Jump to content

The X Factor (British TV series) series 5

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from The X Factor (UK series 5))

The X Factor
Series 5
Burke during her All Night Long Tour in 2011.
Hosted byDermot O'Leary (ITV)
Holly Willoughby(ITV2)
Judges
WinnerAlexandra Burke
Winning mentorCheryl Cole
Runner-upJLS
Release
Original network
Original release16 August (2008-08-16) –
13 December 2008 (2008-12-13)
Series chronology
← Previous
Series 4
Next →
Series 6
List of episodes

The X Factor is a British television music competition to find new singing talent. The fifth series was broadcast on ITV from 16 August 2008 until 13 December 2008. Dermot O'Leary returned to present the main show on ITV, while Fearne Cotton was replaced by Holly Willoughby as presenter of spin-off show The Xtra Factor on ITV2. Simon Cowell, Louis Walsh, and Dannii Minogue returned to the judging panel. Sharon Osbourne left after four series and was replaced by Cheryl Cole. The series was won by Alexandra Burke, with Cole emerging as the winning mentor. Auditions in front of producers were held in April and May, with callbacks in front of the judges in June. The number of applicants for series 5 reached an all-time high with a reported 182,000[1] people auditioning. A number of well-established music acts from around the world, such as Beyoncé, Mariah Carey, Britney Spears, Girls Aloud, Take That, Il Divo, and series 3 winner Leona Lewis, performed during the live stages of the show.

Burke's prize, as winner, was a £1 million recording contract with Syco Music (a subsidiary of Sony BMG). Her debut single, "Hallelujah", written by Leonard Cohen, was released for digital download on 14 December 2008, with the physical format following on 17 December. It was later announced that her single had become the fastest-selling X Factor single at that time.

It was during auditions for the fifth series of the show that viewers were introduced to two teenagers: 15-year-old Jade Thirlwall, who would form one quarter of the winning act of series eight, Little Mix, and 14-year-old Liam Payne, who would become a member of boy band One Direction, formed in the seventh series.

Judges, Presenters and Other Personnel

[edit]
Judges and Presenter(s) for The X Factor Series 5

In February 2008, it was reported that Sharon Osbourne would not return as a judge for the fifth series.[2] On 6 June, six days before filming was due to begin at the London auditions, ITV announced Osbourne's departure from the show.[3][4] Media speculation over the reasons for Osbourne's departure alluded to rising tensions between her and fellow judge Dannii Minogue, as well as disputes over pay.[4] When interviewed by Chris Moyles on BBC Radio 1, Osbourne said that it was "the best four years of [her] life" but felt that it was "time to move on."[5]

On 10 June 2008, after Osbourne's departure, ITV confirmed that Girls Aloud singer Cheryl Cole was the new judge and Osbourne's replacement for series 5. Minogue praised the new judge, saying, "She's very knowledgeable about music and I think she's going to bring a new side to the show."[6] Cowell is reported by Minogue to feel that Cole's voiced opinions are something "which he loves".[6]

Dermot O'Leary returned to present the main ITV show, choosing to leave other projects, including his ongoing role as the host of Big Brother's Little Brother, to concentrate on The X Factor.[7] The Xtra Factor presenter Fearne Cotton left after series 4, having presented for only one series, to be replaced by Holly Willoughby.[8] Brian Friedman returned as choreographer and performance coach (billed as "Creative Director"), along with Yvie Burnett as vocal coach.[citation needed]

Selection process

[edit]

Auditions

[edit]
Cities that auditions were held in.

