American Idol season 5

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American Idol season 5
Hosted byRyan Seacrest
JudgesPaula Abdul
Simon Cowell
Randy Jackson
WinnerTaylor Hicks
Runner-upKatharine McPhee
Finals venueKodak Theatre
Release
Original networkFox
Original releaseJanuary 17 (2006-01-17) –
May 24, 2006 (2006-05-24)
Season chronology

The fifth season of American Idol began on January 17, 2006, and concluded on May 24, 2006. Paula Abdul, Simon Cowell, and Randy Jackson returned as judges, while Ryan Seacrest returned as host. Taylor Hicks was named the winner, while Katharine McPhee was the runner-up. 18 contestants (including all of the top 10 and a few semifinalists) got record deals – nine of them with major labels.

Regional auditions[edit]

Auditions were held in seven cities in the summer and fall of 2005.[1] An audition was originally planned for Memphis, Tennessee, but that was canceled due to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort that was taking place there,[2] and replaced by Las Vegas, Nevada, and Greensboro, North Carolina.[3]

American Idol (season 5) – regional auditions
City Preliminary date(s) Preliminary venue Filming date(s) Filming venue Golden tickets
San Francisco, California August 18, 2005 Cow Palace Unknown Parc 55 San Francisco[a] 18
Austin, Texas[a] August 25–26, 2005 Frank Erwin Center September 28, 2005 12
Boston, Massachusetts August 31, 2005 Gillette Stadium October 27, 2005 Seaport Hotel and World Trade Center[6] 28
Denver, Colorado September 11, 2005 Invesco Field at Mile High Unknown Colorado Convention Center 37
Chicago, Illinois September 16, 2005 Soldier Field September 20, 2005 W Hotel[7] 34
Greensboro, North Carolina October 3, 2005 Greensboro Coliseum October 6, 2005 Marriott Downtown 33
Las Vegas, Nevada October 10–11, 2005 Las Vegas Convention Center October 12–13, 2005 Renaissance Las Vegas[8] 11
Total number of tickets to Hollywood 175
  1. ^ a b Later stages of the Austin auditions were held in San Francisco due to Hurricane Katrina, which caused a large number of evacuees to be relocated in Texas.[4] However, the show made no mention of the venue switch and presented the Austin auditions as having taken place entirely in Austin.[5]

One notable audition this season was Paula Goodspeed, a fervent fan of Paula Abdul, who auditioned in Austin.[9] In 2008, Goodspeed made headlines when she committed suicide outside Abdul's home.[10] Abdul later claimed that she had objected beforehand to Goodspeed being at the audition because she knew Goodspeed and had been frightened by her past behavior, but the producers overrode her objection.[11] Producers Ken Warwick and Nigel Lythgoe denied being aware of her fears or that they would put her in danger.[12][13]

Hollywood week[edit]

The Hollywood semifinal rounds were held at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles and consisted of 175 contestants. The first round of semifinals consisted of a solo a cappella performance with each contestant choosing one song from a list of twelve that were given to each contestant two weeks in advance. Those who did not impress the judges were sent home the following day. After this round, the contestants were separated into four groups, with three groups going through (with 44 contestants chosen). In the Pasadena Civic Center, each were individually taken to the judges' station where they learned whether they would proceed or not. Twenty were cut and the final twenty-four (twelve men and twelve women) were selected.

Semifinals[edit]

The semifinals began on February 21, 2006, with the names announced on February 15, 2006. Starting with twelve women and twelve men, the women and the men performed weekly on separate shows, and on the results show, the bottom two women and bottom two men were eliminated each week. The semifinals took place over three weeks, resulting in six women and six men making up the top 12.

Color key:

  This contestant was saved by the public vote.
  This contestant was in the bottom three, but was saved by the public vote.
  This contestant was eliminated.

