Menu

❶Hans vant årets X Factor: - Vet ikke hva jeg skal si|Marthe Valle – Fader Vår|The X Factor (Vereinigte Staaten)|Inhaltsverzeichnis|X Factor - Gamereactor Norge|Make Up Products | Home | Max Factor | Max Factor]

Nettstedet du nå besøker blir i stor del finansiert av annonseinntekter. Basert på din tidligere aktivitet hos oss, vil du få annonser vi tror kan interessere deg. Vi bruker dataene til å forbedre og tilpasse tjenestene, tilbudene og annonsene våre. Hans Bollandsås. Atle Pettersen. Tanita Kolås 2 av 4 stemmer - seernes stemmer. Ole Gustav Johnsen 3 av 4 stemmer. Marthe Valle 2 av 4 stemmer - seernes stemmer. Et sterkt enebarn som har lært mye i livet, selv om jeg fortsatt er ung.

Jeg har vært gjennom så mye. Det er det som har gjort meg sterk. Suksessen Han husker godt X-faktor-suksessen, og nedturen som kom da han ble stemt ut rett før. Tiden går så fort. Det var veldig vondt den perioden. Jeg grein som bare det. Jeg ville gjøre alle stolte, og det var så mange forventninger til meg, sier han. Mye oppmerksomhet fikk han også på den tiden. Særlig positiv oppmerksomhet, men også negativ. Under et portrettintervju med Dagbladet ble han drapstruet av en mann som ikke likte det han mente var feminine trekk ved artisten.

Du møter folk som er glad i deg, og folk som ikke er glad i deg. Man kan ikke være redd for sånne ting. Men den type ting er jeg ikke redd for. Men når jeg skal på scenen er jeg nervøs. Etter har hun klart å etablere seg både i musikkbransjen og i kjendispressen.

Mens vi venter på X-factor , får vi se om forrige års finalister klarer å holde oppe gløden på stjernehimmelen. Bildene på denne siden er hentet fra nyhetskommentar.

Lagt inn av fiskeri kl. Etiketter: atle pettersen , bilder , mo , mohamed abdi farah , tone damli aaberge , x-factor. Ravi skal løfte X-Factor En ny runde med X-Factor er på gang, og forhåpentligvis blir det mer X-Factor å spore i enn i forrige runde. I forrige runde følte mange seg snytt da Elin Gaustad ble tatt ut av konkurransen før TV-seerne fikk avsi sin dom. Samtidig ble det fremført langt flere sure toner og enda flere disharmonier enn hva som forventes mot slutten av en slik konkurranse.

I media fikk også programlederen blandet kritikk. I mine tidligere vurderinger av deltakerne ble det mer en konkurranse om å synge minst dårlig. Med dommerne imot seg greide Norge å henge med til fransk ledelse, Da hadde trener Christian Berge irritert seg så grenseløst at han fikk gult kort. Frankrike ledet til pause. I andre omgang kjempet Norge for å komme à jour, men greide aldri å få nærkontakt. Avstanden var aldri mindre enn tre mål.

Det haglet med dommerkommentarer på Twitter, og det var ikke bare fra partiske nordmenn. Håpløst», skrev den danske spilleren og håndballnerden Rasmus Boysen.

Dansk TV 2s veterankommentator meldte: «Iransk dommerpar skader ikke Frankrike». Hans sjef, Dan Phillipsen skrev: «Å sette ukjente, iranske dommere til toppkamp i et VM i håndball, er som å sette en døv til å være dommer i X Factor».

Bootcamp was cut entirely in series 15 due to timing constraints and instead the judges reviewed the audition tapes and decided who to send through to the next stage of the competition. In series 4, 6, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14 and 15, the judges found out which category they would be mentoring at the same time that the contestants found out their mentor, but in series 5, 7 and 9 the contestants did not know who their mentor was until they revealed themselves at the house or at Bootcamp in series The judges then disband for the "judges' houses" round, where they reduce their six acts to three for the live shows.