A reported "record-breaking" 182,000 applied for series 5,[1][9] with filming for auditions in front of judges taking place in June/July 2008. Auditions were held in the cities of London, Birmingham, Manchester, Cardiff, and Glasgow.[10]

Due to her commitments with Australia's Got Talent, Minogue was absent from some of the auditions in Birmingham and Cardiff but was not replaced.[citation needed]

Bootcamp

[edit]

As in series 4, all four judges worked together at the bootcamp stage of the competition. This took place at indigO2 at The O2 in Greenwich, London on 4 August 2008, and was televised in two episodes on 27 and 28 September 2008.[11][12] Contestants are said to have stayed in a nearby hotel in Blackheath.[12]

During bootcamp, around 150 acts were whittled down to 24 who advanced to the next round, six in each category. After completion of bootcamp, the judges were told the category that they were to mentor. Cowell was given the Boys, Walsh the Groups, Minogue the Over 25s, and Cole the Girls.

Judges' houses

[edit]

This round was filmed in late August and early September and was broadcast over two shows on 4 and 5 October. As in previous years, the judges welcomed the six acts from their selected category to their "homes".[13] Each act had one chance to impress their mentor who, along with a guest judge, had the task of selecting which three acts were to go through to the live shows and which three would be eliminated. For her guest judge, Minogue chose former Spice Girls member and Emma Bunton, Cole chose her fellow Girls Aloud member Kimberly Walsh, Cowell chose singer Sinitta, and Walsh chose Shane Filan from Westlife.

Judges Houses Performances
  • Act in bold advanced

Boys:

Over 25s:

Groups:

Girls:

Summary of judges' houses
Judge Category Location Assistant Acts Eliminated
Cole Girls Cannes Kimberley Walsh Annastasia Baker, Hannah Bradbeer, Amy Connelly
Cowell Boys Barbados Sinitta Mali-Michael McCalla, Liam Payne, Alan Turner
Minogue Over 25s Saint-Tropez Emma Bunton Suzie Furlonger, Louise Heatly, James Williams
Walsh Groups Castle Leslie, Ireland Shane Filan 4Instinct, Desire, Priority

Acts

[edit]

Key:

  – Winner
  – Runner-Up
Act Age(s) Hometown Category (mentor) Result
Alexandra Burke 20 London Girls (Cole) Winner
JLS 20–23 London and Peterborough Groups (Walsh) Runner-up
Eoghan Quigg 16 Dungiven, Northern Ireland Boys (Cowell) 3rd place
Diana Vickers 17 Accrington Girls (Cole) 4th place
Ruth Lorenzo 26 Murcia, Spain Over 25s (Minogue) 5th place
Rachel Hylton 27 London 6th place
Daniel Evans 39 Leyton 7th place
Laura White 21 Atherton, Greater Manchester Girls (Cole) 8th place
Austin Drage 22 Grays, Essex Boys (Cowell) 9th place
Scott Bruton 19 Manchester 10th place
Girlband 18–22 Various Groups (Walsh) 11th place
Bad Lashes 19–24 12th place

Live shows

[edit]

The live shows began on 11 October 2008 and continued through to the finale on 13 December 2008. An added twist for this series, confirmed on the first live show, was that acts in the bottom-two showdown sang a new song of their own choosing, rather than repeating the song they performed in the first part of the show.

Musical guests

[edit]

Leon Jackson performed on the first live show, promoting his second single "Don't Call This Love". Girls Aloud performed their new single "The Promise" on the second show on 18 October. Will Young performed his new song "Grace" on 1 November. Mariah Carey appeared on 8 November and performed her new single "I Stay in Love", plus a special version of "Hero" with 11 of the finalists (Diana Vickers was ill with laryngitis so could not perform). Leona Lewis appeared the week after and performed her new single "Run". Take That performed on 22 November show, as did series 4 third-place act Same Difference, who performed their debut single, and series 4 runner-up Rhydian Roberts, who sang a track from his debut album.[14] On 29 November show, in the main programme Miley Cyrus performed her single "7 Things", whereas Britney Spears performed her new single "Womanizer" during the result show. On 6 December show, Il Divo sung their latest single "Amazing Grace" from their new album.

Boyzone, Westlife, and Beyoncé were guests on the final show where they duetted with the finalists, with Knowles performing "Listen" with Alexandra Burke. Beyoncé also performed "If I Were a Boy" in the final result show.

