Talent show’s are huge right now, and there are so many of them. There’s Idol, X Factor, XX Country’s got talent just to name a few. I have to admit, I am not a regular viewer, however I do tune in from time to time, and after a few seasons I have noticed a series of patterns on who wins and who doesn’t. It seems Wozo from Fiscal Fizzle did too, and he compiled this list of 7 patterns he learnt, from American Idol specifically, that applies to any talent show, or just success in general.
#1: You don’t have to be the front runner to win the game. What you do have to be is unclear–a little bit lucky, a consistent singer, an underdog, perhaps an attractive young guy. But definitely not the front runner. In the past few seasons, it’s been almost impossible to predict who would end up in the final two and compete for the crown.
#2: You have to bring your A-game every week. The audience is unforgiving–you have to give 110% every week or you might quickly find yourself voted off the show. At the same time, the public has a strong desire to vote for the underdog, and they will recognize upward progress over consistency given the right conditions.
#3: If you mess up, you just have to come back stronger. Sooner or later, almost everyone will have a low moment on the show. The ones who stick around are able to put it behind them and come back even stronger on the next performance, proving to everyone that they deserve to stay.
#4: You need to be well-rounded in many aspects. Idol is a singing competition, but it’s also a popularity contest, a test of resilience, humility, passion and personality, and a measure of how good a musician you can be. Singing well is the price of entry, but you can’t fake the other stuff and make it to the end.
#5: Your best critic, and the one you need to trust, is inside you. There are the three judges, which have been overly positive this season. There are the voters, where landing in the “bottom 3” can really shake you. Unless you can get past all that and make decisions about what’s best for you, you don’t survive very long.
#6: The more successful you are, the more the haters come out. It’s tough to find an Idol blog lately that doesn’t present the day’s events in a cynical, nasty manner. The further you get in the competition, the more smaller and smaller nuances of your performance are analyzed. If the judges and contestants took the time to read all the negativity written about them, they could lose their way. It’s all about laser focus in these late stages of the game.
#7: You don’t need to win the game. You don’t need support from the masses. In fact, some of the most successful Idols have been runners-up, 4th place finishers, and worse. Even those that never made it through auditions grew in some way. In the end, uniqueness matters as much as mass appeal, and the process is more important than the result.

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Totally love these tips!
It’s kinda sad that the really, super talented ones were always eliminated.
And #7 is soooo true.
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