AGT 2025: Sacred Riana Leaves Judges Speechless with Eerie Magic Performance!
Simon Cowell reveals singer Cheryl turned down Britain’s Got Talent judging role
Updated / Monday, 17 Feb 2025 21:00
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Simon Cowell has labelled Amanda Holden the “Britain’s Got Talent queen” as he revealed singer Cheryl turned down a judging role on the show.
The popular ITV talent show returns for its 18th series on Saturday with judges Cowell, Holden, singer Alesha Dixon and former Strictly Come Dancing judge Bruno Tonioli.
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TV duo Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly return to host the show, with social media star and musician KSI joining the panel as a guest judge.
Cowell said of 54-year-old TV and radio presenter Holden, who has been on the judging panel since the first series, that the secret to her BGT success is that she “loves the acts”.
He explained: “That’s her, she honestly loves it. You know, every time I talk to her it makes me laugh because I say, ‘you are loving this, aren’t you?.’
“Because there are days where I’m knackered and there’s still an hour to go.
“And I’m like, wow, it’s been a long day, and she’s like, ‘yeah, but it’s brilliant, isn’t it?.’
“She is our Britain’s Got Talent queen and she deserves that crown.”
The music mogul added: “And you know what? She was an interesting booking because we’d offered the role to Cheryl Cole, as she was known in those days.
“A week before filming, she calls me and goes, ‘I just can’t do it’ and wouldn’t give me a reason. I think she was freaked out.
“We literally had two judges and a week to book someone. I just knew it had to be Amanda because I’d met her and I really liked her, she was very funny and I just thought she’d fit the show perfectly.
“Fast forward 18 years and she’s still a huge success and we have become great friends. I do consider her one of my best friends.”
Girls Aloud member Cheryl has previously been a judge on Cowell’s former ITV singing show The X Factor, serving on its panel from 2008 to 2010, joining the show’s US version in 2011, before returning between 2014 and 2015.
Syco Entertainment boss Cowell went on to speak about a near death experience he went through while filming the latest series when he was asked to lay next to a line of watermelons as a contestant smashed them with a sledgehammer.
The 65-year-old said: “It’s that feeling when you kind of think somebody doesn’t want you on the show anymore. It was that.
“It was the closest, genuinely, where I’m thinking, ‘they actually want to kill me.’
“And I swear to God, that’s how I felt because this guy got really nervous and he’d slipped and was shaking as he was smashing these watermelons.
“The health and safety guys, normally quite annoying, actually stopped him. Thank god, they saved my life.”
Host McPartlin said he and the rest of the cast were “scared for Simon Cowell’s life” and added that there is “a lot of danger” in this year’s series.
Last year’s series of Britain’s Got Talent was won by singer Sydnie Christmas, who sung Somewhere Over The Rainbow in the show’s final winning with 27.2% of the vote.
She beat out numerous other contestants including runner-up Jack Rhodes, a magician, and third-placed dance duo Abigail And Afronitaaa.
The show has run since 2007 and has produced winners including Susan Boyle, Paul Potts and Diversity.
The series’ champion receives £250,000 in prize money and the opportunity to perform at the Royal Variety Performance.
Britain’s Got Talent will return on Saturday, 22 February, at 7pm on Virgin Media One.
Source: Press Association
Not using MLS listings cost sellers $1 billion in lower home prices: Zillow
Report finds homes not on the multiple listing service sell, on average, for nearly $5,000 less
- February 17, 2025
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Home sellers who didn’t use a multiple listing service (MLS) collectively “left $1 billion on the table” over the past two years via lower closing prices, according to Zillow.
These homes off the MLS typically sold for $4,975 less than those listed on it in 2023 and 2024, a median loss of 1.5% nationwide, the study showed.
Off-MLS sales lowered the closing price in 44 out of the 46 states included in its study, Zillow reported. Sellers in 33 states experienced median losses exceeding 1%, and sellers in 10 states saw losses greater than 2%.
The greatest median loss was in California, where sellers not using MLS saw an average price reduction of $30,075, or 3.7%. That was followed by New York (-3.7%, or $13,749) and Massachusetts (-3.4%, or $20,171), Zillow said.
The study also found that homes in all price tiers typically sold for less when off the MLS, but lower-priced homes were most severely impacted.
Zillow analyzed 10 million transactions, with 2.7 million meeting criteria for comparing homes that sold on the MLS with privately listed sales. Some 97% of transactions were for homes included in the MLS listing, while “pocket listings,” sales that were marketed privately and seemingly only submitted to the MLS once a purchase contract was in place, accounted for 2%.