Occasionally between the first and second stages of Bootcamp or prior to judges' houses, judges may look at certain rejected solo artists who they feel have potential but may be better suited in a group, and in an attempt to give them a lifeline, then send these acts into a room to form a number of different groups, each depending on size, height, fashion and chemistry.

Lineup changes may also sometimes occur depending on what the judges feel the group is missing or which members they think work well with others.

In series 10, the format to Bootcamp was changed: the judges find out their categories before Bootcamp starts, and each judge will make decisions on who is performing in the Six-Chair Challenge by eliminating the contestants, this is up to each individual judge. From Series 11 onwards, the judges do not know their categories before the Bootcamp, so they have to make the decisions together.

After the Bootcamp round, the mentor challenges their contestants through the Six-Chair Challenge. Judges make decisions on who to put through to judges' houses straight after each act has performed, with those getting a yes taking a chair in the final six chairs on stage. It is up to the mentor to decide, which act they want to take to judges' houses, but once all six spots are full, if the mentor wants to send another act through to the next stage it means they have to replace one of those who were previously given a yes.

This format was very poorly rated by many members of the British public. In series 12, all of Bootcamp aired on-screen. Series 15 introduced a new feature with a golden X in front of the judging panel.

Similar to the Golden Buzzer on Britain's Got Talent , the mentor can press the button once for one of their acts currently performing whom they feel has the most potential. When this is pressed, the act in question is guaranteed a 'Safe Seat', immunizing them from being swapped out for other acts, and will go straight through to Judges' Houses.

For series 12, the judges' houses round was given a new tweak: the contestants perform for their mentors in the scheduled destinations as usual, but only find out whether or not they are through to the live shows during a live decider in front of a studio audience of friends and family. Judges' houses returned to its previous format in being entirely pre-recorded at the locations for series The selected finalists either 9, 12, 13 or 16 acts move into shared accommodation to take part in the show.

The house accommodates both contestants and TV production staff [39] and footage from the house is often used in spin-off show The Xtra Factor. In , the finalists stayed at the Corinthia Hotel in London.

The finals consist of a series of two live shows, the first featuring the contestants' performances and the second revealing the results of the public voting, culminating in one or more acts being eliminated.

Celebrity guest performers also feature regularly. These live shows were filmed at Fountain Studios in Wembley , London from series 1 to In series 1—5, both live shows were broadcast on Saturday nights. In series 6, the results show moved to Sunday nights. In series 1, nine acts were put through to the live shows, increased to 12 in series 2. In series 7, following the addition of four wildcards, it increased to Then in series 9, it reduced back to three each, but one wildcard was added, meaning there were 13 finalists.

Series 10 reverted to 12 finalists. Series 11 initially did the same, but the addition of four wildcards in the live shows brought it back up to 16 finalists; but with the wildcards chosen by a different judge instead of their category's mentor. Series 12 used the same format as series 9, in which each category had three acts before one wildcard was added. For series 13, it returned to just 12 finalists, with no wildcard twist like in series 10 , although wildcard acts in each category were selected prior to judges' houses, each judge picking for another judge's category.

Series 14 also used the wildcard premise as series 7 and 11, but added a twist in which the public voted for one act in each category to progress to the live shows. Series 15 returned to the judges picking four acts each with no wildcards. 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. In the first two series, acts usually chose a cover of a pop standard or contemporary hit. From the third series, each live show has had a different theme; each contestant's song is chosen according to the theme.

A celebrity guest connected to the theme is often invited onto the show, and clips are shown of the guest conversing with the contestants at rehearsal. For series 13, a jukebox theme selection was introduced; at the end of each results show, a jukebox is utilised and then spun around to find out the next week's theme from a selection of assorted themes.

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 four series 1 and 3 , five series 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 or seven series 7 , the format changes. Each act performs twice in the first show, with the public vote opening after the first performance.

This continues until only two series 1 and 3 , three series 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10 and 11 or four series 7 acts remain. These acts go on to appear in the grand final which decides the overall winner by public vote. In past series some of the more memorable failed auditionees from the early rounds have also returned for a special appearance in the final. From its inception up to series 7, the final took place in the same studio as the live shows.