Results summary

[edit]
Colour key

  Act in Boys

  Act in Girls

  Act in Over 25s

  Act in Groups

  – Act was in the bottom two and had to sing again in the final showdown
  – Act received the fewest public votes and was immediately eliminated (no final showdown)
  – Act received the most public votes
  – Act was given a bye and automatically advanced to the following week
Weekly results per act[15]
Act Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Quarter-Final Semi-Final Final
First Vote Second Vote
Alexandra Burke 6th
7.20%
7th
7.15%
6th
8.83%
6th
8.82%
2nd
18.35%
4th
13.31%
4th
14.97%
1st
24.53%
2nd
31.04%
1st
44.02%
Winner
58.34%
JLS 7th
5.03%
3rd
9.21%
4th
10.81%
2nd
17.00%
4th
13.26%
5th
9.91%
5th
11.75%
2nd
24.34%
1st
35.03%
2nd
30.65%
Runner-Up
41.66%
Eoghan Quigg 1st
21.19%
1st
26.77%
1st
20.73%
1st
19.81%
1st
27.39%
2nd
19.56%
1st
31.79%
3rd
19.58%
3rd
21.14%
3rd
19.58%
Eliminated
(final)
Diana Vickers 4th
7.35%
2nd
16.24%
2nd
15.13%
3rd
15.24%
Given bye1 1st
31.30%
2nd
18.94%
4th
16.32%
4th
12.79%
Eliminated
(semi-final)
Ruth Lorenzo 10th
3.47%
10th
2.95%
5th
8.93%
5th
10.25%
7th
6.94%
3rd
13.91%
3rd
16.07%
5th
15.23%
Eliminated
(quarter-final)
Rachel Hylton 8th
4.77%
8th
5.01%
3rd
12.21%
9th
3.81%
5th
10.39%
7th
4.48%
6th
6.48%
Eliminated
(week 7)
Daniel Evans 5th
7.21%
6th
8.23%
9th
5.94%
4th
10.83%
3rd
13.77%
6th
7.53%
Eliminated
(week 6)
Laura White 3rd
16.99%
4th
8.99%
7th
7.53%
7th
7.38%
6th
9.90%
Eliminated
(week 5)
Austin Drage 9th
3.63%
5th
8.98%
8th
6.22%
8th
6.86%
Eliminated
(week 4)
Scott Bruton 2nd
19.48%
9th
4.17%
10th
3.67%
Eliminated
(week 3)
Girlband 11th
2.17%
11th
2.30%
Eliminated
(week 2)
Bad Lashes 12th
1.51%
Eliminated
(week 1)
Final Showdown Bad Lashes,
Girlband
Girlband,
Lorenzo
Bruton,
Evans
Drage,
Hylton
Lorenzo,
White
Evans,
Hylton
Hylton,
JLS
No final showdown or judges' votes: results were based on public votes alone
Walsh's vote to eliminate (Groups) Bad Lashes Lorenzo Bruton Drage White Evans Hylton
Minogue's vote to eliminate (Over 25s) Girlband Girlband Bruton Drage White 2 JLS
Cole's vote to eliminate (Girls) Girlband Girlband Bruton Drage Lorenzo Evans Hylton
Cowell's vote to eliminate (Boys) Bad Lashes Lorenzo Evans Hylton White Evans Hylton
Eliminated Bad Lashes
2 of 4 votes
Deadlock
Girlband
2 of 4 votes
Deadlock
Scott Bruton
3 of 4 votes
Majority
Austin Drage
3 of 4 votes
Majority
Laura White
3 of 4 votes
Majority
Daniel Evans
3 of 3 votes
Majority
Rachel Hylton
3 of 4 votes
Majority
Ruth Lorenzo
15.23%
to save
Diana Vickers
12.79%
to save
Eoghan Quigg
25.33%
to save
JLS
41.66%
to win

The total number of votes cast for the entire series was 16,469,064.[citation needed]

^1 Due to illness, Diana Vickers did not perform during week 5 and automatically advanced to week 6.
^2 Minogue was not required to vote as there was already a majority.

