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American Idol Needs to Rethink About Picking Their Candidates...

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Rockets34Legend, Mar 31, 2003.

  1. Rockets34Legend

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    http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/coreyidol1.html

    Another "American Idol" Scandal
    Reality show finalist facing trial for battering teen sister


    MARCH 31--An "American Idol" finalist is facing trial next month on charges he assaulted his teenage sister and battled with cops while resisting arrest, The Smoking Gun has learned.

    Corey Clark, 22, was arrested last October following a disturbance in his family's Topeka, Kansas home. Neighbors called police after hearing a girl yelling inside the Clark residence on SW 33rd Terrace. One witness told TSG that while he heard loud noises coming from the home, "what finally caught my attention was a lot of screaming. Then I knew somebody was getting hurt."

    When police arrived, Clark--now one of nine remaining "American Idol" contestants--and his 15-year-old sister Alecia were questioned separately by officers. After about 15 minutes, Clark became confrontational with cops, screaming and yelling at officers, several of whom responded by wrestling the wiry, 6-foot singer to the pavement. Clark was handcuffed behind his back and placed in a Topeka Police Department cruiser.

    While sitting in the squad car, he was somehow able to get his cuffed hands in front of him, causing police to yank Clark out of the car and attempt to re-cuff him, the witness said. When he again struggled with officers, a cop showed Clark a Taser and warned that if he continued to resist, he would be shot with the stun gun. Clark then relented.

    He was booked into the Shawnee County jail and charged with a variety of misdemeanors, including battery on four law enforcement officers, battery on his sister, and endangering a child. After three days in custody, Clark was released on bond, a condition of which probibited him from contacting his sister. On a bond application form, Clark wrote that he had worked as a "self employed entertainer" for the prior eight years and was "currently enrolling into school for audio engineering."

    On December 4, just days after Clark was tabbed as one of the final 234 "Amercan Idol" contestants, he was named in a three-count misdemeanor complaint filed by prosecutors in Kansas District Court. The complaint, which modified the original police counts, charged Clark with resisting arrest, battery upon his sister, and criminal restraint. If convicted of the charges, Clark faces a maximum of a year in prison on two of the misdemeanors, and a max of six months on the third count.

    Along with three neighbors and five cops, Kansas prosecutors listed Clark's two sisters--Alecia and 19-year-old Ajia--as prospective witnesses. In preparation for Clark's trial, scheduled for April 15 in Topeka, prosecutors recently began serving subpoenas to those expected to testify as government witnesses.

    In late-January, Clark was picked as one of the 32 "American Idol" semifinalists, and he has continued to advance in the competition. He is now one of nine remaining competitors who can be seen performing twice weekly in prime time on Fox Television. Shortly after his October arrest, Clark briefly relocated to Nashville, but he is now ensconced in a Hollywood Hills mansion with his fellow "American Idol" finalists.

    The pending criminal charges against Clark were not the wannabe star's first brush with the Kansas court system. In April 2000, he was sued by Wal-Mart for passing more than $600 in bad checks at a Topeka store. One year later, Clark was sued by a Topeka grocery store where he allegedly passed a bad $50 check. In the case of the Wal-Mart lawsuit, it appears Clark made good on the bad paper nearly two years after the retail giant filed its District Court lawsuit. But that was not before Wal-Mart secured seven separate garnishment orders on Clark's bank account (though those attempts yielded only $49.77 and repeated notices from the Bank of American that Clark's account had "no funds," or was "overdrawn." The grocery store, JM Bauersfeld's, fared better, getting repaid just five months after filing against Clark in District Court.

    So, were/are "American Idol" producers aware of Clark's criminal predicament? Well, TSG long ago stopped believing anything that reality TV producers say when it comes to what they did or did not know about a contestant's past. It appears that a combination of Keystone Kops background checks, participant mendacity, and unblinking network indifference has guaranteed that drunk drivers, bankrupt deadbeats, shoplifters, bondage actresses, and assorted convicted criminals will continue to populate reality TV shows.

    For its part, Fox has adopted a blanket policy whereby network executives refuse comment "on the private lives of show participants." That's not a bad stance when you consider that this year's original 32 "American Idol" semifinalists included a convicted thief, an Internet p*rn model, and guy who's been charged in connection with a fight that ended in the death of a Pennsylvania man. In fact, Fox booted the contestant, Jaered Andrews, a month before he was even arrested for misdemeanor assault.

    TSG will venture a guess that Fox knew about Clark's rubber checks, but were unaware that he had been popped for battering his little sister (if true, not exactly "Idol" behavior). Either way, April 15 will turn out to be a taxing Tuesday for him, with Clark scheduled to be in the Topeka dock at 10 AM and, as of now, singing live on TV later that day.
     
  2. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    Because genuine American Pop Stars NEVER do anything like dangle a 2 year old baby out of a 3 story window, or drugs, or anything else that would be considered bad behaviour.

    DD
     
  3. Vengeance

    Vengeance Member

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    They probably really WANT to pick people like this, because it creates added publicity for the show, and gives it more of the "reality" element.
     
  4. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    So, this Frenchie character gets kicked off because of where she used to work, but this guy isn't?

    I'm glad I don't watch the show. I guess it's worse that I read news about it though.
     
  5. A-Train

    A-Train Member

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    Nashville Star is a LOT better than American Idol. REAL musicians who play (gasp!) instruments. Next week, they sing their own songs...
     
  6. TheHorns

    TheHorns Member

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    I think they are doing a swell job of selecting candidates. You want a group that is somewhat represntative of you. So they have a some one who is in p*rn and a domestic violence offender, what can you say, it is American Idol:D
     
  7. Mr. Mooch

    Mr. Mooch Contributing Member

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    Yeah, I'm with you and I don't even like country music.

    At least this girl didn't pull an R. Kelly.
     
  8. Rockets34Legend

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    I'm surprised the background checks for these reality shows aren't very accurate for FOX....

    http://entertainment.msn.com/news/article.aspx?news=118864

    Idol Finalist Trenyce Has Felony Arrest in her Past

    Zap2it.com

    LOS ANGELES -- It has almost become a routine to watch a new FOX reality show and wait to see what brand of criminal, amoral or controversial past behaviors made it past the network's background checks. The latest revelations involve Trenyce, one of the nine remaining finalists on the second season of American Idol.

    TheSmokingGun.com has obtained a mug-shot photo of Trenyce, then still known as Lashundra Cobbins, stemming from an 1999 felony theft arrest. Cobbins was booked in Memphis, Tenn., on Oct. 6, 1999, but a Shelby County criminal court judge put her in a pre-trial diversion program, allowing her to expunge her record. According to TSG, Cobbins was upfront with producers about her past, so she'll remain on the show.

    It's been a difficult season for a couple of American Idol participants. First, "big voice" Frenchie Davis got the heave-ho when it came to light that she had some unsavory aspects to her history that went beyond the usual stripping or simple nude modeling.

    Then news came that former semifinalist Jaered Neale Andrews is facing charges for assault after a November altercation outside a bar, which left a Pennsylvania man dead.

    The series of entertaining FOX reality scandals began, of course, with accused wife-beater and non-millionaire Rick Rockwell of Who Wants to Marry a Multimillionaire. Taheed Watson and Ytossie Patterson of Temptation Island raised ethical hackles when it was discovered that they went on the couple-splitting show despite having a child. Earlier this year, Joe Millionaire faced minor embarrassment over the fetish-film past of finalist Sara Kozer, while Married by America had to deal with a possible suitor who was already married.
     

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