Очередная встреча коллег - Кристины Агилеры, солиста Maroon 5 Адама Ливайна, кантри-певца Блэйка Шелтона и рэпера Си Ло Грина - прошла перед камерами на уютном диване в дружеской творческой атмосфере. Ребята хохмили, гримасничали и радовали поклонников, а мы - собирали для вас фотоотчет.
Напомним, что популярный проект, придуманный в Нидерландах и уже с успехом прошедший во многих странах мира, стал невероятно популярным в США и Великобритании. В Америке же его популярность поддерживает звездный статус судей - настоящих тяжеловесов (во всех смыслах) заокеанского шоу-бизнеса.
Carson Daly
Alison Haislip
Christina Milian Christina Aguilera
CeeLo Green
Adam Levine
Blake Shelton
Shakira
Usher
Gwen Stefani
Pharrell Williams
Miley Cyrus
Alicia Keys
Jennifer Hudson
Kelly Clarkson
John Legend
Nick Jonas
Ariana Grande
Camila Cabello John de Mol
Mark Burnett
Audrey Morrissey
Stijn Bakkers
Marc Jansen
Jay Bienstock
Lee Metzger[1] Ashley Baumann
Amanda Borden
Carson Daly
Keith Dinielli
May Johnson
Bart Kimball
Michael Matsumoto
David Offenheiser
Dan Paschen
Kyley Tucker
Teddy Valenti[1] Mark Burnett Productions (2011–2012)
One Three Media (2012–2014)
United Artists Media Group (2014–2015)
Talpa Media (2011–2019)
Warner Horizon Television
MGM Television (2016–present)
ITV America (2020–present) ITV Studios Global Entertainment
Warner Bros. Television Distribution The Voice (franchise)
La Voz US
The Voice is an American singing reality competition television series broadcast on NBC. It premiered during the spring television cycle on April 26, 2011. Based on the original The Voice of Holland and part of The Voice franchise, it has aired twenty-one seasons and aims to find unsigned singing talent (solo or duets, professional and amateur) contested by aspiring singers, age 13 or over, drawn from public auditions.[2]
The winner is determined by television viewers voting by telephone, internet, SMS text, and iTunes Store purchases of the audio-recorded artists' vocal performances. They receive US$100,000 and a record deal with Universal Music Group for winning the competition. The winners of the twenty-one seasons have been: Javier Colon, Jermaine Paul, Cassadee Pope, Danielle Bradbery, Tessanne Chin, Josh Kaufman, Craig Wayne Boyd, Sawyer Fredericks, Jordan Smith, Alisan Porter, Sundance Head, Chris Blue, Chloe Kohanski, Brynn Cartelli, Chevel Shepherd, Maelyn Jarmon, Jake Hoot, Todd Tilghman, Carter Rubin, Cam Anthony, and Girl Named Tom.
The series employs a panel of four coaches who critique the artists' performances and guide their teams of selected artists through the remainder of the season. They also compete to ensure that their act wins the competition, thus making them the winning coach. The original panel featured Christina Aguilera, CeeLo Green, Adam Levine, and Blake Shelton; the panel for the current twenty-second season features Shelton, Gwen Stefani, John Legend and Camila Cabello.[3] Other coaches from previous seasons include Shakira, Usher, Pharrell Williams, Miley Cyrus, Alicia Keys, Jennifer Hudson, Kelly Clarkson, Nick Jonas, and Ariana Grande. In the fifteenth season, Kelsea Ballerini was featured as an off-screen fifth coach for "Comeback Stage" contestants. Bebe Rexha took over as the "Comeback Stage" coach for the sixteenth season.
Concept
An adaptation of the Dutch show The Voice of Holland, NBC announced the show under the name The Voice of America in December 2010;[4] its name was soon shortened to The Voice.[5] (The name "Voice of America" was already in use by the U.S. government for its overseas radio service.) In each season, the winner receives $100,000 and a record deal with Universal Republic Records (seasons 1 2) or later Universal Music Group (season 3–present).
Selection process and format
Each season begins with the "Blind Auditions", where coaches form their team of artists (12 in almost all seasons except seasons 1 (8), 3 (16), 18-20 (10), 22 (14)) whom they mentor through the remainder of the season. The coaches' chairs are faced towards the audience during artists' performances; those interested in an artist press their button, which turns their chair towards the artist and illuminates the bottom of the chair to read "I want you." At the conclusion of the performance, an artist either defaults to the only coach who turned around or selects their coach if more than one coach expresses interest.[6] Introduced in the 14th season is "Block", which allows one coach to block another coach from getting a contestant.