Top 24 (February 21 & 22)[edit]

Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Top 24 (Female contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Mandisa "Never" Safe
Kellie Pickler "How Far" Safe
Becky O'Donohue "Because the Night" Eliminated
Ayla Brown "Reflection" Safe
Paris Bennett "Midnight Train to Georgia" Safe
Stevie Scott "To Where You Are" Eliminated
Brenna Gethers "You Are the Sunshine of My Life" Safe
Heather Cox "When You Tell Me That You Love Me" Safe
Melissa McGhee "When the Lights Go Down" Safe
Lisa Tucker "I Am Changing" Safe
Kinnik Sky "Get Here" Safe
Katharine McPhee "Since I Fell for You" Safe
Top 24 (Male contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Patrick Hall "Come to My Window" Eliminated
David Radford "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" Safe
Bucky Covington "Simple Man" Safe
Will Makar "I Want You Back" Safe
Sway Penala "Reasons" Safe
Chris Daughtry "Wanted Dead or Alive" Safe
Kevin Covais "One Last Cry" Safe
Gedeon McKinney "Shout" Safe
Elliott Yamin "If You Really Love Me" Safe
Bobby Bennett "Copacabana" Eliminated
Ace Young "Father Figure" Safe
Taylor Hicks "Levon" Safe

Top 20 (February 28 & March 1)[edit]

Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Top 20 (Female contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Katharine McPhee "All in Love Is Fair" Safe
Kinnik Sky "Here for the Party" Bottom three
Lisa Tucker "Who's Lovin' You" Safe
Melissa McGhee "Why Haven't I Heard from You" Safe
Heather Cox "Hero" Eliminated
Brenna Gethers "Last Dance" Eliminated
Paris Bennett "Wind Beneath My Wings" Safe
Ayla Brown "I Want You to Need Me" Safe
Kellie Pickler "Something to Talk About" Safe
Mandisa "Cry" Safe
Top 20 (Male contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Taylor Hicks "Easy" Safe
Elliott Yamin "Moody's Mood for Love" Safe
Ace Young "If You're Not the One" Safe
Gedeon McKinney "A Change Is Gonna Come" Safe
Kevin Covais "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" Bottom three
Sway Penala "Overjoyed" Eliminated
Will Makar "Lady" Safe
Bucky Covington "The Thunder Rolls" Safe
David Radford "The Way You Look Tonight" Eliminated
Chris Daughtry "Hemorrhage (In My Hands)" Safe

Top 16 (March 7 & 8)[edit]

Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Top 16 (Female contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Paris Bennett "Conga" Safe
Lisa Tucker "Here's Where I Stand" Safe
Melissa McGhee "What About Love" Safe
Kinnik Sky "If I Ain't Got You" Eliminated
Katharine McPhee "Think" Safe
Ayla Brown "Unwritten" Eliminated
Mandisa "I'm Every Woman" Safe
Kellie Pickler "I'm the Only One" Safe
Top 16 (Male contestants)
Contestant Song Result
Gedeon McKinney "When a Man Loves a Woman" Eliminated
Chris Daughtry "Broken" Safe
Kevin Covais "Vincent" Safe
Bucky Covington "Wave on Wave" Safe
Will Makar "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)" Eliminated
Taylor Hicks "Takin' It to the Streets" Safe
Elliott Yamin "Heaven" Safe
Ace Young "Butterflies" Safe

Top 12 finalists[edit]

From left to right: Ace Young, Bucky Covington, Mandisa, Lisa Tucker, Kevin Covais, and Melissa McGhee

Finals[edit]

Color key:

  This contestant was saved by the public vote.
  This contestant was in the top two.
  This contestant was in the bottom two or three, but was saved by the public vote.
  This contestant was eliminated.
  This contestant won American Idol.
  This contestant was the runner-up.

