The audition process started in May 2008 with an initial registration period for applicants. TV3 initially purchased the rights to produce a local version of The X Factor in 2010. It was the first and only series of New Zealand's Got Talent produced by Prime.

[4] In September 2012, TV3 finally confirmed that the first series would begin production in early 2013. They were singer Paton Jacinto, pianist Kent Isomura and singer Melissa Nordhouse.

[7] Series three premiered on 15 September 2013. When The X Factor ran overtime, Four broadcast the TV3 feed until it had finished. In March 2015, it was announced that NZ on Air would not provide any funding for future series, making a third series less likely. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. Dominic Bowden returned to host season two.

New Zealand's Got Talent is a New Zealand reality television show which premiered in 2008. Each week has a different theme; each act's song is chosen according to the theme. The show is based on the Got Talent series.

Stage 4: Judges' retreats. [6], Natalie Bassingthwaighte (2015) Live shows 2 -10 weeks. Nyssa Collins placed second and Brendon Thomas and the Vibes followed in third. The show's site at tv3.co.nz has over 6.3 million page impressions, with over 886,000 streams of full episodes and over 844,000 streams of individual song performances. It aired on Four, sister channel of The X Factor's channel TV3, on Sunday and Monday, then repeats were aired on The Edge TV on Monday and Tuesday at 7 pm. The first series of New Zealand's Got Talent began airing on Prime on 8 September 2008 and ran to 28 October 2008. Again in season two, judges retreat went international with the help of celebrity guests.   Contestant in Team "Melanie Blatt" [11] They were replaced by Australian X Factor judge Natalie Bassingthwaighte and kiwi drummer of Blindspott and I Am Giant, Shelton Woolright.

In each series, after the audition process, each judge is allocated a category to mentor.

The results are announced during the live results show the following day. Heated disagreements, usually involving judges defending their acts against criticism, are a regular feature of the show. The hosts were TV presenter Andrew Mulligan and radio host Jason Reeves, with actress Miriama Smith, former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and television producer and presenter Richard Driver as judges. [23] In the second series, the bootcamp included a live studio audience and used a six-seat challenge to choose the contestants to progress to the judges retreats' round.
[32][33] It was filmed live in Vector Arena (where The X Factor was filmed), off to the side of the main stage, and presented by Guy, Sharyn & Clint's Guy Williams, Sharyn Casey, and Clint Roberts. Jackie Thomas was announced as X Factor NZ winner for 2013, with Whenua Patuwai placing second and Benny Tipene coming in third place. Moon was assisted by former New Zealand's Got Talent judge, Jason Kerrison and travelled to Karaka and Kills was assisted by former X Factor New Zealand contestant, Benny Tipene and travelled to Titirangi. During the first live show of the second series, judges Natalia Kills and her husband Willy Moon verbally attacked and ridiculed a contestant, Joe Irvine, resulting in an audible backlash from the audience and fellow judge Melanie Blatt, who later described Kills as "a twat" on social media for her behaviour. Stage 3: Bootcamp - Six-Chair Challenge. [3][7], The judging panel for the first season was composed of New Zealand-born, UK-based singer-songwriter Daniel Bedingfield, All Saints member Melanie Blatt, New Zealand singer-songwriter Ruby Frost as well as Australian-born Maori and Australian Idol winner Stan Walker. It was later announced by the show's producers that both Kills and Moon had been immediately removed from the program. It consisted of 13 episodes. The live shows consist of two weekly live shows, the first featuring the contestants' performances and the second revealing the results of the public voting, culminating in one act being eliminated each week. Winners are in bold, eliminated contestants in small font. It consisted of 13 episodes. The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". The first series also had strong online engagement, with over 120,000 Facebook fans and up to 70,000 people actively discussing the show.