In the "Battle Rounds", each coach pairs two of their team members to perform together, then chooses one to advance in the competition. In each season, coaches are assisted by celebrity advisors that are different in each season. In the first season, coaches sit alongside their respective advisors in the battle stage. However, starting with the second season, the advisors no longer join the coaches in the battle stage. A new element was added in season three; coaches were given two "steals", allowing each coach to select two individuals who were eliminated during a battle round by another coach. Saves were also added later, which lets a coach prevent someone that they eliminated on their team from going home.
The Knockout Rounds were also introduced in season three and introduced in almost all seasons except seasons six and sixteen. A pair of artists within a team are selected to sing individual performances in succession. They are not told until a few minutes prior to their performances who their partner is. The artists get to choose their own songs in this round, although they continue to get help and advice from their respective coaches. At the conclusion of the performances, coaches would decide which one of each pair gets to advance to the next round.[6] Similar to the battle rounds, the coaches can steal one eliminated artist from another coach starting with season five. Starting in season 14, coaches can save one eliminated artist from their own team. In season 18, the artists who were saved faced a Four-Way Knockout, with the winner decided through a public vote.[7]
The "Battles, Round 2" were introduced to replace the Knockout Rounds in season six.[6] Similar to the Knockout Rounds, each singer is paired within their team. One celebrity key adviser also assists all four of the coaches and their teams in preparation of these rounds. Coaches give each Battle pairing a list of songs and each pair must agree on which song to sing.[8] Like the first Battle round, each coach can still decide which of their singers in each pair will advance to the next round, and also allowed one steal.[9]
In the sixteenth season, the knockouts were replaced by The Live Cross Battles, a format identical to the Cross Battles from the Chinese version of The Voice. Each coach selects an artist to perform with another coach's artist together. The artist that receives the public vote will move on to the Playoffs, while the losing artist may be eliminated from the competition. The Live Cross Battles did not return in season seventeen due to poor reception.[10]
Previously eliminated artists can also advance to compete in the live shows; between seasons nine and thirteen (except season 11), each coach saved one artist (from either the Battle or Knockout rounds) to put through to the Live Playoffs. For seasons 15, 16 and 20, selected singers (prior to the Live elimination rounds) are put through to the "Comeback Stage" (which would be mentored by a fifth coach) and competed in a series of duels for a place in the live shows, with the winner earning a right to join a team of their choice.
In the final live performance phase of the competition, artists perform in weekly shows, where public voting narrows to a final group of artists and eventually declares a winner.[6] The coaches have the power to save one artist that had not received the public's vote that week. As of season two, these artists would give a last chance performance to win their coach's save. However, in deciding who moves on to the final four phase, the television audience and the coaches have equal say. With one team member remaining for each coach, the contestants compete against each other in the finale, where the outcome is decided solely by public vote. For the first two seasons, one artist per team would advance, but in favor on focusing on a more competitive format due to multiple potential artists, the format was revised beginning season three where artists who earned the lowest number of votes were progressively eliminated each week until five artists remain (three until season 6, then four prior to season 17), hence introducing a possibility where at least one coach would not represent a single artist in the finals, except in the case from seasons 18–20, where the rules in the semifinals was made to guarantee on having at least one artist representing the coach in the finale to accommodate the short number of live shows at three weeks,[11] but these changes were reverted on the twenty-first season by reverting to the regular elimination format while retaining the top five finalists.[12]
Voting system
In a first for a music competition series, NBC and Universal Republic Records offered fans of the show the ability to vote for their favorite artists by purchasing the studio versions of the songs that they perform on the live show each week via the iTunes Store. Alternative methods of voting can be done through toll-free phone calls (until season 8), text messaging, "The Voice Official App on NBC" app, and through online votes via NBC.com and Facebook. Each method is limited to ten votes per user, and voting lasts until noon EST the next day.