However, from series 8 onwards, due to the success of the arena auditions, the final now takes place at Wembley Arena , accommodating a larger stage and a much larger audience in series 9, however, the final took place at Manchester Central as Wembley Arena was unavailable.

Series 6 saw a change to the live show format: since then, the live shows on Saturdays show just the contestants' performances, and Sunday's results shows reveal the results for the contestants, giving viewers a much longer time span to vote. Series 9, 11 and most of series 13 completely changed the voting format, where lines now open for viewers to vote at the start of each show, and then close during the results show.

For series 14, the format of the live shows was revised significantly: the finalists are divided into two groups, where the contestants in each group compete against each other on Saturday or Sunday to win that night's show. The contestants with the highest votes for that night is also announced and the two acts who won their respective public votes will then sing against each other in a new element of the show called the prize fight.

The winner of the prize fight will win a special weekly prize. The voting window was also shortened, viewers only have a few minutes to vote for their favourite acts after all the contestants on the night have performed. Before the results are announced, there are live or pre-recorded performances from one or more invited celebrities, often with performers connected to the week's theme.

From series 6 onwards, the results show begins with a group performance from the remaining contestants. However, the song is pre-recorded and the contestants mime, due to problems with the number of microphones. Both these acts perform again in a "final showdown", and the judges vote on which of the two to send home. In the first four series the bottom two contestants reprised their earlier song, but from series 5 they were able to pick new songs.

In series 3, a twist occurred where the act with the fewest votes was automatically eliminated, and the two with the next fewest votes performed in the "final showdown" as normal. Double eliminations have since occurred occasionally in series 7, 8, 11, 12 and 14 onwards, with series 12, 14 and 15 using them more frequently than usual due to the reduction of live shows from 10 weeks to 7 weeks. Ties became possible with the introduction of a fourth judge in series 4.

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; according to a spokesman, "We would never reveal the voting figures during the competition as it could give contestants an unfair advantage and spoil the competition for viewers".

Once the number of contestants has been reduced to four series 1, 3, 7, 8 and 9 or five series 2, 4, 5 and 6 , 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.

From series 10 onwards, the semi-final proceeds with the bottom two in the final showdown for the judges to decide who to send home before the final. Four occasions in series 7, 10, 13 and 15 during the semi-final saw the judges instead vote to send one of the bottom two through to the final.

In series 1, the eliminated acts also reprised one of their songs in the results show after being voted off. This has become less common in other series, instead being relegated to results shows with no final showdown. In series 10, the flash vote was introduced: where one contestant is revealed with the fewest flash votes on Saturday's live show, and the contestant with the second lowest votes from the remaining public vote is announced on Sunday's results show and therefore participates in the final showdown with the other contestant.

Despite the flash vote eliminating all possibilities of deadlock, it quickly drew criticism from viewers and was quickly dropped after several weeks. However, another variation of the flash vote has debuted in series 11 twice as part of a double elimination. In this variation, the act who polled the fewest votes on Saturday's show is automatically eliminated.

The two acts with the next fewest votes on Sunday then perform in the final showdown. This double elimination variation was used once again in series 12 and for the semi-final in series 15; in the latter case two acts were sent home on Saturday before the sing-off took place on Sunday. A lifeline vote was introduced within the first half of the series 13 live shows, where the bottom three contestants are announced. Viewers are then given a few minutes to vote to save one of the bottom three, with the winner of the lifeline vote avoiding the final showdown.

As of series 14, the contestants are split into two halves competing on Saturday and Sunday night, respectively, therefore each week is a double elimination. As the results are announced, the contestant who had the lowest viewer votes on each night is announced and leaves the show immediately; the winning contestant is announced thereafter.

The quarter-final during this series served as the show's first quadruple public vote elimination: the two acts with the fewest votes on each night leaving immediately, with four acts sent home that weekend.