The show originally screened on Prime for one series before being dropped. The original line-up on Prime included Andrew Mulligan and Jason Reeves as hosts, with Miriama Smith, Paul Ellis and Richard Driver as judges. [4] Starting 29 September, the live semi-finals started aired on Monday nights, with the results show on Tuesday nights. It was a replacement of behind-the-scenes video blog Samsung Insider, which was part of the first series of The X Factor. It was produced by South Pacific Pictures. Contestants competed for the grand prize of NZ$100,000 cash and a 2013 Toyota Corolla car. Kills and Moon were replaced by kiwi-born, I am Giant drummer - Shelton Woolwright and X Factor Australia judge, Natalie Bassingthwaighte. On 15 March 2015 during the first live episode of The X Factor, Kills and Moon bullied and verbally attacked a contestant, Joe Irvine. This page was last edited on 24 July 2020, at 05:50. New Zealand's Got Talent was a New Zealand reality television show, based on the original UK series, to find new talent.The third and final series began airing on TV One from 15 September 2013. [19], In 2017, MediaWorks confirmed that the format rights to the show had expired, thus revealing that plans for a third series had officially been cancelled.[20]. [24] At the retreats, contestants are divided into the four categories: Boys, Girls, Over-25s and Groups, and each category is assigned one of the judges as a mentor. The series' key sponsors were Ford New Zealand as broadcast sponsor, Samsung Electronics as technology partner with McDonald's and Coca-Cola as programme partners. Despite good ratings for the network, Prime was unable to outrun costs and decided not to renew the series for another season. [34][35] The first episode aired on 15 March 2015, immediately preceding the first live show,[36] and the final episode on 18 May 2015, immediately preceding the final results show. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. The show was cancelled in 2017, with MediaWorks confirming that the format rights to the show had expired. NZ On Air noted that any future series would not be eligible for funding.

[5] Broadcast funding agency NZ On Air confirmed they would contribute $1.6 million to the first series as a minority investor, for the production of 30 episodes of 60 minutes duration each. [2] From the second series, bands were also able to enter in the group category.[3]. Benny Tipene is the most successful act to emerge from The X Factor NZ; he was the only act to chart internationally. The results night aired with only Walker and Blatt in attendance at the judging panel. The series had a top prize of NZ$100,000.

The winner was signed to Sony Music Entertainment New Zealand. Blatt was assisted by Nicole Appleton and travelled to Pattaya. The table below shows, for each series, which category each judge is allocated and which acts he or she put through to the live finals. Bedingfield was assisted by singer/songwriter and sister Natasha Bedingfield and travelled to Rarotonga, Blatt was assisted by Rachel Stevens and travelled to Mahurangi, Frost was assisted by X Factor Australia judge, Guy Sebastian and travelled to Sydney and Walker was assisted by Hollie Smith and went to Queenstown. Overall the second series had an average viewership of 328,000, down 18%. [6] The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". [5] In February 2012, TVNZ announced that a new local version of the show was in the early stages of production and would screen on TV One. [citation needed] In July, the final two judges were announced - former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and former Radio With Pictures presenter and television producer Richard Driver.[1]. Two series were broadcast, as summarised below. [17] That nights episode saw only Walker and Blatt attend the panel. TV One later revived the show, with series produced in 2012 and 2013.[1]. TVNZ confirmed a third series would be produced in 2013.
[1] The show began in 2013 and was open to anyone aged 14 and over.   Contestant in Team "Stan Walker" The series was won by Bassingthwaighte's contestant, Beau Monga.

[citation needed] From this round, the judges chose 32 contestants to go through to the semi-finals.
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The audition process started in May 2008 with an initial registration period for applicants. TV3 initially purchased the rights to produce a local version of The X Factor in 2010. It was the first and only series of New Zealand's Got Talent produced by Prime.

[4] In September 2012, TV3 finally confirmed that the first series would begin production in early 2013. They were singer Paton Jacinto, pianist Kent Isomura and singer Melissa Nordhouse.

[7] Series three premiered on 15 September 2013. When The X Factor ran overtime, Four broadcast the TV3 feed until it had finished. In March 2015, it was announced that NZ on Air would not provide any funding for future series, making a third series less likely. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. Dominic Bowden returned to host season two.

New Zealand's Got Talent is a New Zealand reality television show which premiered in 2008. Each week has a different theme; each act's song is chosen according to the theme. The show is based on the Got Talent series.