Live show details

[edit]

Week 1 (11 October)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the first live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Country Result
Girlband Groups (Walsh) 1 "Venus"  UK Bottom Two
Austin Drage Boys (Cowell) 2 "Every Breath You Take"  UK Safe
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 3 "I Want to Know What Love Is"  USA
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 4 "I Wanna Dance with Somebody"
JLS Groups (Walsh) 5 "I'll Make Love to You"
Scott Bruton Boys (Cowell) 6 "Yeh Yeh"  UK
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 7 "With Every Heartbeat"
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 8 "With or Without You"  USA
Bad Lashes Groups (Walsh) 9 "It Must Have Been Love"  USA Bottom Two
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 10 "Imagine"  UK Safe (Highest Votes)
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 11 "Take My Breath Away"  USA Safe
Laura White Girls (Cole) 12 "Fallin'"
Final showdown details
Girlband Groups (Walsh) 1 "That's What Friends Are For" Saved
Bad Lashes Groups (Walsh) 2 "Wonderwall" Eliminated
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Cowell: Bad Lashes – gave no reason but described both acts as "shocking"; he later stated on The Xtra Factor that he felt Girlband had shown more emotion in their final showdown performance due to being shown in an earlier slot to be overlooked by the public.
  • Cole: Girlband – gave no reason.
  • Minogue: Girlband – gave no reason.
  • Walsh: Bad Lashes – could not decide between two of his own acts so chose to take the vote to deadlock.

With the acts in the bottom two receiving two votes each, the result went to deadlock and reverted to the earlier public vote. Bad Lashes were eliminated as the act with the fewest public votes.

Week 2 (18 October)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the second live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Result
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 1 "I'll Be There" Safe
Scott Bruton Boys (Cowell) 2 "She's Out of My Life"
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 3 "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" Bottom Two
Girlband Groups (Walsh) 4 "Heal the World"
Laura White Girls (Cole) 5 "You Are Not Alone" Safe
Austin Drage Boys (Cowell) 6 "Billie Jean"
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 7 "One Day in Your Life"
JLS Groups (Walsh) 8 "The Way You Make Me Feel"
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 9 "Man in the Mirror"
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 10 "Dirty Diana"
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 11 "Ben" Safe (Highest Votes)
Final showdown details
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "Purple Rain" Saved
Girlband Groups (Walsh) 2 "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" Eliminated
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Walsh: Ruth Lorenzo – backed his own act, Girlband.
  • Minogue: Girlband – backed her own act, Ruth Lorenzo.
  • Cole: Girlband – based on the final showdown performances.
  • Cowell: Ruth Lorenzo – chose to take the vote to deadlock as he wanted to give Girlband a second chance whereas he felt Lorenzo did not "play to her strengths".

With the acts in the bottom two receiving two votes each, the result went to deadlock and reverted to the earlier public vote. Girlband were eliminated as the act with the fewest public votes. During the show, a mistake was made in one of the overlays and Lorenzo's number was briefly displayed incorrectly, meaning any calls to that number would not have registered a vote. After the show, viewers complained that they had dialled this incorrect number and could not get through to vote for Lorenzo, but ITV insisted the issue should not have made any difference to the overall result as Lorenzo received more votes than Girlband and advanced to the third week after the result went to deadlock.[16]

