TV Guide (May 30th 2011)

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Perfect Harmony

Cee Lo, Christina, Adam and Blake spill secrets about NBC’s new hit The Voice

[edited version]

Think of it as The First Supper.

One night before taping the initial audition episodes of his new NBC show The Voice, exec producer Mark Burnett wanted the music competition series’ four coaches—Christina Aguilera, Blake Shelton, Cee Lo Green and Maroon 5 lead singer Adam Levine—to bond. So, after handing over his personal credit card, he sent them off to L.A.’s trendy Soho House for dinner. Shelton was the first to get there, with Levine and Green not far behind. The three per¬ formers then took bets on whether Aguilera would show up. “When I arrived, they had shocked looks on their faces,” she recalls with a laugh. “They didn’t think I was going to make it.” As the evening rolled on, and one bottle of champagne turned into several, the singers realized how much they believed in each other and the show’s mission: discovering new musical talents by first hearing, and not seeing, them. Not only did the coaches connect with each other that night, but the chemistry they’ve created has hooked viewers as well. The Voice has averaged 12 million viewers in its first four weeks. The show has survived all “the initial views from skeptics who wanted to see whether or not we’d be a train wreck,” says Green. And as for Burnett, he’s convinced his dinner plan was worth the price he paid. There’s just one problem: He still doesn’t know what that price is. “They called the next day and said, ‘You’re going to regret giving your credit card to us.’ I haven’t even looked at the bill yet. I don’t want to look. I’m just extremely relieved that their natural chemistry is coming through.” As the coaches prepare for the first live shows beginning June 7, when viewers will begin voting on which singers stay or go, they tell TV Guide Magazine—in their own voices—about their connection with one another, their coaching styles and which one is known as the Dirty Uncle (take a wild guess).

BLAKE SHELTON

The reaction to the show has been a lot more than I expected. I’ve always been a country artist struggling to get on television, but now that I am, it’s a completely different world. Now I’m "that guy from that show,” which is fine. I’m happy with anything that can help people focus on what I do, which is make music.

That’s my strength as a coach. I’ve made tons of mistakes along the way, and I love to share that with my team, not just for this show but for the journey beyond for them. There are things I’ve done in my shows that I wish I hadn’t—bad song selection, showing too much nerves or attitude—and a couple of girls on my team get really nervous. Clearly I don’t have a problem coming out of my shell, but that wasn’t always the case. Who knows? I might take them to make asses of themselves at karaoke and get it all out of their system.

One thing I’m not doing is coaching them on how to sing. They know how to do that. I’m mostly trying to figure out what the right songs are for them. We’re communicating through email because the network wants us to have a little distance from them. I’m getting more emails than I’ve ever seen in my life!

I have no idea what the other coaches are doing or how into it they are with their teams. I just want to keep it light and fun for mine. The only part I don’t like about working with them is I have to be the one who whittles down 50 percent of the team. The fun stuff I’d like to do with [them] won’t happen till the live shows start. That’s when we dig in, and it’s more about what America thinks. That’s when I’m out of the equation and I can be the parent at the baseball game in the stands.

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Rolling Stone (June 9th 2011)

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Us Weekly (May 30th 2011)