Stage 4: Judges' retreats. [6], Natalie Bassingthwaighte (2015) Live shows 2 -10 weeks. Nyssa Collins placed second and Brendon Thomas and the Vibes followed in third. The show's site at tv3.co.nz has over 6.3 million page impressions, with over 886,000 streams of full episodes and over 844,000 streams of individual song performances. It aired on Four, sister channel of The X Factor's channel TV3, on Sunday and Monday, then repeats were aired on The Edge TV on Monday and Tuesday at 7 pm. The first series of New Zealand's Got Talent began airing on Prime on 8 September 2008 and ran to 28 October 2008. Again in season two, judges retreat went international with the help of celebrity guests.   Contestant in Team "Melanie Blatt" [11] They were replaced by Australian X Factor judge Natalie Bassingthwaighte and kiwi drummer of Blindspott and I Am Giant, Shelton Woolright.

In each series, after the audition process, each judge is allocated a category to mentor.

The results are announced during the live results show the following day. Heated disagreements, usually involving judges defending their acts against criticism, are a regular feature of the show. The hosts were TV presenter Andrew Mulligan and radio host Jason Reeves, with actress Miriama Smith, former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and television producer and presenter Richard Driver as judges. [23] In the second series, the bootcamp included a live studio audience and used a six-seat challenge to choose the contestants to progress to the judges retreats' round.
[32][33] It was filmed live in Vector Arena (where The X Factor was filmed), off to the side of the main stage, and presented by Guy, Sharyn & Clint's Guy Williams, Sharyn Casey, and Clint Roberts. Jackie Thomas was announced as X Factor NZ winner for 2013, with Whenua Patuwai placing second and Benny Tipene coming in third place. Moon was assisted by former New Zealand's Got Talent judge, Jason Kerrison and travelled to Karaka and Kills was assisted by former X Factor New Zealand contestant, Benny Tipene and travelled to Titirangi. During the first live show of the second series, judges Natalia Kills and her husband Willy Moon verbally attacked and ridiculed a contestant, Joe Irvine, resulting in an audible backlash from the audience and fellow judge Melanie Blatt, who later described Kills as "a twat" on social media for her behaviour. Stage 3: Bootcamp - Six-Chair Challenge. [3][7], The judging panel for the first season was composed of New Zealand-born, UK-based singer-songwriter Daniel Bedingfield, All Saints member Melanie Blatt, New Zealand singer-songwriter Ruby Frost as well as Australian-born Maori and Australian Idol winner Stan Walker. It was later announced by the show's producers that both Kills and Moon had been immediately removed from the program. It consisted of 13 episodes. The live shows consist of two weekly live shows, the first featuring the contestants' performances and the second revealing the results of the public voting, culminating in one act being eliminated each week. Winners are in bold, eliminated contestants in small font. It consisted of 13 episodes. The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". The first series also had strong online engagement, with over 120,000 Facebook fans and up to 70,000 people actively discussing the show.

The show originally screened on Prime for one series before being dropped. The original line-up on Prime included Andrew Mulligan and Jason Reeves as hosts, with Miriama Smith, Paul Ellis and Richard Driver as judges. [4] Starting 29 September, the live semi-finals started aired on Monday nights, with the results show on Tuesday nights. It was a replacement of behind-the-scenes video blog Samsung Insider, which was part of the first series of The X Factor. It was produced by South Pacific Pictures. Contestants competed for the grand prize of NZ$100,000 cash and a 2013 Toyota Corolla car. Kills and Moon were replaced by kiwi-born, I am Giant drummer - Shelton Woolwright and X Factor Australia judge, Natalie Bassingthwaighte. On 15 March 2015 during the first live episode of The X Factor, Kills and Moon bullied and verbally attacked a contestant, Joe Irvine. This page was last edited on 24 July 2020, at 05:50. New Zealand's Got Talent was a New Zealand reality television show, based on the original UK series, to find new talent.The third and final series began airing on TV One from 15 September 2013. [19], In 2017, MediaWorks confirmed that the format rights to the show had expired, thus revealing that plans for a third series had officially been cancelled.[20]. [24] At the retreats, contestants are divided into the four categories: Boys, Girls, Over-25s and Groups, and each category is assigned one of the judges as a mentor. The series' key sponsors were Ford New Zealand as broadcast sponsor, Samsung Electronics as technology partner with McDonald's and Coca-Cola as programme partners. Despite good ratings for the network, Prime was unable to outrun costs and decided not to renew the series for another season. [34][35] The first episode aired on 15 March 2015, immediately preceding the first live show,[36] and the final episode on 18 May 2015, immediately preceding the final results show. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. The show was cancelled in 2017, with MediaWorks confirming that the format rights to the show had expired. NZ On Air noted that any future series would not be eligible for funding.