Week 3 (25 October)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the third live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Big Band Artist Result
Scott Bruton Boys (Cowell) 1 "That's Life" Frank Sinatra Bottom Two
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "The Lady Is a Tramp" Mitzi Green
Laura White Girls (Cole) 3 "God Bless the Child" Billie Holiday Safe
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 4 "L-O-V-E" Nat King Cole Safe (Highest Votes)
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 5 "Summertime" Ella Fitzgerald Safe
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 6 "Candyman" Christina Aguilera
Austin Drage Boys (Cowell) 7 "Mack the Knife" Bobby Darin
JLS Groups (Walsh) 8 "Ain't That a Kick in the Head?" Dean Martin
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 9 "Smile" Charlie Chaplin
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 10 "Feeling Good" Nina Simone
Final showdown details
Scott Bruton Boys (Cowell) 1 "I Can't Make You Love Me" Eliminated
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "To Where You Are" Saved
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Cowell: Daniel Evans – backed his own act, Scott Bruton.
  • Cole: Scott Bruton – said that she felt the "belief and passion" in Evans' performance.
  • Minogue: Scott Bruton – backed her own act, Daniel Evans, whom she stated sang the best in the sing off.
  • Walsh: Scott Bruton – commented that Evans "sang every word like he meant it".

Week 4 (1 November)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the fourth live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Result
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "Lost in Music" Bottom Two
Austin Drage Boys (Cowell) 2 "Wishing on a Star"
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 3 "Call Me" Safe
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 4 "Don't Leave Me This Way"
Laura White Girls (Cole) 5 "Somebody Else's Guy"
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 6 "Could It Be Magic" Safe (Highest Votes)
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 7 "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough)" Safe
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 8 "On the Radio"
JLS Groups (Walsh) 9 "Working My Way Back To You"/"Forgive Me Girl"
Final showdown details
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "No More Drama" Saved
Austin Drage Boys (Cowell) 2 "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow" Eliminated
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Cowell: Rachel Hylton – backed his own act, Austin Drage.
  • Cole: Austin Drage – stated she was prepared to give Hylton a "moment to shine".
  • Minogue: Austin Drage – backed her own act, Rachel Hylton.
  • Walsh: Austin Drage – said Hylton had more to give to the competition and was more of a "raw talent".

However, voting statistics revealed that Drage received more votes than Hylton which meant that if Walsh sent the result to deadlock, Drage would have been saved.

Week 5 (8 November)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the fifth live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Result
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 1 "Anytime You Need a Friend" Safe (Highest Votes)
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "My All" Bottom Two
Laura White Girls (Cole) 3 "Endless Love"
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 4 "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" Safe
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 5 Bye Week1 Automatically Advanced
JLS Groups (Walsh) 6 "One Sweet Day" Safe
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 7 "Open Arms"
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 8 "Without You"
Final showdown details
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" Saved
Laura White Girls (Cole) 2 "Over the Rainbow" Eliminated

^1 Due to illness, Diana Vickers did not perform and automatically advanced to the following week. She was due to perform fifth and would have performed "Always Be My Baby".

Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Cowell: Laura White – gave no reason but commented that both acts "were not the worst singers of the night".
  • Cole: Ruth Lorenzo – backed her own act, Laura White.
  • Minogue: Laura White – backed her own act, Ruth Lorenzo.
  • Walsh: Laura White – commented that Lorenzo was "more of a fighter".

However, voting statistics revealed that White received more votes than Lorenzo which meant that if Walsh sent the result to deadlock, White would have been saved.

Week 6 (15 November)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the sixth live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song British Artist Result
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "It's Not Unusual" Tom Jones Bottom Two
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 2 "You Are So Beautiful" Joe Cocker Safe
JLS Groups (Walsh) 3 "I Want to Hold Your Hand"/"Twist and Shout"/"Hey Jude" The Beatles
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 4 "You Know I'm No Good" Amy Winehouse Bottom Two
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 5 "One More Try" George Michael Safe
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 6 "Yellow" Coldplay Safe (Highest Votes)
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 7 "Angels" Robbie Williams Safe
Final showdown details
Daniel Evans Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "Bridge over Troubled Water" Eliminated
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "One" Saved
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Walsh: Daniel Evans – gave no reason but had constantly criticised Evans throughout the competition.
  • Cole: Daniel Evans – stated that she had seen a spark back from Hylton this week.
  • Cowell: Daniel Evans – gave no reason though commented that Hylton "threw it away" with her last performance and that he would have liked to see her perform with more passion; he later stated on The Xtra Factor that he wanted to save Hylton as she was one of his favorite acts in the competition.
  • Minogue was not required to vote as there was already a majority; she stated she would have chosen to take the vote to deadlock as both acts were in her category.