Top 12 – Stevie Wonder (March 15)[edit]

Stevie Wonder served as a guest mentor this week. Contestants performed one song from his discography and are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Stevie Wonder song Result
Ace Young "Do I Do" Bottom three
Kellie Pickler "Blame It on the Sun" Safe
Elliott Yamin "Knocks Me Off My Feet" Safe
Mandisa "Don't You Worry 'bout a Thing" Safe
Bucky Covington "Superstition" Safe
Melissa McGhee "Lately" Eliminated
Lisa Tucker "Signed, Sealed, Delivered I'm Yours" Bottom two
Kevin Covais "Part-Time Lover" Safe
Katharine McPhee "Until You Come Back to Me (That's What I'm Gonna Do)" Safe
Taylor Hicks "Living for the City" Safe
Paris Bennett "All I Do" Safe
Chris Daughtry "Higher Ground" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Stevie Wonder "My Love Is On Fire"

Top 11 – Music from the 1950s (March 22)[edit]

Barry Manilow served as a guest mentor this week. Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Song Result
Mandisa "I Don't Hurt Anymore" Safe
Bucky Covington "Oh, Boy!" Bottom two
Paris Bennett "Fever" Safe
Chris Daughtry "I Walk the Line" Safe
Katharine McPhee "Come Rain or Come Shine" Safe
Taylor Hicks "Not Fade Away" Safe
Lisa Tucker "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?" Bottom three
Kevin Covais "When I Fall in Love" Eliminated
Elliott Yamin "Teach Me Tonight" Safe
Kellie Pickler "Walkin' After Midnight" Safe
Ace Young "In the Still of the Night" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Barry Manilow "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing"

Top 10 – Music from the 2000s (March 29)[edit]

Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Song Result
Lisa Tucker "Because of You" Eliminated
Kellie Pickler "Suds in the Bucket" Safe
Ace Young "Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me)" Bottom three
Taylor Hicks "Trouble" Safe
Mandisa "Shackles (Praise You)" Safe
Chris Daughtry "What If" Safe
Katharine McPhee "The Voice Within" Bottom two
Bucky Covington "Real Good Man" Safe
Paris Bennett "Work It Out" Safe
Elliott Yamin "I Don't Want to Be" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Shakira & Wyclef Jean "Hips Don't Lie"

Top 9 – Country music (April 5)[edit]

Kenny Rogers served as a guest mentor this week. Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Country song Result
Taylor Hicks "Take Me Home, Country Roads" Safe
Mandisa "Any Man of Mine" Eliminated
Elliott Yamin "If Tomorrow Never Comes" Bottom two
Paris Bennett "How Do I Live" Bottom three
Ace Young "Tonight I Wanna Cry" Safe
Kellie Pickler "Fancy" Safe
Chris Daughtry "Making Memories of Us" Safe
Katharine McPhee "Bringing Out the Elvis in Me" Safe
Bucky Covington "Best I Ever Had (Grey Sky Morning)" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Kenny Rogers "I Can't Unlove You"

Top 8 – Queen (April 12)[edit]

Contestants performed one song from the Queen discography and are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Queen song Result
Bucky Covington "Fat Bottomed Girls" Eliminated
Ace Young "We Will Rock You" Bottom three
Kellie Pickler "Bohemian Rhapsody" Safe
Chris Daughtry "Innuendo" Safe
Katharine McPhee "Who Wants to Live Forever" Safe
Elliott Yamin "Somebody to Love" Bottom three
Taylor Hicks "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" Safe
Paris Bennett "The Show Must Go On" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Top 8 Queen medley

Top 7 – Great American Songbook (April 19)[edit]

Rod Stewart served as a guest mentor this week. Contestants performed one song from the Great American Songbook and are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Song Result
Chris Daughtry "What a Wonderful World" Bottom two
Paris Bennett "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" Bottom three
Taylor Hicks "You Send Me" Safe
Elliott Yamin "It Had to Be You" Safe
Kellie Pickler "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered" Safe
Ace Young "That's All" Eliminated
Katharine McPhee "Someone to Watch Over Me" Safe
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Rod Stewart "The Way You Look Tonight"

Top 6 – Love songs (April 26)[edit]

Andrea Bocelli and David Foster served as guest mentors this week. Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Song Result
Katharine McPhee "I Have Nothing" Top two
Elliott Yamin "A Song for You" Safe
Kellie Pickler "Unchained Melody" Eliminated
Paris Bennett "The Way We Were" Bottom two
Taylor Hicks "Just Once" Safe
Chris Daughtry "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" Top two
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Andrea Bocelli & David Foster "Because We Believe"

