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American Idol season nine winner is Lee DeWyze during the AMERICAN IDOL GRAND FINALE 2010 at the Nokia Theatre on Weds. May 26, 2010 in Los Angeles, Calif. Vince Bucci/FOX

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American Idol season nine winner is Lee DeWyze during the AMERICAN IDOL GRAND FINALE 2010 at the Nokia Theatre May 26, 2010 in Los Angeles. Vince Bucci/FOX

DeWyze edges Bowersox for Idol title

DeWyze edges Bowersox for Idol title

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Alanis Morissette and Idol finalist Crystal Bowersox perform during the AMERICAN IDOL GRAND FINALE 2010 at the Nokia Theatre on Weds. May 26, 2010 in Los Angeles. Vince Bucci/FOX

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The American Idol finalists perform with Alice Cooper during the AMERICAN IDOL GRAND FINALE 2010 at the Nokia Theatre on Weds. May 26, 2010 in Los Angeles. Vince Bucci/FOX.
 

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Crystal Bowersox poses backstage after the "American Idol" finale on Wednesday, May 26, 2010, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

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Crystal Bowersox arrives at the "American Idol" finale on Wednesday, May 26, 2010, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

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DeWyze edges Bowersox for Idol title

Bowersox still hero in struggling hometown

Updated: Thursday, 27 May 2010, 12:22 AM EDT
Published : Wednesday, 26 May 2010, 10:38 PM EDT

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lee DeWyze, a paint store clerk who overcame his shyness to impress "American Idol" judges and viewers with his spirit and soulful voice, triumphed Wednesday over bluesy musician Crystal Bowersox in the contest's ninth season.

When asked by host Ryan Seacrest how he felt, an emotional DeWyze said, "I don't know. It's amazing, thank you, guys, so much ... I love you. Crystal, I love you."

The finalists had closely matched fan bases, with just a 2 percent voting gap between them coming into the finale, Seacrest said. DeWyze's victory was based on votes cast after Tuesday's performance show, which drew more judges' compliments for Bowersox, 24, of Toledo, Ohio, than for DeWyze, also 24, of Mount Prospect, Ill.

The total number of votes cast in the finale weren't announced by Seacrest. That's a departure from most years past: Last season, for example, the high-profile contest between Kris Allen and Adam Lambert drew 100 million phone and text message votes.

Fox didn't comment on the omission. But "Idol," although still TV's top-rated show, has seen audience erosion this season that could have affected the tally. The talented but low-key Bowersox and DeWyze might also have provoked less interest.

"You have the honesty of Abe Lincoln and the charm of the guy who shot him," Cook told Cowell, who took the ribbing with a smile.

The walk down memory lane continued with ex-judge Paula Abdul, who often played Cowell's sparring partner during the seasons the shared.

"I've loved all the fun we've had together," Abdul told Cowell. "`American Idol's' not gonna be the same without you. But as only I can you, it will go on."

Cowell, in turn, shed his usual cool in an on-stage appearance.

"I didn't think I was going to be this emotional and I genuinely am. ... Everybody asks who's going to replace me, who going to be the next judge. The truth is," he told the audience, "you guys are the judge of this show and you've done an incredible job over the years."

The finale, as usual, was stuffed with humor, including the return of Larry "Pants on the Ground" Platt and William Hung, return appearances by former contestants and music stars.

Kris Allen, last year's winner, sang "The Truth," with Carrie Underwood, Michael McDonald, Christina Aguilera, Hall & Oates, Robin and Barry Gibb, Janet Jackson and Joe Cocker were among those whose performances were scattered throughout the two-hour show.

Bret Michaels, the ailing former Poison frontman and reality TV star, joined "Idol" finalist Casey James on one of the band's biggest hits, "Every Rose Has Its Thorn."

The bluesy voiced Bowersox, whose status as a single mom and nurturing of the other contestants had earned her the nickname "Mama Sox," had basked in praise Tuesday.

"You took that song and you absolutely nailed it," Cowell said of Bowersox's rendition of "Black Velvet," a song he said he's normally "allergic" to because it gets murdered.