However, voting statistics revealed than Evans received more votes than Hylton which meant that if the result went to deadlock, Evans would have been saved.

Week 7 (22 November)

[edit]
Acts' performances on the seventh live show
Act Category (mentor) Order Song Result
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 1 "Relight My Fire" Safe
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "Love Ain't Here Anymore"
JLS Groups (Walsh) 3 "A Million Love Songs" Bottom Two
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 4 "Rule the World"
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 5 "Patience" Safe
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 6 "Never Forget" Safe (Highest Votes)
Final showdown details
JLS Groups (Walsh) 1 "Stand by Me"/"Beautiful Girls" Saved
Rachel Hylton Over 25s (Minogue) 2 "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" Eliminated
Judges' votes to eliminate
  • Walsh: Rachel Hylton – backed his own act, JLS.
  • Minogue: JLS – gave no reason but effectively backed her own act, Rachel Hylton.
  • Cole: Rachel Hylton – said JLS would go further in the competition though stated that it had been the best Hylton had sung since the auditions.
  • Cowell: Rachel Hylton – stated that this was Hylton's third time in the bottom two and that JLS should not have been in the final showdown.

JLS had previously been rehearsing to sing "Rule the World", with the approval of their mentor, Walsh. Contrary to this, Minogue, who had higher priority in the judges' song-selection rota, selected the song for her artist Hylton to sing. This led to an on-screen argument between Minogue and Walsh.[17]

Week 8: Quarter-Final (29 November)

[edit]
Acts' performances in the quarter-final
Act Category (mentor) Order First song Order Second song American Artist Result
Ruth Lorenzo Over 25s (Minogue) 1 "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" 6 "Always" Bon Jovi Eliminated
JLS Groups (Walsh) 2 "...Baby One More Time" 7 "You Light Up My Life" Whitney Houston Safe
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 3 "Toxic" 8 "Listen" Beyoncé Safe (Highest Votes)
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 4 "Sometimes" 9 "We're All in This Together" The Cast of High School Musical Safe
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 5 "I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman" 10 "Everybody Hurts" R.E.M

The quarter-final did not feature a final showdown and instead the act with the fewest public votes, Ruth Lorenzo, was automatically eliminated.

Week 9: Semi-Final (6 December)

[edit]
Contestants' performances in the semi-final
Act Category (mentor) Order First song Order Second song Result
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 1 "Year 3000" 5 "Does Your Mother Know" Safe
Diana Vickers Girls (Cole) 2 "Girlfriend" 6 "White Flag" Eliminated
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 3 "Don't Stop the Music" 7 "Un-Break My Heart" Safe
JLS Groups (Walsh) 4 "Umbrella" 8 "I'm Already There" Safe (Highest Votes)

The semi-final did not feature a final showdown and instead the act with the fewest public votes, Diana Vickers, was automatically eliminated.

Week 10: Final (13 December)

[edit]
Acts' performances in the final
Act Category (mentor) Order First song Order Second song Duet Partner Order Third song Order Fourth song Result
Eoghan Quigg Boys (Cowell) 1 "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" 4 "Picture of You" Boyzone 7 "We're All in This Together" N/A N/A (already eliminated) Eliminated
JLS Groups (Walsh) 2 "Last Christmas" 5 "Flying Without Wings" Westlife 8 "I'm Already There" 10 "Hallelujah" Runner-Up
Alexandra Burke Girls (Cole) 3 "Silent Night" 6 "Listen" Beyoncé 9 "You Are So Beautiful" 11 "Hallelujah" Winner

Charity single

[edit]

The twelve contestants together recorded a cover version of Mariah Carey's 1993 hit "Hero" in support of the Help for Heroes charity.[18] The single was available for download from 25 October 2008, after the finalists performed the song live on that night's show. It was released in stores on 27 October, and Simon Cowell predicted it "will go straight to the top of the charts".[19] In the first week of its release it went straight to number 1 and sold 313,244 copies, more than the rest of the top ten combined.[20]

Reception

[edit]

Ratings

[edit]

Viewing figures for series 5 were, at the time of airing, the highest ever for any X Factor series, about 20% up on the previous series.[21] This, however, was beaten by the sixth series the following year.