[5] Broadcast funding agency NZ On Air confirmed they would contribute $1.6 million to the first series as a minority investor, for the production of 30 episodes of 60 minutes duration each. [2] From the second series, bands were also able to enter in the group category.[3]. Benny Tipene is the most successful act to emerge from The X Factor NZ; he was the only act to chart internationally. The results night aired with only Walker and Blatt in attendance at the judging panel. The series had a top prize of NZ$100,000.

The winner was signed to Sony Music Entertainment New Zealand. Blatt was assisted by Nicole Appleton and travelled to Pattaya. The table below shows, for each series, which category each judge is allocated and which acts he or she put through to the live finals. Bedingfield was assisted by singer/songwriter and sister Natasha Bedingfield and travelled to Rarotonga, Blatt was assisted by Rachel Stevens and travelled to Mahurangi, Frost was assisted by X Factor Australia judge, Guy Sebastian and travelled to Sydney and Walker was assisted by Hollie Smith and went to Queenstown. Overall the second series had an average viewership of 328,000, down 18%. [6] The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". [5] In February 2012, TVNZ announced that a new local version of the show was in the early stages of production and would screen on TV One. [citation needed] In July, the final two judges were announced - former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and former Radio With Pictures presenter and television producer Richard Driver.[1]. Two series were broadcast, as summarised below. [17] That nights episode saw only Walker and Blatt attend the panel. TV One later revived the show, with series produced in 2012 and 2013.[1]. TVNZ confirmed a third series would be produced in 2013.
[1] The show began in 2013 and was open to anyone aged 14 and over.   Contestant in Team "Stan Walker" The series was won by Bassingthwaighte's contestant, Beau Monga.

[citation needed] From this round, the judges chose 32 contestants to go through to the semi-finals.
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Starting 29 September, the live semi-finals started aired on Monday nights, with the results show on Tuesday nights. The judges were accompanied by Dominic Bowden who hosted the series. The first series of New Zealand's Got Talent began airing on Prime on 8 September 2008 and ran to 28 October 2008. – Winning judge/category.

[37], "X-Factor follows reality 'bible' religiously", "X Factor NZ auditions hit the road again", "TV3 Announces Dominic Bowden as Host of the X Factor NZ", "Final Two Judges For The X Factor NZ Announced", "Husband and wife duo join X-Factor NZ judging panel", "TV3 sacks X Factor judges Willy Moon and Natalia Kills for bullying contestant on live TV", "TV3 Signs Brit Award Winner For The X Factor NZ", "Mediaworks Partners with Mazda On the X Factor NZ", "X Factor judges Natalia Kills, Willy Moon sacked", "New Zealand On Air cuts funding to X Factor", "MediaWorks Factors Out X Factor NZ - ScreenScribe", "THE X FACTOR NZ AUDITION DATES AND VENUES", "Rotorua turns out to X Factor auditions", "The X Factor NZ Boot Camp Performance Day", "The X Factor NZ Sets New Audience Engagement Records", "More than half a million votes cast in 'X Factor' final", "Melanie Blatt on Natalia Kills X Factor rant: Sorry love, you're a tw*t", "Weekend Watch: Michael Jordan, Marriages and Maori Twilight Zone", "New additions to The X Factor NZ family", "MEDIAWORKS ANNOUNCES TWO NEW ADDITIONS TO THE X FACTOR NZ FAMILY", "THE EDGE AFTERNOONS' GUY, SHARYN AND CLINT TO HOST THE XTRA FACTOR", https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_X_Factor_(New_Zealand_TV_series)&oldid=969235547, 2013 New Zealand television series debuts, 2015 New Zealand television series endings, New Zealand television series based on British television series, Pages using infobox television with unknown empty parameters, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, Stage 1: Pre-auditions (these auditions decide who will sing in front of the judges). The show features singers, dancers, magicians, comedians and other variety performers of all ages competing for a top prize of $100,000 cash and a Toyota RAV4 car. It was produced by South Pacific Pictures. It featured behind-the-scenes footage and the presenters' favourite moments of the second New Zealand series of The X Factor. [10] However, Moon and Kills were sacked from their roles as judges after the two humiliated a contestant. Every episode trended on Twitter, with #xfactornz sometimes trending internationally. American choreographer Cris Judd also joined the judging panel. The discography of The X Factor consists of music releases from contestants of the show. The series had not delivered expected advertising revenue and in 2009, the network confirmed that they would not produce any further series. The top two finalists were dancer Chaz Cummings and musical group TMC, with Chaz Cummings eventually becoming the winner of the first series of New Zealand's Got Talent.

