
Who is Jamal Roberts, first Black man to win American Idol in over 20 years
American Idol
season 23 finale took place on May 18.
Jamal Roberts
was voted as the winner of this season, creating a new milestone. Jamal Roberts defeated fellow contestants John Foster and Brenna Nix in order to secure the title. Foster was awarded the first runner-up prize, while Nix came third.
According to American Idol host Ryan Seacrest, this year the viewers cast nearly 26 million votes, breaking last year's record.
5
5
Next
Stay
Playback speed
1x Normal
Back
0.25x
0.5x
1x Normal
1.5x
2x
5
5
/
Skip
Ads by
Who is Jamal Roberts, winner of American Idol 2025?
Roberts, a 27-year-old physical education teacher from Meridian, Mississippi, has become the first Black man to hold the title since 2003, when Ruben Studdard was crowned the winner. With his moving rendition of Her Heart by Anthony Hamilton Roberts, a father of three daughters, clinched the American Idol 2025 title.
On the final night, Roberts was also seen performing TEEKS' First Time and The Temptations' Just My Imagination, impressing the judges with his signature soaring voice.
Live Events
Roberts also opened about his journey from a teacher to American Idol, candidly expressing the hardships he had to go through to be able to come to the singing reality competition.
About the American Idol Season 2025 finale
On Sunday night, the American Idol season 23 finale was held with much grandeur. The event featured several performers, including Good Charlotte, Jennifer Holliday, Jessica Simpson and the Goo Goo Dolls.
In addition to their solo performances, the top three finalists prepared for duets as Jamal Roberts performed with Jelly Roll, John Foster with judge Luke Bryan, and Brenna Nix with Brandon Lake. Along with Luke Bryan, the judges' panel featured Carrie Underwood and Lionel Richie.
American Idol 2025 prize money
As per Newsweek, the winner of American Idol gets the opportunity to sign a record contract with Hollywood Records. This year, Roberts will initially receive $125,000 and then an additional $100,000 after completing an entire album.
According to the publication, the winners of American Idol are usually given up to $300,000 in advance in order for them to create a debut album. Later, they are supposed to reimburse the money with his own earnings. Newsweek further reported that this structure has been modified over the years due to inflation.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

First Post
3 hours ago
- First Post
Danielle Spencer, who played little sister Dee on ‘What's Happening!!,' dies at 60
Spencer, who became a veterinarian later in life, died Monday at a hospital in Richmond, Virginia, after a yearslong battle with cancer, family spokesperson Sandra Jones said. Danielle Spencer, who played the wisecracking and tattling little sister Dee Thomas on the 1970s sitcom 'What's Happening!!' has died at 60. Spencer, who became a veterinarian later in life, died Monday at a hospital in Richmond, Virginia, after a yearslong battle with cancer, family spokesperson Sandra Jones said. As Dee, Spencer was the smarter, more serious younger sister who offered a steady stream of deadpan roasts of big brother Roger 'Raj' Thomas and his friends Dwayne Nelson and Freddie 'Rerun' Stubbs. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'Ooh, I'm gonna tell mama,' would become Dee's catchphrase. The show, set in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Watts and among the first on television to focus on the lives of Black teenagers, was based on the movie 'Cooley High' and ran on ABC from 1976 to 1979. It had a long legacy thanks to its memorable characters, including the geeky Raj, the catchphrase-spouting Dwayne, the red-bereted dancing phenom Rerun, and Dee with her eyerolls and icy stare. Early in the production of the show's first season, Spencer, then 12, was in a major car accident on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, California, that left her in a coma for three weeks and killed her stepfather, Tim Pelt. She would have spinal and neurological problems that would require multiple surgeries in the years afterward. Born in Trenton, New Jersey, and raised in New York, Spencer began acting when she was about 9. 'What's Happening!!' would be her first credited role. 'Imagine being plucked from obscurity to star in a TV show,' she told Jet magazine in 2014. 'I had never seen any young Black girl in that type of spotlight, so I didn't have a reference point in the media as to how to deal with this opportunity. I was from the Bronx.' STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Haywood Nelson, who played Dwayne on the show, paid tribute Tuesday to 'Dr. Dee, our brilliant, loving, positive, pragmatic warrior.' 'We have lost a daughter, sister, family member, 'What's Happening' cast member, veterinarian animal rights proponent and healer, and cancer heroine. Our Shero,' Nelson said on Instagram. 'Danielle is loved.' Spencer also appeared on a mid-1980s reboot of the show, 'What's Happening Now!!,' which ran for three seasons. In 2018, she had emergency surgery for a bleeding hematoma, which stemmed from that 1977 car crash. In the immediate aftermath, a family spokesperson said she could only speak slightly and had to use crutches to walk. She had been suffering symptoms from at least 2004, when she had to use a wheelchair and relearn how to walk. In 2014, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a double mastectomy. She went on to become a veterinarian and advocate for animals. She attended the University of California, Davis, and UCLA, and got a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Tuskegee University in 1993. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Spencer continued to dabble in acting in her later years, including an appearance as a veterinarian in the 1997 Jack Nicholson film 'As Good as it Gets.' She is survived by her brother, musician Jeremy Pelt, and her mother, Cheryl Pelt.


