Paula's drunken mistake!

ni4ni

Golden Member
Nov 26, 2004
1,511
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WTF was going on with Paula Abdul tonight on American Idol?

If you didn't see, let me describe it to you. It is said the contestants will all sing one song, the judge will evaluate and then the contestants will sing a second song. So the contestants sing number one and Paula keeps going on about Jason?s second performance...which he hasn't performed yet.

Is she a drunken mess or what?
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
73,721
35,583
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I just looked up pics of Paula Abdul. I could have sworn that back in the 80s she was black.
 

chowderhead

Platinum Member
Dec 7, 1999
2,633
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I think the singers go through a practice run of both songs. This is recorded so they have footage of the singers during the recap where they give out all the numbers. The judges and the audience probably sit through both the practice and the live runs so the judges have a good idea what they want to say. Or, Paula is off her meds again.
 

Xstatic1

Diamond Member
Sep 20, 2006
8,982
50
86
Originally posted by: Baked
She's probably on crack again.

maybe the producers will finally take it as a sign to get rid of her. but then again, maybe they need the publicity. :laugh:

here's the clip
 

miketheidiot

Lifer
Sep 3, 2004
11,060
1
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Originally posted by: ironwing
I just looked up pics of Paula Abdul. I could have sworn that back in the 80s she was black.

wiki says she is jewish
Abdul was born in San Fernando, California, to Harry Abdul, a former livestock trader and owner of a sand and gravel business, and Lorraine Rykiss, a concert pianist who once worked as film director Billy Wilder's assistant. Her father is a Syrian Jew who was born in Syria, raised in Brazil, and subsequently emigrated to the U.S.[3] Abdul's mother, Lorraine Rykiss, is also Jewish and originally from Saint Boniface, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

i can't believe i actually looked that shit up
 

CPA

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2001
30,322
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apperently her notes were from the rehearsals that she always attends. I'm guessing you won't see that format ever again.
 
T

Tim

Remember... don't do drugs or you could spoil big money entertainments plans to keep weaker minds hooked on mind-knumingly over-done TV shows.
 

compman25

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2006
3,767
2
81
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: ironwing
I just looked up pics of Paula Abdul. I could have sworn that back in the 80s she was black.

wiki says she is jewish
Abdul was born in San Fernando, California, to Harry Abdul, a former livestock trader and owner of a sand and gravel business, and Lorraine Rykiss, a concert pianist who once worked as film director Billy Wilder's assistant. Her father is a Syrian Jew who was born in Syria, raised in Brazil, and subsequently emigrated to the U.S.[3] Abdul's mother, Lorraine Rykiss, is also Jewish and originally from Saint Boniface, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

i can't believe i actually looked that shit up

Well, your name fits. :D
 

FeuerFrei

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2005
9,144
929
126
Haven't watched the show yet, but I did read this account.
She seems easily discombobulated.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Paula Abdul must be hearing double.

On a night when "American Idol" switched up the judges' format by making them hold their appraisals until every contestant had a turn, Abdul offered feedback Tuesday for two songs by Jason Castro - except that he'd only sung one.

Unlike the usual format, in which each "Idol" performance is judged immediately, Abdul, Randy Jackson and Simon Cowell were made to take notes, then offer individual critiques in rapid succession at the end of each round. The reason, Seacrest explained, was because "this show is so tight."

So after each of the final five contestants sang one Neil Diamond song, Jackson zipped through his appraisals, offering a few terse words for each before kicking it to a visibly flustered Abdul.

"Oh gosh, we've never had to write these things down ... fast enough," she began, shuffling through her notecards. "Jason, first song, I loved hearing your lower register, which we never really hear, um ... ."

And that's where it started going off the rails.

"The second song, I felt like your usual charm wasn't - it was missing for me. It kind of left me a little empty."

Indeed.

All six people on stage, including Seacrest, stared blankly (except Syesha Mercado, who wore the furrowed brow of mystification).

"The two songs," she continued, "made me feel like you're not fighting hard enough to get into the top four."

After a smattering of nervous crowd laughter, Jackson finally broke the tension.

"That was just on the first song," he said sheepishly, pointing up to Castro. "Just on the first one."

Simon Cowell closed his eyes and shook his head, and began to guffaw as Abdul's confusion mounted.

"Oh my god, I thought you - I thought you sang twice!" she said.

She explained that she got confused by looking ahead at the notes for David Cook.

At that point Seacrest, who makes his money by smoothing over situations just such as these, pointed to Abdul, saying: "You're seeing the future, baby!" before cutting her off and throwing to Cowell.

Even Cowell gathered himself to help patch up the moment, patting Abdul on the shoulder and asking, as if to speed things along, "Paula, who was your favorite?"

Her reply: Cook (the same contestant whose performance she supposedly noted as having left her "empty").

Pressed for time, Cowell then put an end to the awkward-fest by bursting into his own rapid-fire valuation: "Jason, forgettable; David Cook, just above average; Brooke (White) a nightmare; David Archuleta, I thought it was amateurish; and Syesha, I thought it was old-fashioned.

"So guys ... I want to see the performance of a lifetime coming up," he said, as if to ensure absolute clarity, "the second time around."

Abdul told "Entertainment Tonight" after the show that she was thrown for a loop when producers apprised the judges of the change "in the dark" at the last minute.

"This was officially the strangest show we've ever done," Cowell said at the conclusion of the telecast, "but I like that. It's kind of a bit chaotic tonight."