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Cowell said launching a show that doesn't put an age limit on contestants
-- and allows groups along with individual singers -- makes it very different from "American Idol." The top age for "Idol" singers is 28. Susan Boyle, 48, who was discovered on "Britain's Got Talent," is an example of why age should be irrelevant, said Cowell, a judge on the British show he created and executive producer of "America's Got Talent" on NBC. Boyle became an unlikely sensation and released one of the year's top-selling CDs. Rice wouldn't speculate on possible replacements for Cowell on "Idol." "We have to take our time on that," he said. "We have to make sure the chemistry of the judges is as good as it can be." Cowell said there are many who want the job. But while everybody is talking about the judges, he added, "Fundamentally, the most important reason we do this is to find talent." Asked about bringing in Abdul as a judge on "X Factor," Cowell replied: "I adore Paula. Whatever happens, I will be working with her in some capacity, because I miss her." But Victoria Beckham, a guest judge this season on "Idol," won't be joining his new show, Cowell said without explanation. Cowell apparently carefully chose his time to resign, saying he didn't want to leave "American Idol" at a time when it was fading in the ratings. "You want to leave on a high," he said. "I'm very proud of what the show has achieved." "American Idol," which is entering its ninth season this week, has been the country's most popular television program for the past five years and has launched such stars as Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood and Chris Daughtry. Yet viewership for "American Idol" has been shrinking since its 2005 peak when it averaged more than 30 million weekly viewers, according to research chief Brad Adgate of Horizon Media; last year's weekly audience averaged just under 25 million. The median age of viewers has shot up, from nearly 32 years old in the first season to about 44 last year. Rice and Cowell said "Idol" and "The X Factor" would complement each other, not detract. Airing the network's talent shows throughout the season -- "The X Factor" in the fall, "American Idol" from January through May and "So You Think You Can Dance" in the summer
-- will be a "source of strength" for Fox's schedule, Rice said.
[Associated
Press;
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