From the top 12 results show of season 3 to the end of season 17, a rule regarding voting was enacted with regards to iTunes singles purchases. In the first two seasons, voting via iTunes purchases of contestant performances counted singly during the official voting window and only accredited to the live show in concern. When a competitor's performance peaked within the Top 10 of the iTunes "Top 200 Singles Chart" during this window, it was given an iTunes bonus that multiplies iTunes votes made by ten. In season 5, the iTunes bonus multiplier was reduced to five for the studio versions of the songs performed by the competitors. The finale's vote count included a 'Cumulative iTunes Vote Total' of all singles (from top 12 onwards) purchased during and outside of the various voting windows, with iTunes bonuses previously earned.[13] Between seasons 15 and 17, the bonus multiplier was revised to include streams counting as a vote, and the only artist with the most streams after the voting window ended would receive the bonus.[14] The iTunes bonus multiplier was discontinued beginning with the live shows of the eighteenth season, as the performances are now recorded away from the studios and could not be recorded to iTunes or Spotify; this measure was initially enacted for safety reasons as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak.[15] In the nineteenth season, studio performances are now recorded on YouTube Music, replacing the traditional iTunes and Spotify recordings that were done between the seasons 2–17, but this was changed back beginning season 20, though bonuses do not apply regardless if the song charted within the top 10 or not.
Only the studio recording of the contestants' performances, not the live performance, were available on iTunes. In the first season, the battle rounds were recorded in the studio with both artists in the pairing. However, from season 2 to season 18, only the winner's version of the song from the battle round was released. Season 7 reverted to the old style of both artists. With the introduction of the Knockout Rounds in season three, where each contestant sang a separate song, only the winner's single was released.
The "Instant Save" was introduced in season five. During the live elimination episodes, viewers are given a five-minute window to vote for the contestants in risk of elimination by using their Twitter account (and since season 17, the official app) to decide which contestant will move on to the next show, starting with the Top 12. Home viewers can only vote once per account for one contestant of their choice. Since season six, the Instant Save now function as a Last Chance Performance where artists perform an additional song to rally votes.
Coaches and hosts Coaches
CeeLo Green of Gnarls Barkley and Adam Levine of Maroon 5 became the first confirmed coaches in February 2011,[16] followed by Christina Aguilera[17] and Blake Shelton in March.[18] Aguilera and Green did not return for season four and were replaced by Shakira and Usher.[19] Aguilera and Green then returned for season five, while Shakira and Usher returned for season six.[20][21] In an interview with Ellen DeGeneres in February 2014, Green revealed that he would not be returning to The Voice.[22] On March 31, 2014, it was announced that Pharrell Williams would become Green's replacement.[23] On April 19, 2014, it was announced that No Doubt's Gwen Stefani would replace Aguilera in season seven due to her pregnancy. On May 20, 2014, Shakira and Usher confirmed that after season six, they would focus on their music.[24][25] On March 25, 2016, Miley Cyrus confirmed that following her role as key advisor during the tenth season that she would be joining the series once again in its eleventh season as a coach.[26] That same day, Alicia Keys was also announced to be joining the series as a coach for the eleventh season.[27] On October 18, 2016, it was announced that Stefani would re-join the coaches' panel for the series' twelfth season, alongside returning coaches Keys, Levine and Shelton; it was also confirmed that Cyrus would return for the thirteenth season.[28]
On April 27, 2017, in an interview published by TV Insider, Keys confirmed that the twelfth season would be her last. She stated, "Who knows what the future holds, but I know this one is my final season."[29] On May 10, 2017, NBC announced that Jennifer Hudson would join the coaches lineup for the series' thirteenth season alongside Cyrus, Levine and Shelton.[30] On May 11, 2017, it was announced that Kelly Clarkson would be a coach in season fourteen in 2018.[31] On October 18, 2017, NBC announced that Alicia Keys would return to the series for the 14th season.[32] On May 10, 2018, it was announced that Hudson would return for the series fifteenth season after a one-season hiatus joining Clarkson, Levine, and Shelton. Kelsea Ballerini also joined season fifteen as the fifth coach for the Comeback Stage of the competition.[33] On September 13, 2018, John Legend was announced as a coach for the show's sixteenth season, alongside returning coaches Clarkson, Levine and Shelton.
