The X Factor (British series 1)


The X Factor is a British television music competition to find new singing talent; the winner of which receives a £1 million recording contract with the Syco Music record label. The first series was broadcast from 4 September to 11 December 2004. The competition was split into several stages: auditions, bootcamp, judges' homes and live shows, with Louis Walsh, Sharon Osbourne and Simon Cowell as judges. Kate Thornton presented the show on ITV, whilst Ben Shephard presented the spin-off show The Xtra Factor on ITV2.
Auditions were held in Dublin, Newcastle, London, Leeds, Birmingham and Glasgow.
Steve Brookstein won the series, with Cowell as the winning mentor. Brookstein went on to have some chart success, with runner-up group G4 achieving two platinum albums before splitting up in 2007, but reuniting in 2014.

Selection process

Applications and auditions

Before the auditions, advertisements appeared on ITV, newspapers, and trade magazines, promising that the new show would encourage groups to join, and while the emphasis was on singing, would welcome those who played musical instruments and wrote their own songs. The show would differentiate itself from its predecessor, Pop Idol.
For the first episode of auditions, which aired on 4 September 2004, the judges visited Leeds and London. The second episode aired on 11 September 2004 in which the judges visited Newcastle. The third aired on 18 September 2004, the fourth on 25 September 2004 and the fifth on 2 October 2004.

Bootcamp and judges' homes

After the auditions, each judge was allocated a category at random:
Each judge chose 12 acts from their category to go through to round two. After bootcamp, each judge selected five acts to progress to the judges' homes round. The bootcamp episodes aired on 9 and 16 October 2004.
In judges' homes, the 15 acts went to the homes of their respective judges, where they were interviewed and performed again. Each judge then chose three acts to go through to the live shows, making a total of nine finalists.
JudgeCategoryLocationAssistantsContestants eliminated
CowellOver 25sLondonAnnie Skates, SinittaOdis Palmer, Lloyd Wade
Osbourne16-24sBuckinghamshireMark Hudson, Terry Longden, Jack OsbourneMegan Ramsay, Andy Steed
WalshGroupsDublinLinda Martin, Faye Sawyer, David Laudat4Tune, Advance

Finalists

Key:

Live shows

Format

Two live shows were broadcast each Saturday evening during the competition. Until week 5, each act performed once in the first show, then the public voted for the act that they wanted to remain in the show. In the other results show, the two acts with the fewest votes were revealed. These two acts then had to sing again before the three judges decided whom to eliminate.
The format changed in the sixth week: each act performed twice in the first show and performed one of their songs in the results show. The act with the fewest votes was eliminated at the end of the second show.
The live shows started on 23 October 2004 and ended on 11 December 2004.

Results summary

;Colour key
Cowell was not required to vote as there was already a majority.

Live show details

Week 1 (23 October)

ActCategoryOrderSongResult
Voices with SoulWalsh 1"Ain't No Mountain High EnoughBottom two
Verity KeaysCowell 2"I Will Always Love You"Safe
Roberta HowettOsbourne 3"Superstar"Eliminated
2 to GoWalsh 4"Don't Know Much"Safe
Steve BrooksteinCowell 5"When a Man Loves a Woman"Safe
Cassie ComptonOsbourne 6"Alfie"Safe
G4Walsh 7"Everybody Hurts"Safe
Rowetta SatchellCowell 8"You Don't Have to Say You Love Me"Safe
Tabby CallaghanOsbourne 9"You Really Got Me"Safe

;Judges' votes to eliminate
;Judges' votes to eliminate:
;Judges' votes to eliminate:
;Judges' votes to eliminate:
;Judges' votes to eliminate:
The quarter-final did not feature a final showdown and instead the act with the fewest public votes, Rowetta Satchell, was automatically eliminated

Week 7: Semi-Final (4 December)

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

Week 8: Final (11 December)

Reception

Ratings

This series achieved an average of 7.4 million viewers per episode.
EpisodeAir dateOfficial ITV1 rating
Weekly rank
Auditions 14 September5.2521
Auditions 211 September6.5317
Auditions 318 September7.0814
Auditions 425 September7.2416
Auditions 52 October6.7118
Bootcamp 19 October6.6921
Bootcamp 29 October7.8917
Judges' houses16 October7.3217
Live show 123 October7.1817
Live results 123 October7.8315
Live show 230 October6.5320
Live results 230 October7.2617
Live show 36 November6.8919
Live results 36 November7.0218
Live show 413 November7.4215
Live results 413 November6.8818
Live show 520 November7.9116
Live results 520 November7.9814
Live show 627 November8.0622
Live results 627 November8.0123
Live semi-final4 December7.7920
Live results 74 December7.5223
Final11 December8.6215
Final results11 December9.968

Controversies

Cheating

It was reported in tabloid newspapers that the show's audition process was unfair after Walsh was accused of cheating. He was thought to have advised the group Co-Ed on things such as song choices, which caused controversy after it was revealed that he had actually previously managed Co-Ed after they appeared on the Irish version of Popstars in 2001. Also, footage of Cowell and Osbourne coaching contestants to argue back to the judges was being auctioned over the Internet.

Claims of Rigging

Before the first live show, Osbourne accused Cowell of "rigging" the show by editing footage to make the contestants in his category more appealing to viewers. Osbourne attracted criticism again following the final in December 2004 when she was forced to make an apology after attracting what Cowell referred to as "record complaints" over an outburst by Osbourne in which she criticised eventual winner Steve Brookstein. This left her place on the show uncertain, although she returned for the second series in 2005.