The two winning contestants of both Saturday and Sunday night then compete in a sing-off to win their weekly prize. Once they have performed their sing-off songs, the lines then reopen and the public votes on which contestant to win the weekly prize. The semi-final dispensed with the prize fight format in a triple elimination; on Saturday night, all the acts instead sing one song each to remain in the competition before the lines open briefly, then the act with the lowest votes on the night leaves the competition.

The remaining acts then sing one more song on Sunday night for the public vote to go through to the final, the two acts with the lowest votes on the night are therefore sent home as well. Series 15 has reverted to the usual Sunday elimination format with every live show being a double elimination, albeit mostly with the lines freezing before the results show and the act with the lowest votes eliminated immediately at the beginning of the show before lines reopen briefly. The first and third live shows avoided this variation of the format; in the latter show, problems that caused sound to be distorted during some of the performances caused the Saturday vote to be cancelled and in the Sunday results show, the performances were rebroadcast without the sound problems before lines reopened in order to give all the acts a fair shot.

The semi-final followed roughly the same format as the series 14 semi-final, albeit with two acts eliminated immediately after the acts' Saturday performances, before the remainder of the acts sing their second song on Sunday to avoid the sing-off.

In series 5, this deal consisted of a £, cash advance with the balance covering the costs of recording and marketing. Following the appointment of singer Minogue as a judge in series 4, the same principle could not universally apply.

In fact, when Minogue won series 4 with Leon Jackson , a new outside manager was appointed. It features an array of finalists from the most recent The X Factor series. From until , Jeff Brazier hosted the tour. Becca Dudley took over the hosting duties from the tour, which sees a revamped format in which the finalists compete to be the winner of each night's tour, with the arena audience voting for the night's winner.

Act in or mentor of "16—24s" category      Act in or mentor of "Boys" category      Act in or mentor of "Girls" category      Act in or mentor of "Over 25s", "Over 26s", "Over 28s" or "Over 30s" category      Act in or mentor of "Groups" category. On 22 June, it was confirmed that Friedman had been reassigned the role of creative director and would be replaced on the panel by Walsh.

Speculation surrounded judging line-up changes for series 5 , centering on whether Osbourne would return.

On 6 June , six days before filming for series 5 was due to begin, ITV confirmed that Osbourne had left the show, [50] and a number of other artists and producers were approached regarding her replacement. On 10 June, Cheryl Cole was confirmed as Osbourne's replacement.

Despite rumours that Minogue would leave the show after series 5, [53] [54] all four judges from series 5 returned for series 6. Due to Minogue's maternity leave during series 7, a series of guest judges filled in for her at the audition stages before she rejoined the panel in September. In July , Cole was diagnosed with malaria towards the end of the auditions, so Scherzinger returned as a guest judge for bootcamp.

On 5 May , it was announced that Cowell and Cole would not be returning to the judging panel for the eighth series , to concentrate on the American version of the programme.

For this reason I am unable to return. Barlow, [68] [69] Walsh [70] and Tulisa [71] returned for series 9. Rowland left due to other commitments. On 21 May , ending months of media speculation, Tulisa announced that she would not return as a judge for the 10th series.

On 7 February , it was confirmed that Cowell would return as a judge for series Cowell was confirmed to return as a judge for the 12th series. He also revealed that he was in the dark about whom Cowell had the intentions of bringing onto the panel.

To get 10 was great, to get 11 was amazing — I'm not hanging around for them this year. On 18 February , a series representative announced Grimshaw's departure from the judging panel, confirming: "We are sad to see him go but wish him all the best. In , Williams and Field announced their departures from the programme. Sharon Osbourne —, , — Nicole Scherzinger —, — The first three series of the show were hosted by Kate Thornton.

She was replaced from series 4 by Dermot O'Leary who signed a contract worth £1 million to present two series of the programme on ITV.

On 16 April , ITV confirmed that both Olly Murs and Flack would take over presenting duties, becoming the first duo to host the show. In a statement, Murs stated, "This was an incredibly hard decision to make and one I didn't take lightly as I've really enjoyed co-hosting The X Factor. Friedman served as performance coach and choreographer billed as "Creative Director" from series 4—7 and left before series 8 to join the American version.

