| Original judges Simon "Mr. Nasty" Cowell, Paula Abdul and 
				Randy Jackson, along with winners including Kelly Clarkson, 
				Carrie Underwood and Scotty McCreery looked back on the highs 
				and lows of the talent show credited with harnessing people 
				power to turn ordinary Americans into superstars.
 " 'Idol' was made for people like me that just needed a door," 
				said Underwood, who was raised on a farm in Oklahoma and who 
				went on to become a Grammy-winning force in country music.
 
 "I still hear on a daily basis, 'I voted for you'," added 
				Underwood, who won in 2005.
 
 The 90-minute retrospective "American Idol: American Dream," was 
				broadcast as the TV series prepares to crown its last Idol later 
				this week before ending production.
 
 Old clips recalled how Fox television took a chance in 2002 on 
				unknown Britons Cowell and series creator Simon Fuller and a 
				format that turned atrocious auditions into mass entertainment, 
				brought an acerbic tone to critiques of amateurs, and handed TV 
				audiences the power to choose the winner.
 
 Between 2005-2007, "American Idol" was watched by some 30 
				million Americans, crushing shows on rival networks. Audiences 
				have now dropped to around nine million.
 
 Along the way, stars like Clarkson were born, Americans were 
				introduced to "guyliner" courtesy of 2009 runner-up Adam 
				Lambert, and others, like Jennifer Hudson, were booted off only 
				to triumph a few years later.
 
 "When I was winning the Oscar (for 'Dreamgirls') at the Kodak 
				Theatre, I was thinking, oh, the 'American Idol' final was here. 
				That was the first thing that came to my mind," said Hudson, who 
				won the supporting actress Academy Award in 2007.
 
 Over the years, the "Idol" judges hugged (Abdul), fought (Nicki 
				Minaj and Mariah Carey), cursed (Steven Tyler) and wept 
				(Jennifer Lopez), and, after the departure of Cowell in 2010, 
				became kinder.
 
 "Working with Mariah and Nicki was exceptionally challenging," 
				recalled executive producer Nigel Lythgoe. "Nothing would stop 
				them once they got going, which I don't think the public 
				enjoyed. We certainly didn't."
 
 Although "American Idol" comes to an end this week, Fuller held 
				out the hope that it may return one day.
 
 "I do believe there is an opportunity to do things differently 
				and see what a revamped next generation 'American Idol' might 
				look like," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Michael Perry)
 
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