Congrats to Mariah Carey on getting the new American Idol judgeship,
but isn't she a bit too famous for that? What would such a big star get out of
being a reality judge?
—LeopardBlu, via the
inbox
Well, there
are big stars like Carey—and then there are supernovas so huge they come with
their own solar systems. Lady Gaga and Rihanna currently fall into the latter
category. Mimi, while a very accomplished solo act, is not currently shining so
brightly as she once did.
In fact, if
we compare her recent trajectory to that of Jennifer Lopez, you could even
argue that Idol is about to do Mimi's career a great big solid. Here's the
proof...
Read the
announcement of Mariah Carey joining American Idol
First, let's
take a look at the recent doin's of Mrs. Nick Cannon. She is undoubtedly a
money-making machine in the music business, having sold more than 200 million
records sold to date.
The World
Music Awards honored her in 1998 as the biggest-selling artist of the 1990s.
Mimi's name is pretty much a synonym for "whistle register."
But the
42-year-old's headiest days are, arguably, behind her. According to Nielsen
Soundscan, her last non-holiday studio album, 2009‘s Memoirs of an Imperfect
Angel, sold 540,000 copies. (A sophomore Christmas compilation, put out the
next year, sold 505,000 copies.)
Those
figures are, as Billboard magazine's Keith Caulfield puts it to me,
"handsome numbers," but nothing amazing, especially considering that
Mimi's 2008 album, E=MC², sold 1.3 million copies.
Mariah dead?
See the Twitter hoax that claimed (falsely!) she had passed
In
conclusion, Caulfield says, "it's been three years" since Carey has
produced a real album, and four years since she released anything close to a
juggernaut. Given that the mom of two has a fresh single coming out in August,
her new Idol gig could be a "great way to double promote."
OK, then.
Could the Second Coming of Mariah Carey be the next logical step, with the help
of the Idol producers? Not necessarily.
"The
show really didn't do much for Jennifer Lopez's music catalogue,"
Caulfield points out. Indeed, J. Lo's 2011 album, Love?, sold 333,000
copies—"not much," Caulfield says. But the triple threat did enjoy a
smash single, "On the Floor," and enough Idol-borne momentum to launch
her current concert tour.
So the real
question is: Is American Idol too big a star for Mariah?
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