The XY Factor: Saudi Arabian talent show Buraydah's Got Talent bans singing. And women.
Tuesday 12 June 2012
Related articles
Saudi Arabian starlets hoping the latest spin-off of the popular Got Talent franchise will launch their careers are likely to be disappointed, with both women and music strictly banned from proceedings.
The oasis city of Buraydah in the conservative kingdom's north has jumped on the popular format, but as a centre for Wahhabism – the austere branch of Islam which is dominant in Saudi Arabia – Buraydah's Got Talent is unlikely to discover the country's equivalent of Susan Boyle, who was runner-up of ITV1's Britain's Got Talent.
Millions across the region are already following Arabs Got Talent, the Middle East's official spin-off of Simon Cowell's popular franchise, stars of which include 18-year-old Emirati singer Shamma Hamdan, who has caused a stir with her masculine attire and decision to appear without a headscarf. Buraydah's version will be notably more muted. "Do you have a talent, or a skill, or a beautiful voice?" the promotional material reads, before specifying that only men are eligible to join and musical accompaniment, singing and dancing is banned.
Competitors will be permitted to show off their talents in religious chanting, poetry and sporting feats, the pan-Arab daily Al Hayat reported. Organised by a local internet forum, the competition will take place in an outside arena in front of a jury comprised of a local poet, a television producer and presenters, event organiser Jalawi al-Shakair told the newspaper.
Since Arabs Got Talent, which is aired on Dubai-based satellite channel MBC4, it has been hard to avoid in the region, its live shows are played in coffee shops from Cairo to Beirut. It is one of 39 spin-offs of the format across the globe and was won last year by an Egyptian satirical poet Amr Katamesh, who took home 500,000 Saudi riyals (£85,950) and a Chevrolet car.
-
Have shock jocks gone too far after Rush Limbaugh called Sandra Fluke a slut?
-
British business: We need to stay in the European Union - or risk losing up to £92bn a year
-
World news in pictures
-
British father faces charges after confessing to slitting his two children's throats in Lyon flat
-
Civil partnerships face axe as price of ensuring David Cameron's gay marriage plans become law
- 1 The ‘Beverly Hills’ of Surrey pays more income tax than big cities of the North
- 2 Austerity has hardened the nation's heart
- 3 Tottenham to smash pay scale with £150,000-a-week contract in attempt to tie Gareth Bale to club
- 4 The moral case on tax avoidance is overwhelming - and we all know Google wants to do the right thing
- 5 Sam Wallace: The second coming of Jose Mourinho at Chelsea will be a reunion that can only end in tears
Get your summer started with British Military Fitness
BMF is the UK’s biggest and best loved outdoor fitness classes
Visit York
Find out what The Independent's resident travel expert has to say about one of the most beautiful small cities in the world
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Independent Dating
iJobs General
SAP SD Consultant
£475 - £476 per day + negotiable: Progressive Recruitment: SAP SD Contract Con...
Maths Teacher- Reading
Negotiable: Randstad Education Reading: Our client in Sonning Common, is looki...
Science Teacher- Reading
Negotiable: Randstad Education Reading: Our client in Sonning Common, is looki...
Special Needs Teacher in Lewisham South London
£27000 - £55000 per annum: Randstad Education London: Supply special education...
Day In a Page
The price of pacifism
Jason Isaacs: Groupies, theatre bores and James Bond
Sealand: 'Micronation' or illegal fortress?
Legend of James Hunt has set Hollywood hearts racing
Macklemore: 'I don't have moderation'






