“American Idol”’s famed Brit judge Simon Cowell has been
trading barbs with host Ryan Seacrest, and each week the rhetoric seems to rise
a notch.
Things have gotten so bad even Oprah Winfrey has taken note.
Cowell recently appeared on Oprah’s daytime talk show, and
she asked him about the on-air squabbling with Seacrest.
Cowell explained that over the years his relationship with
members of the show has changed.
“They used to be more groveling towards me,” he said, adding,
“As the show has gotten more successful, they got more confidence . . . and
they probably dislike me more than seven years ago.”
The “Idol” maker told Winfrey that there is no time to
prepare a simulated fight prior to the show. “I see Paula maybe two seconds
before the show starts. Ryan, it's the same thing,” Cowell said.
He then went on to compare Seacrest to an annoying bug.
“Ryan has developed this - he's like a mosquito in your face,”
Cowell said. “It's like he's flying around, and you want to swat him but he
can't be bothered. That's my relationship now with Ryan.”
No one knows more about bugging people than the master
mosquito himself.
In more Oprah news, lawsuits involving daytime’s reigning
queen are starting to clog up the courts.
One woman has brought legal action against Oprah’s
production company and daytime talk show, claiming that in their mad dash to be
in the studio audience, overly excited fans of the show pushed her down the
stairs. And another female plaintiff from Boston
alleges that it was she who years ago came up with a television reality show
almost identical to “Oprah’s Big Give.”
In the first case, Orit Greenberg filed papers in an
Illinois state court, which claimed that she went to Harpo Studios in December
2006 to be an audience member for Oprah’s TV show; however, when audience
members were purportedly told to go sit where they wished in the studio, a
stampede resulted. Greenberg alleges that she was pushed down a flight of
stairs by the rushing crowd. She says she
has suffered “severe and permanent injuries” from the incident and is seeking
more than $50,000 in damages.
In the second suit, Darlene Tracy, a mother of four who is
representing herself, filed a complaint in U.S. District Court in Boston, seeking to stop
“Oprah’s Big Give” from airing. Tracy
claims that she created a reality show titled “The Philanthropist” in February
2005. The show purportedly featured contestants who were challenged to help the
needy.
According to Tracy,
she submitted the idea to the executive producer of Oprah’s show, Ellen
Rakieten, and claims that Rakieten and another producer wrote and requested
additional details. After Tracy
purportedly responded in early 2005 with a more complete package, she was
allegedly informed that Oprah's company, Harpo Productions, was going to pass
on the project. In December 2006, ABC announced a new show, “Oprah’s Big Give,”
which Tracy
claims came from her idea.
A trial judge has dismissed the suit without explanation and
Tracy has hired
an attorney and filed an appeal.
We’ll have to stay tuned to see if after the big appeal the
“Big Give” will be forced to shell out the big bucks.
James Hirsen is a
media analyst, Trinity Law School
professor and teacher of mass media law at Biola University.
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