The audition process started in May 2008 with an initial registration period for applicants. TV3 initially purchased the rights to produce a local version of The X Factor in 2010. It was the first and only series of New Zealand's Got Talent produced by Prime.

[4] In September 2012, TV3 finally confirmed that the first series would begin production in early 2013. They were singer Paton Jacinto, pianist Kent Isomura and singer Melissa Nordhouse.

[7] Series three premiered on 15 September 2013. When The X Factor ran overtime, Four broadcast the TV3 feed until it had finished. In March 2015, it was announced that NZ on Air would not provide any funding for future series, making a third series less likely. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. Dominic Bowden returned to host season two.

New Zealand's Got Talent is a New Zealand reality television show which premiered in 2008. Each week has a different theme; each act's song is chosen according to the theme. The show is based on the Got Talent series.

Stage 4: Judges' retreats. [6], Natalie Bassingthwaighte (2015) Live shows 2 -10 weeks. Nyssa Collins placed second and Brendon Thomas and the Vibes followed in third. The show's site at tv3.co.nz has over 6.3 million page impressions, with over 886,000 streams of full episodes and over 844,000 streams of individual song performances. It aired on Four, sister channel of The X Factor's channel TV3, on Sunday and Monday, then repeats were aired on The Edge TV on Monday and Tuesday at 7 pm. The first series of New Zealand's Got Talent began airing on Prime on 8 September 2008 and ran to 28 October 2008. Again in season two, judges retreat went international with the help of celebrity guests.   Contestant in Team "Melanie Blatt" [11] They were replaced by Australian X Factor judge Natalie Bassingthwaighte and kiwi drummer of Blindspott and I Am Giant, Shelton Woolright.

In each series, after the audition process, each judge is allocated a category to mentor.

The results are announced during the live results show the following day. Heated disagreements, usually involving judges defending their acts against criticism, are a regular feature of the show. The hosts were TV presenter Andrew Mulligan and radio host Jason Reeves, with actress Miriama Smith, former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and television producer and presenter Richard Driver as judges. [23] In the second series, the bootcamp included a live studio audience and used a six-seat challenge to choose the contestants to progress to the judges retreats' round.
[32][33] It was filmed live in Vector Arena (where The X Factor was filmed), off to the side of the main stage, and presented by Guy, Sharyn & Clint's Guy Williams, Sharyn Casey, and Clint Roberts. Jackie Thomas was announced as X Factor NZ winner for 2013, with Whenua Patuwai placing second and Benny Tipene coming in third place. Moon was assisted by former New Zealand's Got Talent judge, Jason Kerrison and travelled to Karaka and Kills was assisted by former X Factor New Zealand contestant, Benny Tipene and travelled to Titirangi. During the first live show of the second series, judges Natalia Kills and her husband Willy Moon verbally attacked and ridiculed a contestant, Joe Irvine, resulting in an audible backlash from the audience and fellow judge Melanie Blatt, who later described Kills as "a twat" on social media for her behaviour. Stage 3: Bootcamp - Six-Chair Challenge. [3][7], The judging panel for the first season was composed of New Zealand-born, UK-based singer-songwriter Daniel Bedingfield, All Saints member Melanie Blatt, New Zealand singer-songwriter Ruby Frost as well as Australian-born Maori and Australian Idol winner Stan Walker. It was later announced by the show's producers that both Kills and Moon had been immediately removed from the program. It consisted of 13 episodes. The live shows consist of two weekly live shows, the first featuring the contestants' performances and the second revealing the results of the public voting, culminating in one act being eliminated each week. Winners are in bold, eliminated contestants in small font. It consisted of 13 episodes. The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". The first series also had strong online engagement, with over 120,000 Facebook fans and up to 70,000 people actively discussing the show.