Top 5 – Contestants' birth year & Current Billboard top 10 (May 3)[edit]

Contestants each performed two songs: one from the year they were born, and one from the current Billboard top 10 list. Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Order Song Birth year Result
Elliott Yamin 1 "On Broadway" 1978 Bottom two
6 "Home"
Paris Bennett 2 "Kiss" 1988 Eliminated
7 "Be Without You"
Chris Daughtry 3 "Renegade" 1979 Safe
8 "I Dare You"
Katharine McPhee 4 "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" 1984 Safe
9 "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree"
Taylor Hicks 5 "Play That Funky Music" 1976 Safe
10 "Something"
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Top 5 "Together We Are One"

Top 4 – Elvis Presley (May 10)[edit]

Tommy Mottola served as a guest mentor this week. Contestants each performed two songs from the Elvis Presley discography and are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Order Elvis Presley song Result
Taylor Hicks 1 "Jailhouse Rock" Safe
5 "In the Ghetto"
Chris Daughtry 2 "Suspicious Minds" Eliminated
6 "A Little Less Conversation"
Elliott Yamin 3 "If I Can Dream" Safe
7 "Trouble"
Katharine McPhee 4 "Hound Dog" & "All Shook Up" Bottom two
8 "Can't Help Falling in Love"
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Top 4 Elvis Presley medley

Top 3 (May 17)[edit]

Each contestant performed three songs: one chosen by Clive Davis, one chosen by one of the judges, and one chosen by themselves. Contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Order Song Result
Elliott Yamin 1 "Open Arms"[a] Eliminated
4 "What You Won't Do for Love"[b]
7 "I Believe to My Soul"
Katharine McPhee 2 "I Believe I Can Fly"[a] Safe
5 "Over the Rainbow"[c]
8 "I Ain't Got Nothin' but the Blues"
Taylor Hicks 3 "Dancing in the Dark"[a] Safe
6 "You Are So Beautiful"[d]
8 "Try a Little Tenderness"
Non-competition performance
Performers Song
Taylor Hicks "Takin' It to the Streets"
Katharine McPhee "Think"
Elliott Yamin "Moody's Mood for Love"
  1. ^ a b c Song chosen by Clive Davis
  2. ^ Song chosen by Paula Abdul
  3. ^ Song chosen by Simon Cowell
  4. ^ Song chosen by Randy Jackson

Top 2 – Finale (May 24)[edit]

Each contestant performed three songs, and contestants are listed in the order they performed.

Contestant Order Song Result
Katharine McPhee 1 "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree" Runner-up
3 "Over the Rainbow"
5 "My Destiny"
Taylor Hicks 2 "Living for the City" Winner
4 "Levon"
6 "Do I Make You Proud"
Non-competition performances
Performers Song
Top 12
with Carrie Underwood
"Through the Rain"
Paris Bennett
with Al Jarreau
"We're in This Love Together"
Chris Daughtry
with Live
"Mystery"
Katharine McPhee
with Meat Loaf
"It's All Coming Back to Me Now"
Taylor Hicks, Elliott Yamin,
Chris Daughtry, Ace Young,
Bucky Covington & Kevin Covais
"Takin' Care of Business"
"Tobacco Road"
"Don't Stop"
Elliott Yamin
with Mary J. Blige
"One"
Carrie Underwood "Don't Forget to Remember Me"
Taylor Hicks
with Toni Braxton
"In the Ghetto"
Katharine McPhee, Paris Bennett,
Kellie Pickler, Mandisa,
Lisa Tucker & Melissa McGhee
"Man! I Feel Like a Woman!"
"Trouble"
"I'm a Woman"
"(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman"
"I'm Every Woman"
Michael Sandecki
with Clay Aiken
"Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me"
Top 12
with Dionne Warwick
"What the World Needs Now Is Love"
"The Look of Love"
"I'll Never Fall in Love Again"
"Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head"
"I Say a Little Prayer"
"Alfie"
"A House Is Not a Home"
"What's New Pussycat?"
"Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)"
"Close to You"
"Walk On By"
"That's What Friends Are For"
Prince "Lolita"
"Satisfied"
Taylor Hicks & Katharine McPhee "(I've Had) The Time of My Life"