The first show of the series had the highest launch audience for any series, peaking at over 12 million viewers.[22] The entire Auditions phase officially averaged 9.9m, a rise of 1.2m over the previous series.

The Bootcamp episodes performed well in the ratings; although the Saturday episode was beaten for the first time by Strictly Come Dancing,[23] the Sunday episode restored the balance.[24] The Saturday Judges' houses episode had the highest audience since the opening show, and the Sunday episode had a lower rating but still exceeded that of Strictly Come Dancing.[25] The entire bootcamp and judges' houses phase officially averaged 9.8m, a rise of 2.5m over the previous series.

The live shows pulled in very strong audiences, often rating as the most watched programme of the week.[26] The final was the second most watched television programme of 2008 with 14.06m viewers.[27]

Series 5 of The X Factor officially averaged 10.5m, at the time becoming the most watched British talent series of the 21st century.

Episode Air date Official ITV1 rating[28] Weekly rank[28] Share
Auditions 1 16 August 10.78 1 48.2%[29]
Auditions 2 23 August 10.10 1 45.4%[30]
Auditions 3 30 August 8.80 2 43.5%[31]
Auditions 4 6 September 9.57 1 42.8%[32]
Auditions 5 13 September 9.96 1 43.2%[33]
Auditions 6 20 September 10.01 1 41.7%[34]
Bootcamp 1 27 September 8.94 4 36.0%[35]
Bootcamp 2 28 September 9.47 1 38.1%[36]
Judges' houses 1 4 October 10.84 1 40.5%[37]
Judges' houses 2 5 October 10.11 3 42.7%[38]
Live show 1 11 October 11.09 1 44.1%[39]
Results 1 9.05 7 40.8%[39]
Live show 2 18 October 10.21 3 38.5%[40]
Results 2 9.13 9 39.7%[40]
Live show 3 25 October 10.37 2 39.7%[41]
Results 3 8.89 10 38.0%[41]
Live show 4 1 November 11.65 1 43.3%[42]
Results 4 9.72 6 37.6%[42]
Live show 5 8 November 10.72 2 42.6%[43]
Results 5 9.46 7 35.6%[43]
Live show 6 15 November 11.28 1 43.5%[44]
Results 6 10.62 2 42.9%[44]
Live show 7 22 November 11.77 1 43.2%[45]
Results 7 9.98 6 41.1%[45]
Live show 8 29 November 12.67 1 46.0%[46]
Results 8 11.41 2 50.0%[46]
Semi-final 6 December 10.30 3 39.1%[47]
Semi-final results 10.60 2 39.6%[47]
Final performances 13 December 13.77 2 50.3%[48]
Final results 14.06 1 54.4%[48]
Series average 2008 10.51 42.4%