The show originally screened on Prime for one series before being dropped. The original line-up on Prime included Andrew Mulligan and Jason Reeves as hosts, with Miriama Smith, Paul Ellis and Richard Driver as judges. [4] Starting 29 September, the live semi-finals started aired on Monday nights, with the results show on Tuesday nights. It was a replacement of behind-the-scenes video blog Samsung Insider, which was part of the first series of The X Factor. It was produced by South Pacific Pictures. Contestants competed for the grand prize of NZ$100,000 cash and a 2013 Toyota Corolla car. Kills and Moon were replaced by kiwi-born, I am Giant drummer - Shelton Woolwright and X Factor Australia judge, Natalie Bassingthwaighte. On 15 March 2015 during the first live episode of The X Factor, Kills and Moon bullied and verbally attacked a contestant, Joe Irvine. This page was last edited on 24 July 2020, at 05:50. New Zealand's Got Talent was a New Zealand reality television show, based on the original UK series, to find new talent.The third and final series began airing on TV One from 15 September 2013. [19], In 2017, MediaWorks confirmed that the format rights to the show had expired, thus revealing that plans for a third series had officially been cancelled.[20]. [24] At the retreats, contestants are divided into the four categories: Boys, Girls, Over-25s and Groups, and each category is assigned one of the judges as a mentor. The series' key sponsors were Ford New Zealand as broadcast sponsor, Samsung Electronics as technology partner with McDonald's and Coca-Cola as programme partners. Despite good ratings for the network, Prime was unable to outrun costs and decided not to renew the series for another season. [34][35] The first episode aired on 15 March 2015, immediately preceding the first live show,[36] and the final episode on 18 May 2015, immediately preceding the final results show. 11-year-old singer Jessie Hillel from Wellington was the runner-up, with 17-year-old singer-songwriter Evan Sinton from Auckland in third place. The show was cancelled in 2017, with MediaWorks confirming that the format rights to the show had expired. NZ On Air noted that any future series would not be eligible for funding.

[5] Broadcast funding agency NZ On Air confirmed they would contribute $1.6 million to the first series as a minority investor, for the production of 30 episodes of 60 minutes duration each. [2] From the second series, bands were also able to enter in the group category.[3]. Benny Tipene is the most successful act to emerge from The X Factor NZ; he was the only act to chart internationally. The results night aired with only Walker and Blatt in attendance at the judging panel. The series had a top prize of NZ$100,000.

The winner was signed to Sony Music Entertainment New Zealand. Blatt was assisted by Nicole Appleton and travelled to Pattaya. The table below shows, for each series, which category each judge is allocated and which acts he or she put through to the live finals. Bedingfield was assisted by singer/songwriter and sister Natasha Bedingfield and travelled to Rarotonga, Blatt was assisted by Rachel Stevens and travelled to Mahurangi, Frost was assisted by X Factor Australia judge, Guy Sebastian and travelled to Sydney and Walker was assisted by Hollie Smith and went to Queenstown. Overall the second series had an average viewership of 328,000, down 18%. [6] The series was won by 15-year-old singer-songwriter Clara van Wel from Blenheim who performed her own song "Where Do You Find Love?". [5] In February 2012, TVNZ announced that a new local version of the show was in the early stages of production and would screen on TV One. [citation needed] In July, the final two judges were announced - former NZ Idol judge Paul Ellis and former Radio With Pictures presenter and television producer Richard Driver.[1]. Two series were broadcast, as summarised below. [17] That nights episode saw only Walker and Blatt attend the panel. TV One later revived the show, with series produced in 2012 and 2013.[1]. TVNZ confirmed a third series would be produced in 2013.
[1] The show began in 2013 and was open to anyone aged 14 and over.   Contestant in Team "Stan Walker" The series was won by Bassingthwaighte's contestant, Beau Monga.

[citation needed] From this round, the judges chose 32 contestants to go through to the semi-finals.

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