Musicians have mixed opinions on these shows,
        
        
          some love the competitive aspect and regard
        
        
          them as a serious platform for artists to build a
        
        
          successful career or view "The Voice" as a com-
        
        
          pelling insight into how decisions are made in
        
        
          the music industry; whilst others view it as a big
        
        
          pile of neon painted monkey bollocks. In defence
        
        
          of these shows, they do expose some of the
        
        
          weaknesses and limitations mainstream pop acts
        
        
          have. Confused? Allowme to explain....
        
        
          Having the best voice and ability to use it is
        
        
          what's sought after in these talent shows and
        
        
          those that participate are arguably attracted to
        
        
          the ideology of being a big star. Show producers
        
        
          are not looking for songwriters or great musi-
        
        
          cians; just androidswith a slight personality who
        
        
          can obey a vocal coach, sing other people's songs
        
        
          and somehow make them sound unique - That's
        
        
          about it. We're all conditioned by this style of
        
        
          Television programming and expected to desire
        
        
          and crave what the contestants are pursuing but
        
        
          the truth is that the finish line for them is not
        
        
          the career that many would actually want to
        
        
          have; especially the majority of musicians.
        
        
          Now if we assume that this process of artist
        
        
          development in "The Voice" is genuinely accu-
        
        
          rate and that this is the way the music industry
        
        
          really works then ask yourself how do famous
        
        
          singers with no talent at all for song writing
        
        
          release original hit singles and how did they do it
        
        
          in the first place to elevate them to where they
        
        
          are now? Let's look at the artist RIHANNA and
        
        
          first examine one of her singles. According to
        
        
          NPR (2011) it cost approximately 78,000 in
        
        
          2010 to make the song "Man Down" off her
        
        
          album "Loud" plus another 1 million to roll it out
        
        
          onto radio playlists across the USA and get a
        
        
          banner advert on iTunes. RIHANNA herself only
        
        
          gets paid if the label recoups what it blew on the
        
        
          album; apparently it didn't sell particularly well
        
        
          and radio play was minimal so the label had to
        
        
          release other singles to make up the shortfall.
        
        
          Well that's a lot of money to spend on an origi-
        
        
          nal song isn't it? Getting a song in the pop charts
        
        
          takes massive investment and labels don't trust
        
        
          an artist to write a song themselves so let's break
        
        
          down their costs. DefJam for example held a
        
        
          writing camp in L.A. to create the songs for
        
        
          RIHANNA's "Loud" album and hired leading
        
        
          songwriters to form awriting camp to work in
        
        
          a cushy recording studio for about a fortnight
        
        
          - that's about 18,000 per song (flying writers
        
        
          to studio, hotels, renting studio rooms etc)
        
        
          plus 15,000 for the songwriter, 20,000 for
        
        
          the producer, 15,000 for the Vocal producer
        
        
          who has to teach RIHANNA how to sing her
        
        
          own song and 10,000 for mixing and master-
        
        
          ing; Oh, and as I said before 1 million to get
        
        
          the song on radio and we haven't even includ-
        
        
          ed costs for her music video.
        
        
          The Judges on "The Voice" know all this
        
        
          because it's the industry they are in, they
        
        
          aren't looking for songwriters or great musi-
        
        
          cians or even care about your unique original
        
        
          lyrics; they want a robotic slave to create an
        
        
          income for existing people in the music indus-
        
        
          try. This explains why artists like RIHANNA
        
        
          act like spoilt twats, it makes sense why she's
        
        
          insisting on having a rider; she'll make faster
        
        
          money finding a dollar bill on the floor of one
        
        
          her live shows. The Vocal producer has the job
        
        
          of being paid to get her to be in the mood to
        
        
          sing; no wonder she famously asked for doves
        
        
          to fly around the studio during the recording
        
        
          because the producer has to pay to make it
        
        
          happen! If I was a slave and I knew someone
        
        
          was getting paid 15,000 to get me in the
        
        
          mood then I would insist on having gigantic
        
        
          posters printed of the producers mom, have
        
        
          them covering all the walls of the recording
        
        
          studio, demand he paint the word "slut" over
        
        
          them in his own human excrement and then
        
        
          invite his father down to watch me record a
        
        
          hit single; cheaper and more satisfying than
        
        
          doves.