Elimination chart[edit]

Color key:

  Winner
  Runner-up
  Saved by the public
  Top two
  Bottom two or three
  Eliminated
American Idol (season 5) - Eliminations
Contestant Pl. Semifinals Top 12 Top 11 Top 10 Top 9 Top 8 Top 7 Top 6 Top 5 Top 4 Top 3 Finale
2/23 3/2 3/9 3/15 3/22 3/29 4/5 4/12 4/19 4/26 5/3 5/10 5/17 5/24
Taylor Hicks 1 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Winner
Katharine McPhee 2 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Bottom two Safe Safe Safe Top two Safe Bottom two Safe Runner-up
Elliott Yamin 3 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Bottom two Bottom three Safe Safe Bottom two Safe Eliminated
Chris Daughtry 4 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Bottom two Top two Safe Eliminated
Paris Bennett 5 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Bottom three Safe Bottom three Bottom two Eliminated
Kellie Pickler 6 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Eliminated
Ace Young 7 Safe Safe Safe Bottom three Safe Bottom three Safe Bottom three Eliminated
Bucky Covington 8 Safe Safe Safe Safe Bottom two Safe Safe Eliminated
Mandisa 9 Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Safe Eliminated
Lisa Tucker 10 Safe Safe Safe Bottom two Bottom three Eliminated
Kevin Covais 11 Safe Bottom three Safe Safe Eliminated
Melissa McGhee 12 Safe Safe Safe Eliminated
Ayla Brown Safe Safe Eliminated
Will Makar Safe Safe
Gedeon McKinney Safe Safe
Kinnik Sky Safe Bottom three
Heather Cox Safe Eliminated
Brenna Gethers Safe
José "Sway" Penala Safe
David Radford Safe
Bobby Bennett Eliminated
Patrick Hall
Becky O'Donohue
Stevie Scott

Controversies[edit]

In January 2006, twins Derrell and Terrell Brittenum were charged with forgery and theft after allegedly using a false identity to purchase a car. This occurred after the Hollywood portion of the show was filmed, and the twins were subsequently disqualified.[14]

On the April 25 show, the theme of which was Greatest Love Songs and featured guest mentors Andrea Bocelli and David Foster, executive producer Nigel Lythgoe forced contestant Taylor Hicks to change his song a day before airtime. Hicks' chosen song was "Try a Little Tenderness," but Lythgoe, in a radio interview, claimed the song was more appropriate for a Blues Brothers week and was not a song that Andrea Bocelli would sing. Hicks changed his song at the last minute to "Just Once" and appeared very uncomfortable on stage. Hicks' fans were distressed, feeling that Hicks' original choice of song was very appropriate to the theme and the producers changed the song at the last minute even though they must have known Hicks' choice the previous week. They also felt that Lythgoe's statement that it was not a song Andrea Bocelli would sing was dubious, as other song choices that were approved were songs sung by Bryan Adams ("Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman") and Donny Hathaway ("A Song for You").[15]

U.S. Nielsen ratings[edit]

American Idol was the top-rated show for the 2005–06 TV season and occupied the top two positions. The number of viewers for its Tuesday episodes averaged 31.17 million and for the Wednesday episodes 30.16 million.[16] It is still the most-watched of all seasons with an overall average number of viewers of 30.6 million per episode. Its 17.6 household share for the season average still ranks as the highest household share rating for any season-topping series on 21st-century U.S. television.