Brian Burke and Elizabeth Honan replaced him for series 8, although Friedman returned for three weeks in series 9 and Honan did not return.

Friedman returned as creative director in series 11, replacing Reeve and Swanhart. However, Tennant's contract was ended before the live shows and Burnett was reinstated. Dickson announced his departure from the show on 28 July , [] but announced his return due to "popular demand" on 30 October Dermot O'Leary —, — In each series, each judge is allocated a category to mentor and chooses a small number of acts three or four, depending on the series to progress to the live finals.

From series 1—11 and 13 onwards, these categories were decided by the producers of the show. In series 12 viewers voted via hashtags on Twitter to determine which of the judges is allocated each of the four categories.

Viewing figures of around 10 million were claimed for series 2 and 4, and 11 to 12 million for series 5. Over three million public votes were cast in series 2 and six million in the first part of the final. The series 3 final attracted 8 million votes [] and a peak of The BBC's rival talent show Strictly Come Dancing initially beat The X Factor in viewing figures in , although The X Factor soon reversed this trend, and when the shows went head-to-head for the first time, [ when?

Since , however, ratings of The X Factor have been in sharp decline. It was overtaken in the rating battle by Strictly Come Dancing during series 8 and has since very rarely managed to beat it, with Strictly Come Dancing extending its lead over the show per year.

The ratings crisis has worsened in the following year with the show recording its lowest ever figures and Strictly Come Dancing now enjoying nearly three times the audience figures of The X Factor in most weeks. The show won the Entertainment award at the Royal Television Society Awards , described as "Undeniably a brilliant, genre-defining piece of television; the team behind this show never rest on their laurels and are determined to continually raise the bar and set new standards.

Must-see television, which everyone talks about on a Monday morning. The viewing figures for the first seven years of the show featured an upwards trend excluding the third series until it peaked for its seventh series in However since the eight series, viewing figures have declined year on year, with the average audience figure for the ninth series being over 2 million lower than the previous year.

From the outset, The X Factor has attracted heavy criticism. Recurring allegations include: that the excessive commercialism of the show detracts from its supposed purpose of unearthing musical talent and even actively damages and distorts the UK music industry; [] that auditionees at mass auditions are shabbily treated; that controversy is deliberately courted and orchestrated, and supposedly spontaneous scenes are staged and scripted; that problems with phone lines leave members of the public unable to vote for their favourite acts; and that contestants are manipulated and unfairly edited.

Series 1—4 of The X Factor effectively included Irish viewers on an equal footing, and Irish viewers were able to vote in these series via SMS or telephone. However, in series 5, voting from Republic of Ireland was discontinued, with the decision being blamed on new regulations introduced regarding phone competitions in the UK. The show held auditions in Dublin and Belfast for the first three series, with Belfast auditions continuing for series 4 before being dropped, though Irish singers could still audition in other cities.

Dublin first round auditions returned in [] with the auditions held on 28 June. In , The X Factor did not hold auditions in Ireland, instead replacing them with a new audition city, Liverpool. Auditions did return to Dublin in , however. On 18 January , it was announced that The Xtra Factor would be axed after 13 years and would be replaced by an online show instead.

Nine celebrity acts participated, singing live in front of the nation and facing the judges of the previous The X Factor series: Cowell, Osbourne and Walsh. Voting revenues were donated to the celebrities' chosen charities.

The winner of the show was Lucy Benjamin, mentored by Walsh. Xtra Bites is the second companion and spin-off show to The X Factor which replaced The Xtra Factor , although Xtra Bites is an online spin-off show which started airing in The show looks at all the action from the show including behind the scenes footage of the judges and interviews with contestants from the show.

There were 13 episodes uploaded altogether for the first series, all presented by Becca Dudley. In November , Cowell announced that The X Factor: The Band would launch on 9 December , with the premise of finding either the biggest male or female group.

Each episode lasted for 90 minutes. In mid, it was reported that an All-Stars version of the show was in production and due to be aired towards the end of It was set to feature contestants from the previous fifteen series of the show.

Abdul, who previously appeared as a guest judge during the third series was set to be a judge for the All-Stars series, replacing Scherzinger.