On February 25, 2019, it was announced that Bebe Rexha will be the fifth coach for season 16 Comeback Stage.[34] In May 2019, it was announced that all four coaches from the same sixteenth season would return for the series' seventeenth season.[35] Later that month, it was announced that Levine would exit the series; Stefani was announced to be returning to the coaching panel as his successor.[36] In October 2019, it was announced that Nick Jonas would join the show as a coach for its eighteenth season, alongside returning coaches Shelton, Clarkson and Legend.[37][38] In June 2020, it was announced that Stefani would be returning to the coaching panel, replacing Jonas, for the nineteenth season, alongside returning coaches Shelton, Clarkson and Legend.[39] In November of the same year, it was announced Stefani would again depart the coaching panel ahead of its twentieth season, and would be replaced by returning Jonas.[40] In March 2021, it was announced that Ariana Grande would replace Jonas for season twenty-one alongside returning coaches Clarkson, Legend and Shelton.[3] In May 2022, it was announced that Stefani would be returning to the coaching panel for season twenty-two alongside returning coaches Legend and Shelton.[41][42][43] It was later confirmed that Clarkson would also not be returning to the series in 2022, while Camila Cabello would enter the coaching panel as a new coach.[44] On October 11, 2022, it was confirmed that Shelton and Clarkson would be returning for season 23, along with new coaches Chance the Rapper and Niall Horan. It was also announced that Shelton will leave the show after season 23.[45]
Coaches gallery
Blake Shelton (1–present)
Adam Levine (1–16)
Christina Aguilera (1–3, 5, 8, 10)
CeeLo Green (1–3, 5)
Shakira (4, 6)
Usher (4, 6)
Gwen Stefani (7, 9, 12, 17, 19, 22)
Pharrell Williams (7–10)
Miley Cyrus (11, 13)
Alicia Keys (11–12, 14)
Jennifer Hudson (13, 15)
Kelly Clarkson (14–21, upcoming in 23)
Kelsea Ballerini (Comeback Stage, 15)
Bebe Rexha (Comeback Stage, 16)
John Legend (16–present)
Nick Jonas (18, 20)
Ariana Grande (21)
Camila Cabello (22)
Chance the Rapper (upcoming in 23)
Niall Horan (upcoming in 23)
Timeline of coaches
Color key Carson Daly has hosted the series since the inaugural season.[46] Alison Haislip served as the original "backstage, online and social media correspondent"[47] and was replaced by Christina Milian. Milian did not return for season five, at which point Daly assumed the duties as the social media correspondent.[48][49]
Coaches' advisors
Battle round advisors are listed first; additional advisors and their roles are denoted by superscripts.
^a ^b ^c ^d ^e ^f ^g ^h ^i ^j ^k ^l ^m ^n ^o ^p ^q ^r ^s Coaches' teams
These are each of the coaches teams throughout the seasons from the playoffs, to the finale.
.mw-parser-output .legend{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .legend-color{display:inline-block;min-width:1.25em;height:1.25em;line-height:1.25;margin:1px 0;text-align:center;border:1px solid black;background-color:transparent;color:black}.mw-parser-output .legend-text{} Winning coach; winners are denoted by boldface .
† Contestant is deceased.Javier Colon † Jermaine Paul Cassadee Pope Danielle Bradbery Tessanne Chin † Josh Kaufman Craig Wayne Boyd Sawyer Fredericks Jordan Smith Alisan Porter Sundance Head Chris Blue † Chloe Kohanski Brynn Cartelli Chevel Shepherd Maelyn Jarmon Jake Hoot Todd Tilghman Carter Rubin Cam Anthony Girl Named Tom Series overview Reception
In 2016, a New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most Facebook Likes found that The Voice "is most popular in North Dakota and least popular in New York. It was behind only Duck Dynasty and Fast N' Loud in its correlation with Trump voters".[51]
Awards and nominations
Ratings
The first season premiered strong at 11.78 million viewers and actually grew upon that audience through its first season. In the 18–49 demographic, the show constantly found itself in the top 5. For its average season rating, the show landed itself as No. 20 with total viewers at nearly 12 million viewers. In the 18–49 rankings, the show was No. 4 at a 5.4 ranking.
The second season premiered on Super Bowl Sunday, February 5, 2012, and for a while managed to keep a 6.0 in the adults 18–49 demographic and 17 million viewers. Partnering The Voice with Smash (NBC's musical drama) helped NBC win the Monday night ratings. However, by Monday, April 9, the ratings had fallen to a 4.0 rating in the adult 18–49 demographic.
