The "American Idol" contest between teenage
country crooners Lauren Alaina and Scotty McCreery drew a record 122
million-plus votes, host Ryan Seacrest said during Wednesday's
finale.
The Fox TV show itself attracted igh-wattage stars including
Beyonce, Jack Black, Tom Jones and Tony Bennett, who performed at
the Nokia Theatre with the top-finishing "Idol" contestants. Judge
Jennifer Lopez even got into the act. Draped in a scanty outfit and
shaking her famous booty, she took the stage to dance while husband
Marc Anthonysang, briefly turning the night into a salsa-flavored
family affair.
Alaina, 16, and McCreery, 17, represent the first all-country
finale and the youngest duo ever to compete on "Idol." Last year,
by contrast, Fox didn't announce the total in the much lower-key
contest between winner Lee DeWyze and runne-up Crystal Bowersox.
When winner Kris Allen and Adam Lambert duked it out in 2009,
more than 100 million votes were cast.
The season's vote total was more than
three-quarters-of-a-billion, Seacrest announced as the show got
under way. For Fox, it's affirmation there's still life in the
series that's ad a long ratings reign as No. 1.
There was drama during Tuesday's performance show when Alaina
required medical treatment for a vocal cord injury suffered during
rehearsals for Tuesday's performance show. She soldiered on with
three tunes, drawing high praise from the Fox TV show's judges.
"This is very tight race tonight, but Lauren, with that song,
you may have just won," Lopez said after Alaina sang an emotional
"Like My Mother Does," the last of her trio of tunes.
But it was up to viewers to choose between Alaina and McCreery,
an equally fresh-faced performer but one with a strikingly mature
voice.
Randy Jackson said backstage Tuesday he thought Alaina's
performance, not her vocal problem and a possible sympathy reaction,
would count in the voting.
"I think she sang brilliantly tonight," said Jackson, who
thought she outsang McCreery on two songs.
But the judge stopped short of predicting her victory.
"Going into tonight, Scotty definitely had an edge and he may
still have a slight edge," Jackson said. But Alaina "was the best
tonight."
Both are impressive singers for the show's "first-ever,
all-country final," he said. "These kids are so young ... I just
go, 'Wow.' They embody what this whole show is about."
Alaina's other tunes were Carrie Underwood's "Flat on the
Floor" and Pam Tillis' "Maybe It was Memphis," which was selected
by former "Idol" winner Underwood.
McCreery sang his own possible future single, "I Love You This
Big," Montgomery Gentry's "Gone" and George Strait's "Check Yes
or No," Strait's pick for the teenager.
After the show, Alaina gave reporters the silent treatment to
protect her voice, with McCreery offering his services as spokesman
while she scribbled answers on a memo pad or whispered to him.
When Alaina was asked if her finale performance had been at risk,
he replied, "She says, 'Yes."'
Judge Steven Tyler said it's not unusual for steroids to be used
for a vocal cord injury.
"You pay for it dearly the next day," he said, adding that
Alaina shouldn't be affected because she was on stage briefly
Tuesday.
The show started with host Ryan Seacrest bringing Dr. Shawn
Nasseri on stage to explain that Alaina blew out one of her vocal
cords but had been given "a lot of medicine" to be able to sing
during the finale.