The assessments of DeWyze were respectful but more measured -- with Ellen DeGeneres the exception.

"Lee, I couldn't be prouder if I birthed you myself," she told him after he sang Simon and Garfunkel's "The Boxer."

DioGuardi admired DeWyze as an "emotionally accessible" singer after he performed R.E.M.'s "Everybody Hurts" as his second number, but Cowell urged him to try harder.

"When you come out for your last performance, I want a 10 out of, because you're capable of that," Cowell told him.

With U2's "Beautiful Day," Jackson welcomed hearing "the guy with the strong big rock voice" and DioGuardi said he had "one of the most commercial voices of the season" and deserved to be in the finale.

Cowell, who had pointed to DeWyze as the frontrunner before the finale performances, said that "American Idol" was designed for someone like DeWyze, who worked in a paint shop when he tried out for the show and needed a break.

DeWyze's first single will be "Beautiful Day," which he performed Tuesday.

Seacrest, who appeared to have an on-air testy relationship with Cowell this season, had only warm words for him Tuesday and Wednesday.

"We really are going to miss you. You are a dear friend and we wouldn't be here without you," Seacrest said.

Cowell isn't going far: He's going to produce and judge "The X Factor," a Fox version of his popular British talent contest.

Bowersox's second-place finish on "American Idol" didn't change how people on her home turf feel about her.

"She's already won" said Judi Clapper, 60, of Whitehouse, who watched the results of the Fox singing competition Wednesday night at one of the bars where Bowersox first started performing when she was 14.

The two share a bond, Clapper said, because they both have diabetes.

"There's a lot of kids with diabetes who see her," Clapper said. "It gives them hope that there's more to life than shots and insulin pumps."

Fans and friends inside Papa's Tavern shook their heads in disbelief when it was announced that DeWyze had won. So did hundreds who watched the show at a downtown arena.

"She's

going to be successful no matter what," said Alisa Smith, 43, of Perrysburg. "She's got her own style."

Just a few months ago, Bowersox was a single mother struggling to make a living and playing every Wednesday night at the same tavern on taco night. She'd stand with her guitar on a tiny stage in the corner and play her original songs.

But this Wednesday, everyone watched her on television.

Ryan Popp, 34, of Toledo, said it's surreal to watch her now and think back to all the years he saw her perform in front a few dozen people.

"She's set for life," he said. "It might be better because now she can do the music she wants. She won't be locked into being the `American Idol."'

With her blue-collar roots, Bowersox is a lot like the Ohio towns where she grew up, and her unlikely path to stardom has hit just the right note with people in an area that has fallen on hard times.

"She's one of us," said Diane Frick, who lives in Oregon, a Toledo suburb. "People are for the underdog today because everyone has been hit by the economic downturn."

Part of what makes Bowersox likable is that she embraces what her story means to people.

A song she wrote a few years ago called "Holy Toledo" has become a favorite on local radio stations, with its refrain: "How do I get to heaven from here?"

"It's the anthem for my city," she said during last week's 'Idol' show. "And it's given the area so much hope and something to look forward to, and that's what this is all about."

As soon as Wednesday night's show was over, the crowd in Papa's Tavern started singing along with her signature song as it played on the jukebox.

Bowersox, 24, started singing when she was 10. She used money she won in talent contests to buy clothes and left home for Chicago when she was 17. She strummed her guitar in subway stations and coffee houses before returning home to raise her son, Tony, who's now a toddler.

She grew up in Elliston, a tiny village just outside the eastern edge of Toledo, and calls both places home.

She's from the side of the city that's home to a pair of oil refineries, a coal burning power plant and a hazardous waste dump.

Her father is an electrician at a plant that processes metal.

The area has been hit hard by auto industry and manufacturing layoffs in recent years, and the unemployment rate has stayed around 13 percent, well above the national average.

Bad news seems to come in bunches lately -- schools being shut down, jobs moving out of town and police officers and firefighters taking pay cuts.

That's why this rags-to-riches story couldn't have come at a better time.

"It's given people something to smile about," said Becky Zaborski, of Petersburg, Mich.

-------

Associated Press John Seewer contributed to this report.

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