filled in for Anggun at the auditions while Anggun was performing in her Europe Live Tour Concert.[8] Numerous people were speculated to host the series, including VJ Boy William and Daniel Mananta, host of Indonesian Idol. On November 23, 2012, ex-VJ Robby Purba was announced as host of the show.

Judges' categories and their finalists

In each season, each judge is allocated a category to mentor and chooses a small number of acts (three for season one) to progress to the live shows. This table shows, for each season, which category each judge was allocated and which acts he or she put through to the live shows.

Key:

     – Winning judge/category. Winners are in bold, eliminated contestants in small font.

Season Ahmad Dhani Rossa Anggun Bebi Romeo
One Groups
Nu Dimension
Ilusia Girls
Dalagita
Girls
Fatin Shidqia
Shena Malsiana
Yohanna Febrianti
Boys
Mikha Angelo
Gede Bagus
Dicky Adam
Over 26s
Novita Dewi
Isa Raja
Alex Rudiart
Agus Hafiluddin
Season Ahmad Dhani Rossa Afgan Bebi Romeo
Two Overage
Desy Natalia
Angela July
Sulle Wijaya
Groups
Jebe & Petty
Classy
Jad n Sugy
Girls
Clarisa Dewi
Ajeng Astiani
Ismi Riza
Riska Wulandari
Boys
Ramli Nurhappi
Aldy Saputra
Siera Latupeirissa

Reception

Television ratings

Season Season premiere Season premiere
viewing figures
Season finale Season finale
viewing figures
Episodes Average Indonesian viewers
in millions
1 28 December 2012 3.2 24 May 2013 6.2 22 4.7
2 3 April 2015 3.7 11 September 2015 2.1 23 3.0

Controversy and criticism

In week six of season one, Ahmad Dhani and Rossa opted to send home Alex Rudiart in favor of Gede Bagus, causing the elimination of Alex Rudiart. This decision resulted in large amount of criticisms and outrages from the public, who claimed the decision as unfair. As a result, a lot of social media reactions begin to appear including several motion to boycott the show.[9]

Media sponsorship

On September 29, 2012, RCTI, SYCOtv and FremantleMedia Asia announced that Cross Mobile will be the official sponsor of the X Factor Indonesia. The sponsorship includes an extensive multi-platform on and off-air marketing partnership.[10] On December 26, Kopi ABC was announced as the second official sponsor of the show. Kopi ABC's sponsorship will also include an extensive multi-platform on and off-air marketing partnership.[11] Indosat Mentari was confirmed as the third official sponsor on December 28. Indosat Mentari's sponsorship of the X Factor Indonesia will also include an extensive multi-platform on and off-air marketing partnership between Indosat and MNC Sky Vision. Oriflame also sponsored the show as the official make-up sponsor.[12] Procter & Gamble using it as a platform to promote its Pantene, Olay and Downy brands.

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Result
2014 Panasonic Gobel Awards Program Talent Show & Reality Show[13] Won

References

  1. 1 2 "Ini Alasan Anggun Jadi Juri X-Factor". Liputan6. December 19, 2012.
  2. Wade Paulse (December 22, 2003). ""Plus-size" contestant wins U.K. 'Pop Idol', as judge Pete Waterman walks out". Reality TV World.
  3. Neil Wilkes. "Pete Waterman: "Michelle is rubbish"". Digital Spy. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  4. "Joe McElderry's 'X Factor' win draws 19.7m", Digital Spy, 14 December 2009
  5. "X Factor Indonesia season 2 digelar tahun 2015". Tabloid Bintang. May 25, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  6. "X Factor Indonesia segera hadir di RCTI". C&R Digital. September 21, 2012. Archived from the original on June 18, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  7. "Ini Hadiah Bagi Pemenang X Factor Indonesia". Okezone.com. May 10, 2013. Archived from the original on June 11, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  8. "Kejutan Dari Kursi Juri". January 19, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  9. "Muncul Gerakan Boikot X Factor Indonesia". Tribun News. March 30, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  10. "Perkuat Strategi Marketing, Cross Sponsori X Factor". Yahoo! News Indonesia. November 27, 2012. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  11. "Kopi ABC Menjadi Sponsor X Factor Indonesia". December 26, 2012. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  12. "Oriflame mensponsori X Factor Indonesia". December 28, 2012. Archived from the original on May 19, 2013. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  13. Pamungkas, Alan (5 April 2014). "X Factor Indonesia, Acara Pencarian Bakat Terfavorit di PGA 2014". Okezone. Retrieved 5 June 2016.

External links

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