Jordin or Blake? 'Idol' finale to tell
Finalists: Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis, each with partisans
Sparks and Lewis have distinctive styles

Jordin Sparks and Blake Lewis are the last two contestants on
"American Idol." |
NEW YORK (AP) -- "American Idol" finalists Jordin Sparks and Blake
Lewis are attractive, talented and have millions of adoring fans. That's
where their similarities end.
The two telegenic singers -- The Beauty and The Beatboxer,
respectively -- will try to out-sing, out-groove and out-charm one
another in this week's fairy-tale finale. Who's gonna win? It's a tough
call. Though many argue that Sparks is the clear frontrunner, Lewis is
full of surprises.
Sparks, the 17-year-old daughter of retired NFL player Phillippi
Sparks, sits pretty in one corner. The bubbly teen with the killer voice
from Glendale, Arizona, is poised beyond her years, yet her
girl-next-door goofiness endears her to viewers of all ages. She was
born to win "American Idol," her fans say. If not, someone please get
this girl a show on the Disney Channel.
"I'm very, very strong willed. This is what I want to do," she told
reporters in a Friday teleconference. "It's what I've been wanting to do
for so long, and I think that if people did vote for me, that I could
represent it well if I actually won. It would be amazing. I would love
to win. ... I don't know: just vote for me if you like me!"
Sparks' bold yet sweet personality has eclipsed some suspect song
choices, like the depressingly old-fashioned "I Who Have Nothing." She
performed that number twice this season -- last week it was panned by
Simon Cowell, whose face turned even gloomier when his favorite
contender, Melinda Doolittle, went home.
If Sparks is this year's Miss Congeniality, Lewis, 25, of Bothell,
Washington, wins awards for Most Creative and Best Dressed. The stylish
beatboxer, who has been experimenting with hair color in recent weeks,
has shown talent for choosing songs that play to his strengths and
altering song arrangements to inject contemporary pizazz.
He's had his ups and downs, but won much acclaim for his takes on
Keane's "Somewhere Only We Know," which highlighted his lilting voice,
and "You Give Love a Bad Name," perhaps his greatest "Idol" hit.
His decision to add hip-hop beats to the latter impressed Cowell and
irked guest mentor Jon Bon Jovi.
"I don't think I've really ever listened to the judges I think on
this show," Lewis told reporters last week. "I kinda nod my head and
smile and say thank you."
His fans argue: He's a risk-taker! He's cute! He's cool! But none of
these qualities matter when Sparks is in the picture, says Rolling Stone
executive editor Joe Levy. Lewis has it going on, but this week he might
be gone ... gone ... gone.
"Jordin brings more to the table and she has all season," Levy told
The Associated Press. "Blake is a limited singer and his presentation is
limited as well. ... He hasn't shown himself to be versatile or as
winning as Jordan. So, on talent alone, I would give it to Jordin."
The soulful singer/high school student "is just better on TV than
Blake," he added. "And in fact, probably better on TV than anyone else
this season."
Her young age provides that edge needed to win over female voters.
"For the teen girls, she's one of them. For the moms, she's everything
they want their daughter or son to grow up to be," Levy said.
Even Lewis appears to be on Team Jordin. "She's 17 and she's already
a woman," he gushed, before going on to sabotage himself. "She performs,
she's good-looking, she's got a fantastic personality and it reads
really well on camera. And so I love Jordin Sparks. ... Regardless of
the finale, I think she already won it in my mind and she was my pick in
the beginning."
Kelly Clarkson, the original American Idol, is also pulling for
Sparks, while Rosie O'Donnell and Elisabeth Hasselbeck of "The View" are
placing bets on Lewis.
Songwriter Sean Garrett, who's worked with Beyonce and Usher, isn't
playing favorites. He's both impressed by Lewis' creativity and Sparks'
growth as a singer.
"It's going to be really, really interesting," he told the AP. "I
mean, I think they both stand for something great. ... Hard work,
creativity, poise. Standing there and not quitting."
Indeed, the pressure of performing live on the top-rated competition
-- and standing out amid the Sanjaya phenomenon -- was no easy task.
Everyone's a winner, right?
CNN
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