Episode list
Show Episode Air date Week
rank
Rating/Share 18–49
rating/Share
Viewers
(millions)
1 "Chicago Auditions"[17] January 17, 2006 3 19.3 / 28 15.3 / 34 35.53
2 "Denver Auditions"[17] January 18, 2006 4 17.8 / 27 13.0 / 33 31.65
3 "Greensboro Auditions"[18] January 24, 2006 1 19.6 / 29 15.1 / 35 34.96
4 "San Francisco Auditions"[18] January 25, 2006 2 18.2 / 28 13.0 / 33 32.44
5 "Las Vegas Auditions"[19] January 31, 2006 5 17.4 / 27 12.4 / 31 30.18
6 "Austin Auditions"[19] February 1, 2006 6 16.9 / 25 12.5 / 32 30.40
7 "Boston Auditions"[20] February 7, 2006 1 17.6 / 26 12.9 / 32 31.15
8 "Hollywood Round 1"[20] February 8, 2006 2 16.3 / 24 11.4 / 29 28.74
9 "Hollywood Round 2"[21] February 14, 2006 2 16.5 / 25 11.4 / 29 26.96
10 "Hollywood: Top 24 Revealed"[21] February 15, 2006 1 15.5 / 24 11.9 / 30 28.78
11 "Top 12 Women Perform"[22] February 21, 2006 2 16.9 / 24 13.0 / 30 30.16
12 "Top 12 Men Perform"[22] February 22, 2006 1 18.2 / 27 13.5 / 33 31.69
13 "Top 24 Results"[22] February 23, 2006 7 13.3 / 20 9.9 / 24 23.38
14 "Top 10 Women Perform"[23] February 28, 2006 2 17.0 / 25 12.4 / 31 30.09
15 "Top 10 Men Perform[23] March 1, 2006 4 16.6 / 26 12.2 / 31 29.64
16 "Top 20 Results[23] March 2, 2006 5 15.2 / 23 10.9 / 27 26.32
17 "Top 8 Women Men Perform"[24] March 7, 2006 2 16.7 / 25 11.8 / 31 28.56
18 "Top 8 Men Perform"[24] March 8, 2006 1 17.2 / 27 12.4 / 32 30.38
19 "Top 12 Revealed"[24] March 9, 2006 4 15.4 / 24 10.8 / 28 26.63
20 "Top 12 Perform"[25] March 14, 2006 1 18.5 / 27 13.7 / 33 32.77
21 "Top 12 Results"[25] March 15, 2006 1 16.3 / 25 11.5 / 27 28.09
22 "Top 11 Perform"[26] March 21, 2006 1 19.2 / 28 13.6 / 33 33.36
23 "Top 11 Results"[26] March 22, 2006 2 15.9 / 24 11.4 / 27 27.68
24 "Top 10 Perform"[27] March 28, 2006 1 18.0 / 27 13.0 / 33 31.71
25 "Top 10 Results"[27] March 29, 2006 2 15.9 / 24 11.3 / 27 27.66
26 "Top 9 Perform"[28] April 4, 2006 1 16.6 / 23 11.6 / 32 28.83
27 "Top 9 Results"[28] April 5, 2006 2 15.7 / 23 10.8 / 26 26.23
28 "Top 8 Perform"[29] April 11, 2006 1 14.2 / 22 12.0 / 33 29.65
29 "Top 8 Results"[29] April 12, 2006 3 12.0 / 19 9.2 / 24 22.64
30 "Top 7 Perform"[30] April 18, 2006 1 16.6 / 26 11.4 / 32 28.44
31 "Top 7 Results"[30] April 19, 2006 2 16.5 / 25 11.3 / 30 27.63
32 "Top 6 Perform"[31] April 25, 2006 1 16.7 / 26 11.5 / 30 28.67
33 "Top 6 Results"[31] April 26, 2006 2 16.6 / 25 11.6 / 28 28.27
34 "Top 5 Perform"[32] May 2, 2006 2 16.6 / 26 11.4 / 31 28.58
35 "Top 5 Results"[32] May 3, 2006 1 16.9 / 25 11.7 / 28 29.26
36 "Top 4 Perform"[33] May 9, 2006 1 16.8 / 26 11.6 / 31 28.85
37 "Top 4 Results"[33] May 10, 2006 2 16.1 / 24 11.2 / 27 27.88
38 "Top 3 Perform"[34] May 16, 2006 1 16.6 / 26 11.0 / 30 28.33
39 "Top 3 Results"[34] May 17, 2006 2 16.6 / 26 10.7 / 25 27.67
40 "Top 2 Perform"[35] May 23, 2006 2 18.2/ 29 12.3 / 34 31.78
41 "Season 5 Finale"[35] May 24, 2006 1 20.5 / 32 14.2 / 35 36.38

Post Idol[edit]

This was the first season where a majority of finalists had major label recording contracts after American Idol. Of them, Taylor Hicks, Katharine McPhee, Elliott Yamin, Chris Daughtry, and Kellie Pickler were distributed by Sony BMG Music Entertainment; Bucky Covington by Universal Music Group; and Ace Young and Mandisa by EMI.