The third season premiered on Monday, September 10, 2012, to 12.28 million viewers and a 4.2 rating in the 18–49 demographic and has since then grown to a season-high 4.8 rating in the 18–49 demographic on October 8, October 15 and 29, 2012 and a 4.9 rating in the finale. The Voice, along with NBC's new drama, Revolution has once again led NBC to win every Monday night of the season so far, just like it did last season. On Tuesdays, comedies Go On and The New Normal has been successful thanks to The Voice, leading NBC to be the only network of the Big 5 to grow in ratings from last season.
The fourth season premiered on Monday, March 25, 2013, to a 13.64 million viewer audience, scoring a 4.8 in the 18–49 demographic but fell back to a 12.41 million viewer audience. In the 18–49 demographic, this first episode had a 4.1 score.
The fifth season premiered on Monday, September 23, 2013, scoring 14.98 million viewers and a 5.1 in the 18–49 demographic.
The sixth season premiered on February 24, 2014, and was watched by 15.74 million viewers with a 4.7 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It was up from last season's premiere by 0.76 million viewers.
The seventh season premiered on September 22, 2014, and was watched by 12.95 million viewers with a 3.9 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It was down from last season's premiere by 2.91 million viewers.
The eighth season premiered on February 23, 2015, and was watched by 13.97 million viewers with a 4.1 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It was up from last season's premiere by 1.02 million viewers.
The ninth season premiered on September 21, 2015, and was watched by 12.37 million viewers with a 3.5 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It was down from last fall's premiere by 0.48 million viewers.
The tenth season premiered on February 29, 2016, and was watched by 13.33 million viewers with a 3.4 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It was up from last season's premiere by 0.96 million viewers.
The eleventh season premiered on September 19, 2016, and was watched by 12.10 million viewers with a 3.3 rating in the 18–49 demographic. It is down from last season's premiere by 1.23 million viewers.
The twelfth season premiered on February 27, 2017, and was watched by 13.03 million viewers with a 3.1 in the 18–49 demographic. It was up from last season's premiere by 0.93 million viewers.
The thirteenth season premiered on September 25, 2017, and was watched by 10.57 million viewers with a 2.6 in the 18–49 demographic. It is down from last season's premiere by 2.46 million viewers.
The fourteenth season premiered on February 26, 2018, and was watched by 12.31 million viewers with a 2.8 in the 18–49 demographic. It is up from last season's premiere by 1.74 million viewers.
The fifteenth season premiered on September 24, 2018, and was watched by 9.66 million viewers with a 2.0 in the 18–49 demographic. This is the second lowest-rated season premiere to date.
The sixteenth season premiered on February 25, 2019, and was watched by 10.77 million viewers with a 2.1 in the 18–49 demographic. This was up from the previous season by 1.11 million viewers.
The seventeenth season premiered on September 23, 2019, and was watched by 8.93 million viewers with a 1.7 in the 18–49 demographic marking the lowest season premiere to date.
The eighteenth season premiered on February 24, 2020, with 8.99 million viewers with a 1.5 in the 18–49 demographic marking a new low for a season premiere.
The nineteenth season premiered on October 19, 2020, with 8.20 million viewers with a 1.2 in the 18–49 demographic marking the latest new series low.
The twentieth season premiered on March 1, 2021, with 7.89 million viewers with a 1.1 in the 18–49 demographic marking the latest new series low.
The twenty-first season premiered on September 20, 2021, with 7.22 million viewers with a 1.1 in the 18–49 demographic marking the latest news series low in viewers but steady in the demographic.
The twenty-second season premiered on September 19, 2022, with 6.12 million viewers with a 0.6 in the 18-49 demographic marking the latest series low in both demographic.
†^ Including an episode that aired after a live broadcast of the Super Bowl:[106]
10:19–10:30 = 46.786 million viewers (retention: 76.68% – football game itself reached a peak of 118.355 million viewers)
10:30–10:45 = 39.494 million viewers
10:45–11:00 = 36.310 million viewers
11:00–11:15 = 32.630 million viewers
11:15–11:21 = 31.792 million viewers
Video game
The Voice: I Want You is a video game based on the television show. It was released on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii, and Wii U on October 21, 2014, and was published by Activision. The game includes a microphone and has songs from the show including songs performed by the coaches.