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Singh, Anita (11 August 2008). "X Factor's Dannii Minogue says she 'won't miss' Sharon Osbourne". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved 11 August 2008.
  2. ^ "Sharon Osbourne quits 'X Factor'?". Digital Spy. 22 February 2008.
  3. ^ "Sharon leaves The X Factor". ITV. 6 June 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  4. ^ a b "Sharon Osbourne quits The X Factor". BBC News. 6 June 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  5. ^ "No more X Factor says Sharon". BBC. 9 June 2008. Retrieved 17 August 2008.
  6. ^ a b "Dannii Minogue 'Upset' by Sharon Osbourne Feud". the daily goss.com. 8 August 2008. Archived from the original on 26 September 2008. Retrieved 8 August 2008.
  7. ^ "Big Brother: Start date announced". Daily Mirror. 25 May 2008. Archived from the original on 7 October 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  8. ^ "Holly joins The Xtra Factor". ITV. 6 June 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  9. ^ "The X Factor". 4 May 2008. Archived from the original on 13 October 2008. Retrieved 6 August 2008.
  10. ^ "Episode 1". The X Factor (British TV series) series 5. London. 16 August 2008. ITV.
  11. ^ "Simon Cowell and Louis Walsh in X Factor stitch up". Daily Mirror. 10 August 2008. Retrieved 10 August 2008.
  12. ^ a b "Singing before their late supper". News Shopper. 6 August 2008. Retrieved 10 August 2008.
  13. ^ "X Factor | X Factor Judges' House Part 2 Wk41 – ITV Press Centre". Itv.com. Archived from the original on 7 October 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  14. ^ "Finalist Video Diary". ITV. 23 October 2008.
  15. ^ "The X Factor - Story Detail - the X Factor voting details". xfactor.itv.com. Archived from the original on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  16. ^ "X Factor Bosses Play Down Phone Error". Digital Spy. 23 October 2008.
  17. ^ Lara, Gould (30 November 2008). "X Factor's Louis Walsh: Simon Cowell could fire me". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 7 December 2008.
  18. ^ "Help For Heroes single". ITV. 5 October 2008. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
  19. ^ "Simon backs Heroes". ITV. 7 October 2008. Retrieved 7 October 2008.
  20. ^ "X Factor single tops UK charts". BBC. 2 November 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  21. ^ The Broadcast Interview: Peter Fincham | In-depth | Broadcast
  22. ^ "10m viewers watch X Factor show". BBC News. 17 August 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2008.
  23. ^ "'Strictly' beats 'X Factor' in ratings". Digital Spy. 28 September 2008. Retrieved 28 September 2008.
  24. ^ "Extra 'X Factor' tops Sunday ratings". Digital Spy. 29 September 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2008.
  25. ^ "Ratings Roundup". Digital Spy. 12 October 2008. Retrieved 12 October 2008.
  26. ^ "Weekly Top 30 Programmes". Barb.co.uk. 5 August 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  27. ^ "BARB Since 1981". Barb.co.uk. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  28. ^ a b "Weekly Viewing Summary (see relevant week)". BARB. Archived from the original on 1 July 2014.
  29. ^ Record audience for 'X Factor' premiere – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  30. ^ 'X Factor' keeps up ratings pace – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  31. ^ 'X Factor' loses 1m to summer heat – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  32. ^ Latest 'X Factor' draws 9 million – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  33. ^ Encouraging start for 'Strictly' – Strictly Come Dancing News, Digital Spy
  34. ^ 'Merlin' pulls in 6.6 million – Merlin News, Digital Spy
  35. ^ 'Strictly' beats 'X Factor' in ratings – Strictly Come Dancing News, Digital Spy
  36. ^ Extra 'X Factor' tops Sunday ratings – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  37. ^ 'X Factor' back ahead of 'Strictly' in ratings – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  38. ^ Huge audience for 'Potter' on Sunday – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  39. ^ a b 'Merlin' ratings rise despite live 'X Factor' – Merlin News, Digital Spy
  40. ^ a b 'X Factor' tops Saturday ratings – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  41. ^ a b 'X Factor' maintains ratings lead – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  42. ^ a b X marks the spot for ITV1 | Broadcast
  43. ^ a b 'Strictly' hits series high with 9.6m – TV News – Digital Spy
  44. ^ a b 'X Factor' maintains ratings lead – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  45. ^ a b 'Strictly' hits new series high – Strictly Come Dancing News, Digital Spy
  46. ^ a b 'X Factor' hits 12.8m ratings high – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  47. ^ a b 'X Factor' suffers 'Strictly' knock – X Factor News, Digital Spy
  48. ^ a b 'X Factor' finale peaks with 14.6 million – X Factor News, Digital Spy
[edit]