



American Idol has historically been a conservative — or “family-friendly” — program. (We all remember how the “guylinered” Adam Lambert lost to “guy next door” Kris Allen, or how viewers never accepted Season 12 judge Nicki Minaj). But after a two-year hiatus and a switch to ABC, the revived show seemed to have the potential to finally broaden its base.

During Sunday’s top 14 semifinals, we saw two edgy, envelope-pushing contestants, Jurnee and Ada Vox, do things never seen on Idol before. Jurnee rapped (with an endorsement from Nicki herself!), and Ada, who’d auditioned for the show five years ago as Adam Sanders, performed as a drag queen. However, it turned out this is the same old Idol… or at least it has the same old viewership. Jurnee and Ada — both openly gay contestants of color — were not among the six contestants voted through to the top 10 by America, and they had to be saved by the judges.

Additionally, prior to the judges’ deliberations that came at the end of Tuesday’s two-hour elimination episode, the Twitterverse exploded with outrage over the fact that, according to the order in which host Ryan Seacrest announced the results, it seemed like everyone going through was white (with the notable exception of the worthy Michael J. Woodard, one of my top six picks). One viewer tweeted, “Who wants to bet Jurnee didn’t get enough votes because she’s PoC AND lesbian?” Another posted, “I am a white woman, and I am offended by these picks.” And another simply wrote: “Welcome to White American Idol.”

@AmericanIdol results have America looking pretty racist at the moment… thank god for the judges vote! Hopefully we get some good talent of color in the mix! @MichelleSussett @DennisLorenzo should have been in from the start!! #notright — Apolinar Santana (@aPAULinar21) April 24, 2018





Apparently the people voting on #AmericanIdol are the same idiots who voted to put Trump in office. A big NO to the biracial lesbian and the Asian drag queen. #Jurnee and #Ada, SHINE ON! You are both amazing! @Jurnee @AdaVox — Truth Monger (@TruthMonger4) April 24, 2018





. @katyperry Here’s the disconnect. Jurnee is a woman, she’s black, and she’s a lesbian. In much of America she has three strikes against her. One of the best singers on the show. — David Hoffman (@atDavidHoffman) April 24, 2018





Anyway, along with Michael, America voted for Maddie Pope and Cade Foehner — who were actually in my personal top six — as well as Catie Turner and two country contestants, Caleb Lee Hutchinson and golden girl Gabby Barrett. That shockingly left Jurnee, Ada, and another one of my top six picks, Dennis Lorenzo, plus Michelle Sussett, Marcio Donaldson, Mara Justine, Garrett Jacobs, and Johnny Brenns, to sing for the top 10’s four judge-determined wild-card slots.

Ada (whose name, according to Ryan, was chanted by the studio audience during the commercial break) boldly went with the Dreamgirls statement song “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going.” And she was right! Katy Perry made an “executive decision” to immediately send Ada to the top 10 — and for that alone, I think Katy deserves her $25 million Idol paycheck.

“I don’t know everything,” said Katy, removing her earrings to show she meant business. “But I think we do know talent when we see it.” However, Katy won’t be able to save Ada every week, and I am afraid America just isn’t ready to see a drag queen on a non-Logo/World of Wonder reality competition.

Katy seemed just as frustrated by Jurnee’s failure to make the top six, complaining, “Never have I ever seen a more qualified woman for the job and still not get the job. What’s the disconnect, America?” Thankfully, the judges saved Jurnee as well, along with Dennis (who had Luke Bryan exclaiming incredulously, “I have never questioned my country, but America does not know what they’re doing!”) and Michelle. This meant Marcio, Mara, Garrett, and Johnny went home.

So, ultimately (and ironically), I did get the top 10 I wanted — and the top 10 that I think American Idol and America in general deserve. But what will happen from here on out? Looking at these early voting patterns, I’m afraid Kieran will soon be dimming the lights on some of my talented favorites.

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