Episode 4 of UnREAL ::SPOILERS AHEAD:: heads
into new territory with Rachel committing to both a better wardrobe (yay) and
her job. Also, instead of spending her time fucking over cast members (in
every way ever done on any Reality show ever), on this episode Rachel tackles
nothing more sexy than set decoration. Turning some shitty location—in this
case bachelor Adam’s vineyard—into something presentable both to the damsels
he’s courting and the discerning home audience… now, that’s real. It is far
more common (and infuriating) for Producers to spend time dressing up a
location than taking down the cast.
The fact is, Producers don't have to waste time manipulating
blowups and breakdowns on Competition Reality (into which genre UnREAL’s Everlasting would fall); the production
model does it for us. You see, a Competition Reality set is a prison and the
cast the prisoners. This scenario alone is far more effective at lighting
fuses and pulling triggers than we ever could be.
Say, for instance, you’ve been cast in The Bachelor.
Now, just getting to this point has been a full-time job, involving
detailed applications, shooting, editing and submitting a casting reel, taking
a screen test, and consenting to a psych eval. By the time you made it
onto the show you’d committed so much unpaid labor to achieving your goal that
you were in it for the long haul (more about this later). After all, you’re well on your way to winning
a millionaire’s hand in marriage!
Farewell to small town fetters: your shitty apartment; your
family (who, let's face it, never quite got you); and your Yorkie named
Boo, and Hello to your handsome future husband; a made-for-TV mansion; and 20
or so other bitches cast specifically to piss you off. You blithely
surrender your phone, computer, ID, credit cards, and money upon coming into
our custody (that's the actual term), effectively severing all contact with the
outside world and—literally—shedding your identity. For the next six weeks (give or take) we
decide where you live, and when or if you can eat, sleep or take a shit.
For the next six weeks you are constantly observed by cameras,
fellow cast members, Producers, or Cast Wranglers (who live with and monitor
the cast). Privacy exists solely in the
toilet (provided we've given you permission to go) but even there, if you leave
your mic pack on, we can hear you weeping. And weep you might.
Whereas on a show like Housewives
we may shoot 12 hour days, on Competition we can shoot anywhere up to 24 hours
a day. The niceties of a meal break every 6 hours doesn't apply,
especially when you're shooting 12 episodes in six weeks.
A typical day begins at 6 am when we arrive to shoot house
reality. By 8 you're lined up to learn about the day's challenge. The challenge is shot from 10 am to
noon. You learn if you're a winner/loser
from 1 pm to 2, then it's on to the next challenge and so on for 14 physically
and emotionally grueling hours (because who actually revels in being literally judged
on a daily basis). After that it’s back
to the cast house to shoot more reality. And then to bed? You wish.
Nights are when we often have to shove in interviews, which accounts for
most of the explosive shit that comes out of people's mouths. Who can
blame you? By day three you're pretty much delirious/belligerent
constantly.
Consider who you'd become if you were confined for 24 hours a
day with people deliberately cast to rub you wrong; if you slept on average 4
hours a night; if you were away from anyone who gave two shits about you; if
you worked all day every day and every other night were liquored up and lined
up to be judged by some douchebag with roses. Would you lose your mind?
Become a Bitch? Whimper like a Whiner? Display emotions that
can be interpreted as Needy? Congratulations: you've just become The
Bitch, Whiner or Needy Nelly of the season. (We don't do subtlety on Reality
TV).
Once you wake up to the – ahem – reality of your situation, why
do you choose to stay? (And stay you will, like nearly every other prisoner
without whom the networks would have no ratings.) There’s that time you spent
getting here in the first place, when your family said you were nuts to try and
your friends suggested you should just stick to your career… There’s that
Appearance Release you signed, too. Don’t you have to legally compete until you
are eliminated, no matter how unhappy you may be? (Um, no, but don’t let us
disabuse you of that misconception.) Finally,
and most disturbingly, you will stay because doing what you’re told becomes a
habit. You accept the role of
prisoner. (In fact, Jan de Bont, one of the creators of Big Brother cites the Stanford Prison Experiment as inspiration
for that show.)
The question, though, is
not only why you accept your role as prisoner. Rather, it is why we Producers
so readily accept our role as your guards.
Oh, and also, where can I get my hands on that leather Rachel’s
wearing?
#UnREALLifetime #BachelorABC #Survivor_Tweet
#CBSBigBrother #bbUK #AmazingRace_CBS #CompetitionReality #RealityTV
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