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Gone are the days when C-listers ran the judging panels on talent shows. Britney Spears joined “The X-Factor” to the tune of $15 million, surpassing Jennifer Lopez’s $12-million deal for “American Idol” and tying Spears with Ryan Seacrest as the highest-paid personality on reality television. From Seacrest to Simon Cowell, here are the highest-paid hosts.
Gone are the days when C-listers ran the judging panels on talent shows. Britney Spears joined “The X-Factor” to the tune of $15 million, surpassing Jennifer Lopez’s $12-million deal for “American Idol” and tying Spears with Ryan Seacrest as the highest-paid personality on reality television. From Seacrest to Simon Cowell, here are the highest-paid hosts.
The pop singer peaked in the early 2000s, hit rock bottom in 2007, then bounced back last year with her billboard-topping album, "Femme Fatale." Now it looks like Brit is parlaying her talents into judging other people’s talent on Simon Cowell’s "X-Factor." Spears has reportedly been offered a whopping $15 million for the gig— several million more than the lump sums fellow pop-divas-turned-reality-TV-judges Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera make on their respective talent shows. As part of the reportedly imminent deal, Spears’s fiancé, music producer and manager Jason Trawick, will produce the show.
No surprise here: In 2009, Seacrest, who has been with "American Idol" since it premiered ten years ago, sealed a three-year, $45 million deal to stay on as the show’s host. Seacrest’s "Idol" salary may explain his reluctance to leave the top-rated TV contest despite his other hosting gigs on "E!," not to mention the money he makes from his production company.
In 2002, Cowell became the face of the ever-expanding talent-show business as the brutally frank top judge of "American Idol," which now makes an average of $6.64 million in advertising revenue every half hour. According to Forbes, Cowell reportedly pocketed $75 million from "Idol" in 2009. Fox matched that fat sum last year for the premiere season of Cowell’s new show "The X-Factor." While the show didn’t reach Cowell’s projected 20-million-viewer rating, he still managed to bank another $42 million in a deal with Sony to hand the show over to his production company, which also produces "America’s Got Talent."
Last year, J.Lo was paid $12 million to replace Simon Cowell on "American Idol’s" 10th season—a huge sum for the rookie judge. But Lopez’s star status was a key factor in the deal, and set off what The Hollywood Reporter has called “the J.Lo effect” for big-name judges demanding big paychecks.
Even if Stern makes more money on his radio show, he’s still doing all right with his $15 million paycheck from NBC’s "America’s Got Talent," where he recently became a panelist. Stern thinks he’s a natural fit for the gig, telling TV’s Inside Edition he’s the “gold standard” for judges and that "American Idol" panelists “need to watch the show and learn.”
Apparently NBC thinks Aguilera is worth more than all the other "Voice" judges combined. She reportedly rakes in more than $225,000 an episode, while the other coaches—Blake Shelton, Cee Lo Green, and Adam Levine—get roughly $75,000 each. In early February, NBC signed Christina Aguilera on for a third season with "The Voice" for a reported $10 million.
"So You Think You Can Dance" is one of America’s hottest TV shows. So it’s not exactly a shocker that its blonde bombshell host Deeley makes $60,000 per episode. Not surprising, but does it seem fair?