Broadcast
The show premiered in Canada on April 26, 2011, on CTV. In Asia, the series began airing on August 21, 2011, on AXN and was transferred to Star World (now Fox Life) starting in Season 11 until cessation of transmission on October 1, 2021.[107] It premiered in New Zealand on July 16, 2011, on TV2, in Australia on August 9, 2011, on Go!, in South Africa on October 5, 2011, on SABC 3, and on March 31, 2012, in the Philippines on Studio 23 (now S A).[108] On May 22, 2019, it premiered in Germany on sixx starting Season 14.[109]
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External links
Official website
The Voice at IMDb
The Voice at epguides.com Glee 2011
Super Bowl lead-out program The Voice 2012 Elementary 2013 Africa
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1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22 Javier Colon
Jermaine Paul
Cassadee Pope
Danielle Bradbery
Tessanne Chin
Josh Kaufman
Craig Wayne Boyd
Sawyer Fredericks
Jordan Smith
Alisan Porter
Sundance Head
Chris Blue
Chloe Kohanski
Brynn Cartelli
Chevel Shepherd
Maelyn Jarmon
Jake Hoot
Todd Tilghman
Carter Rubin
Cam Anthony
Girl Named Tom "Stitch by Stitch"
"I Believe I Can Fly"
"Cry"
"Born to Fly"
"Tumbling Down"
"Set Fire to the Rain"
"My Baby's Got a Smile on Her Face"
"Please"
"Climb Ev'ry Mountain"
"Down That Road"
"Darlin' Don't Go"
"Money on You"
"Wish I Didn't Love You"
"Walk My Way"
"Broken Hearts"
"Wait for You"
"Better Off Without You"
"Long Way Home"
"Up From Here"
"Wanted Dead or Alive"
"The Chain" Dia Frampton
Juliet Simms
Terry McDermott
Michelle Chamuel
Jacquie Lee
Jake Worthington
Matt McAndrew
Meghan Linsey
Emily Ann Roberts
Adam Wakefield
Billy Gilman
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Addison Agen
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Chris Kroeze
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Toneisha Harris
Jim Ranger
Kenzie Wheeler
Wendy Moten Vicci Martinez
Elenowen
Frenchie Davis
Rebecca Loebe
Xenia
Tje Austin
Beverly McClellan
Raquel Castro
Nakia
Serabee
Casey Desmond
Justin Grennan
Lily Elise
Jared Blake
Casey Weston
RaeLynn
Jesse Campbell
Chris Mann
Tony Lucca
Gwen Sebastian
Kim Yarbrough
Angel Taylor
Elley Duhé
Pip
Katrina Parker
Erin Martin
Winter Rae
Moses Stone
Jordis Unga
Naia Kete
Charlotte Sometimes
Tony Vincent
Anthony Evans
Nicolle Galyon
Jordan Rager
Mathai
Preston Shannon
Lex Land
Nicholas David
Amanda Brown
Melanie Martinez
Bryan Keith
Loren Allred
MacKenzie Bourg
Avery Wilson
Joe Kirkland
Collin McLoughlin
Suzanna Choffel
Lelia Broussard
Jordan Pruitt
Ben Taub
Rod Michael
Chris Trousdale
Cupid
The Swon Brothers
Sasha Allen
Judith Hill
Kris Thomas
Garrett Gardner
Jeff Lewis
Julie Roberts
Holly Tucker
Sam Alves
Will Champlin
Matthew Schuler
James Wolpert
Cole Vosbury
Caroline Pennell
Josh Logan
E. G. Daily
Holly Henry
Donna Allen
Dominic Scott Kay
Christina Grimmie
Kristen Merlin
Kat Perkins
Sisaundra Lewis
Morgan Wallen
Dawn and Hawkes
Paula DeAnda
Lindsay Pagano
Chris Jamison
Damien Lawson
Taylor John Williams
Anita Antoinette
Bryana Salaz
Andy Cherry
MEGG
Joshua Davis
Koryn Hawthorne
Corey Kent
Quincy Mumford
Barrett Baber
Jeffery Austin
Madi Davis
Amy Vachal
Viktor Király
Keith Semple
Amanda Ayala
Tyler Dickerson
Caleb Lee Hutchinson
Hannah Huston
Laith Al-Saadi
Mary Sarah
Daniel Passino
Owen Danoff
Emily Keener
Katherine Ho
Tamar Davis
Maddie Poppe
Chase Walker
Wé McDonald
Josh Gallagher
Ali Caldwell
Aliyah Moulden
Jesse Larson
Josh Hoyer
Brooke Simpson
Red Marlow
Esera Tuaolo
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Katrina Rose