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
‘He said some racist things' – Vince McMahon gives his honest thoughts on Hulk Hogan's controversial remarks that almost derailed his career
Vince McMahon and Hulk Hogan. Image via: Michelle Farsi/| David Richard-Imagn Images The life and legacy of Hulk Hogan were in the spotlight once again on Tuesday night when FOX aired TMZ's documentary The Real Hulk Hogan. Among the voices featured was former WWE owner Vince McMahon , who spoke candidly about the scandal that nearly ended Hogan's career. McMahon, who promoted Hogan to global fame in the 1980s, called the remarks 'unforgivable' but insisted his longtime friend was not, in his view, a racist. Vince McMahon recalls the fallout and defends Hulk Hogan's character Hulk Hogan, real name Terry Bollea, was fired by WWE in July 2015 after a leaked s*x tape captured him making racist remarks, including a racial slur and comments about his daughter potentially dating a Black man. 'It was unforgivable and I was agasp, 'What happened?'' McMahon told TMZ's Harvey Levin. 'When those things occurred, that's not like him. 'What in God's name is going on?'' McMahon said WWE severed ties immediately. 'As soon as it happened, obviously, the company didn't have anything to do with him anymore. We took him out of the Hall of Fame. You just don't do those things.' Yet, when the subject turned to Hogan's eventual return three years later, McMahon's tone shifted. 'I knew he wasn't a racist. I'd been with him for so many years. He wasn't a racist. He said some racist things, and he should pay for that. And he did. But in the end, I think everyone saw the real Hulk Hogan, Terry Bollea, and they felt, 'Wait a minute, this guy—he doesn't act like a racist. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Want to Avoid Dementia? Start by Cutting This Out of Your Diet Sharp Memory at Any Age Click Here Undo He's not a racist.' We all make mistakes. That was a big one, but he wasn't a racist.' Vince McMahon addressed the anger over Hulk Hogan's final WWE appearance The TMZ special also revisited Hogan's last WWE appearance on January 6, 2025, when Monday Night Raw debuted on Netflix from the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California. Instead of a hero's welcome, the wrestling legend was met with loud boos. 'I was angry; he deserved much more,' McMahon said, noting the segment 'wasn't set up properly' and claiming it's 'not the way I would have done it.' Hogan's image had grown even more complicated in recent years. Beyond the s*x tape scandal, his public appearances alongside former President Donald Trump and remarks about politics drew polarized reactions. Still, McMahon's defense painted Hogan as a man who made an enormous error but was not defined entirely by it. Also Read: Are Karrion Kross and Scarlett free agents? The 6'4', 265-pound star addresses latest WWE update The special was McMahon's first televised interview since his January 2024 resignation from WWE amid se*ual abuse and trafficking allegations by former employee Janel Grant. While the program featured perspectives from figures like Mark Henry, Bill Goldberg, and Mick Foley, the standout takeaway was McMahon publicly breaking with WWE's past handling of Hogan as he vowed to stop character assassination of the WWE legend. Catch Rani Rampal's inspiring story on Game On, Episode 4. Watch Here!


The Hindu
4 hours ago
- The Hindu
Danielle Spencer, ‘What's Happening!!' star, dies at 60
Danielle Spencer, who played the wisecracking and tattling little sister Dee Thomas on the 1970s sitcom 'What's Happening!!' has died at 60. Ms. Spencer, who became a veterinarian later in life, died Monday (August 11, 2025) at a hospital in Richmond, Virginia, after a yearslong battle with cancer, family spokesperson Sandra Jones said. As Dee, Spencer was the smarter, more serious younger sister who offered a steady stream of deadpan roasts of big brother Roger 'Raj' Thomas and his friends Dwayne Nelson and Freddie 'Rerun' Stubbs. 'Ooh, I'm gonna tell mama,' would become Dee's catchphrase. The show, set in the Los Angeles neighbourhood of Watts and among the first on television to focus on the lives of Black teenagers, was based on the movie 'Cooley High' and ran on ABC from 1976 to 1979. It had a long legacy thanks to its memorable characters, including the geeky Raj, the catchphrase-spouting Dwayne, the red-bereted dancing phenom Rerun, and Dee with her eyerolls and icy stare. Early in the production of the show's first season, Spencer, then 12, was in a major car accident on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, California, that left her in a coma for three weeks and killed her stepfather, Tim Pelt. She would have spinal and neurological problems that would require multiple surgeries in the years afterward. Born in Trenton, New Jersey, and raised in New York, Spencer began acting when she was about 9. 'What's Happening!!' would be her first credited role. 'Imagine being plucked from obscurity to star in a TV show,' she told Jet magazine in 2014. 'I had never seen any young Black girl in that type of spotlight, so I didn't have a reference point in the media as to how to deal with this opportunity. I was from the Bronx.' Haywood Nelson, who played Dwayne on the show, paid tribute Tuesday to 'Dr. Dee, our brilliant, loving, positive, pragmatic warrior.' 'We have lost a daughter, sister, family member, 'What's Happening' cast member, veterinarian animal rights proponent and healer, and cancer heroine. Our Shero,' Nelson said on Instagram. 'Danielle is loved.' Spencer also appeared on a mid-1980s reboot of the show, 'What's Happening Now!!,' which ran for three seasons. In 2018, she had emergency surgery for a bleeding hematoma, which stemmed from that 1977 car crash. In the immediate aftermath, a family spokesperson said she could only speak slightly and had to use crutches to walk. She had been suffering symptoms from at least 2004, when she had to use a wheelchair and relearn how to walk. In 2014, she was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a double mastectomy. She went on to become a veterinarian and advocate for animals. She attended the University of California, Davis, and UCLA, and got a doctorate in veterinary medicine from Tuskegee University in 1993. Spencer continued to dabble in acting in her later years, including an appearance as a veterinarian in the 1997 Jack Nicholson film 'As Good as it Gets.' She is survived by her brother, musician Jeremy Pelt, and her mother, Cheryl Pelt.