As of June [update] , the show has spawned a total of 35 number-one singles: 10 winners' singles six of which have been the Christmas number one , four charity singles one each by the finalists of series 5, 6, 7 and 8 , and 21 other number-ones by contestants who have appeared on the show including winners and runners-up.

By series 6 in , it had seemingly become such a certainty that the X Factor winner would gain the Christmas number one slot every year that bookmakers William Hill were considering withdrawing from the year tradition of betting on the outcome.

In series 1—2, the winner's debut album would be released a few months after their victory in the show.

The album would contain some new material but would consist largely of cover versions. This format changed with series 3 winner Leona Lewis. Cowell, Lewis's X Factor mentor and newly appointed manager, said: "We could have gone into the studio for a month, made the record quick, and thrown it out. It would have been the wrong thing to do. Series 10 winner Sam Bailey , however, released her debut album of covers, The Power of Love , in March , just three months after winning — the earliest ever debut album release by an X Factor winner.

During the fifth series of the show, the finalists released a cover of Mariah Carey 's " Hero " in aid of Help for Heroes which reached number one in the UK singles charts.

Following the success of the song, Cowell announced that a charity single would be released annually though the process was discontinued in series 9. He is quoted as saying: "Following last year's record we made with the X Factor finalists in aid of Help for Heroes, we decided we wanted to do something annually on the show to help good causes.

The finalists released a cover of David Bowie 's " "Heroes" ", with proceeds once again going to the Help for Heroes charity. The charity single was scrapped after series 8, although the winner's singles from series 9 onwards were all released for charity. The album features 34 songs from 21 of the show's finalists. The X Factor Songbook is a song compilation album released 24 November Wie werde ich ihn los — in 10 Tagen?

Lose Yourself von Eminem. Man in the Mirror von Michael Jackson. Across the Universe. Dangerous Minds. No Air von Jordin Sparks feat. Chris Brown. The Pretender von Foo Fighters.

Faith Evans und Piece of My Heart von Erma Franklin. You Belong with Me von Taylor Swift. Skyscraper von Demi Lovato. Wild Horses von The Rolling Stones. You Lost Me von Christina Aguilera. Pretty Young Thing. Someone Like You von Adele. A Song for You von Donny Hathaway. Music and Me von Michael Jackson. We Found Love von Rihanna. Something von The Beatles. Live Your Life von T. Careless Whisper von Wham! Come Together von The Beatles.

Hallelujah von Leonard Cohen. At Last von Etta James. Download as PDF Printable version. X Factor current logo — Guri Solberg Ravi Charlotte Thorstvedt FremantleMedia Syco. Chand Torsvik. Reaching Horizons 2 of 3 votes. Stine Terese Tinker Julseth 2 of 3 votes. No Name - No Fame 3 of 3 votes. The Johnsen Sisters 3 of 3 votes. Gabrielle Leithaug 2 of 3 votes. Pernille Svensen Øiestad 2 of 3 votes. Austin Powers in Goldmember. Over 25s Andreassen. Hans Bollandsås.


❶America's Got Talent:|NORSK BOXERKLUBB||Spotlight on artistry|Daniel De Burgh (X Factor) Informasjon | Live Nation Norge|The X Factor (British TV series) - Wikipedia]

X Factor is a Norwegian television x factor norge talent gratis porn tube contested by aspiring pop singers drawn from public auditions. In each season, x factor norge judge is allocated a category to mentor and chooses three acts to progress popcorn time bot norge the live shows. Xxl drammen table shows, for each season, which aurora snow each judge was allocated and which acts he or she put through to the live shows. The first season of the show was aired from September through to December

4 Comments

  1. Whats up sweetheart. I work with Amatuer Estrella not sure if u are familiar with the platform. However they pay us both for shooting the scene and then we can split the profits. If interested please respond here or through email at [email protected]

    Reply
  2. Oh yeeees ... It is very hot!!! Sexy body ... WoW !!!! ( and great system to ride dildo )!!!

    Reply

Leave a Reply