Natalie Stovall
Kyla Jade
Spensha Baker
WILKES
Megan Lee
Shana Halligan
Kirk Jay
Kennedy Holmes
Reagan Strange
Kameron Marlowe
Hannah Blaylock
Dexter Roberts
Andrew Sevener
Andrew Jannakos
Katie Kadan
Rose Short
Thunderstorm Artis
CammWess
Micah Iverson
Zan Fiskum
Todd Michael Hall
Ian Flanigan
DeSz
John Holiday
Jordan Matthew Young
Rachel Mac
Victor Solomon
Paris Winningham
Hailey Mia
Jershika Maple
Jeremy Rosado Awards and nominations
Discography
Contestants
The Voice: Neon Dreams
American Idol (2011)
The Voice (2012)
The Voice (2013)
Shark Tank (2014)
Face Off (2015)
The Voice (2016)
The Voice (2016)
The Voice (2017)
The Amazing Race (season 4) (2003)
The Amazing Race (season 5) (2004)
The Amazing Race (season 7) (2005)
The Amazing Race (season 9) (2006)
The Amazing Race (season 10) (2007)
The Amazing Race (season 12) (2008)
The Amazing Race (season 14) (2009) Top Chef (season 6) (2010)
The Amazing Race (season 18) (2011)
The Amazing Race (season 20) (2012)
The Voice (season 3) / (season 4) (2013)
The Amazing Race (season 23) (2014)
The Voice (season 7) / (season 8) (2015)
The Voice (season 9) / (season 10) (2016)
The Voice (season 11) / (season 12) (2017)
RuPaul's Drag Race (season 10) (2018)
RuPaul's Drag Race (season 11) (2019) RuPaul's Drag Race (season 12) (2020)
RuPaul's Drag Race (season 13) (2021)
Lizzo's Watch Out for the Big Grrrls (season 1) (2022)
TRL (2001)
The Osbournes (2002)
American Idol (2003)
Punk'd (2004)
American Idol (2005–07)
The Hills (2008–09)
Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2010)
Jersey Shore (2011)
Punk'd (2012)
Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2013–14)
The Voice (2015)
Keeping Up with the Kardashians (2016)
Popular (2000)
The Bernie Mac Show (2002)
8 Simple Rules (2003)
The O.C. (2004)
Desperate Housewives (2005)
So You Think You Can Dance (2006)
Heroes (2007)
Gossip Girl (2008)
Jonas (2009)
The Vampire Diaries (2010)
The Voice (2011)
The X Factor (2012)
The Fosters (2013)
Faking It (2014)
Empire (2015)
Shadowhunters (2016)
Riverdale (2017)
On My Block (2018)
American Auto (since 2021)
American Ninja Warrior (since 2011)
American Song Contest (since 2022)
America's Got Talent (since 2006)
America's Got Talent: Extreme (since 2022)
The Blacklist (since 2013)
Capital One College Bowl (since 2021)
Chicago Fire (since 2012)
Chicago Med (since 2015)
Chicago P.D. (since 2014)
Dancing with Myself (since 2022)
Dateline NBC (since 1992)
Family Game Fight! (since 2021)
Grand Crew (since 2021)
La Brea (since 2021)
Law Order (1990–2010; since 2022)
Law Order: Organized Crime (since 2021)
Law Order: Special Victims Unit (since 1999)
New Amsterdam (since 2018)
Password (since 2022)
Quantum Leap (since 2022)
That's My Jam (since 2021)
The Voice (since 2011)
The Wall (since 2016)
Weakest Link (2001–02; since 2020)
Who Do You Think You Are? (2010–12; since 2022)
Young Rock (since 2021) NBC News Daily (since 2022) Late Night with Seth Meyers (since 2014)
Saturday Night Live (since 1975)
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon (since 2014) Dateline NBC (since 1992)
Early Today (since 1999)
Meet the Press (since 1947)
NBC News Daily (since 2022)
NBC Nightly News (since 1970)
Today (since 1952) IndyCar Series on NBC
Golf Channel on NBC
NASCAR on NBC
NFL on NBC
Football Night in America
NBC Sunday Night Football
Notre Dame Football on NBC
Tennis on NBC
Thoroughbred Racing on NBC
Premier League on NBC Lopez vs. Lopez (2022)
Big Ten Saturday Night (2023)
Magnum P.I. (2023)
Night Court (TBA)
The Wheel (2023)