Taylor Hicks' first post-Idol single, "Do I Make You Proud," debuted at number one and was certified gold.[36] Hicks' album, Taylor Hicks, sold 703,000 copies. He later parted with Arista Records. His follow-up album, "The Distance," was released March 10, 2009, on his own label, Modern Whomp Records.

The contestant with the most commercial success was Chris Daughtry, now lead singer of the band Daughtry. Their eponymous debut album sold over 5 million copies, surpassing the two-album totals of former winners Ruben Studdard and Fantasia, and produced two top-ten singles. The album, which spent two weeks at number one in the U.S., was also the fastest-selling debut rock album in Soundscan history.[37]

Katharine McPhee's debut album sold 374,000 copies and she had two Top 40 Billboard hits. Kellie Pickler's Small Town Girl reached number one on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and was certified gold, selling over 815,000 copies. Elliott Yamin's eponymous debut album was certified gold and produced a platinum-selling single. Bucky Covington's self-titled debut album sold over 400,000 copies and generated a top 20 and two top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. Mandisa became the most recent finalist from American Idol as of 2024 to win a Grammy Award, after earning a nomination for True Beauty for Best Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album in 2007 and winning for Overcomer for Best Contemporary Christian Music Album in 2014.

Music releases[edit]

The compilation album for this season was performed by the top twelve finalists.

Information Digital Downloads
American Idol Season 5: Encores
  • Released: May 23, 2006
  • Label: RCA Records
  • Chart Positions: – 3 (US)
  • RIAA Certification: – Gold
  • U.S. sales: – 381,075
Alphabetical order by song title
(108 US)
(52 US Pop)
(73 US Pop, 76 US Digital)
(69 US, 42 US Digital)
(121 US, 90 US Pop)
(43 US, 11 US Digital, 37 US Pop)

Emmy nominations[edit]

In 2006, American Idol received several nominations in the 2006 Emmy Awards for season five:[38]

  • Outstanding Reality-Competition Program
  • Outstanding Art Direction for a Variety, Music Program or Special – Episode #519
  • Outstanding Directing for a Variety, Music or Comedy Program – Bruce Gowers
  • Outstanding Picture Editing for Nonfiction Programming (Large team entries – Primarily Multi-Camera Productions) – "Audition City: Greensboro"
  • Outstanding Lighting Direction – "American Classics Songbook with Rod Stewart"
  • Outstanding Lighting Direction – "Finale"
  • Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Variety or Music Series or Special or Animation – "American Classics Songbook with Rod Stewart"
  • Outstanding Technical Direction, Camerawork, Video for a Series – Episode #530

Tour[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Fox announces 'American Idol 5' audition dates and locations". Reality TV World. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  2. ^ "'American Idol 5' auditions in Memphis canceled due to relief efforts". Reality TV World. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  3. ^ "'American Idol 5' adds audition sites in Las Vegas and Las Vegas". Reality TV World. September 20, 2005. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  4. ^ "Idol in Austin? Not quite". The Dallas Morning News. Archived from the original on February 4, 2007. Retrieved September 18, 2011.
  5. ^ mtv (May 19, 2006). "Think You Know Everything About 'American Idol'? Part 3". MTV. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  6. ^ "Jenny Anderson took the stage in Hollywood - Ipswich, MA - Ipswich Chronicle". Archived from the original on November 11, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2011.
  7. ^ "Chicago 'Idol'". Articles.chicagotribune.com. September 21, 2005. Archived from the original on May 31, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
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