Tuesday, July 19, 2011

GUILTY PLEASURE: THE BACHELORETTE

How is it that the American public broke up with reality show "Joe Millionaire", but "The Bachelor/Bachelorette" keeps cranking out seasons and hot tub spinoffs? The concept: a man or woman shops from a pool of twenty-five attractive, "successful" single candidates in search of someone who will propose or be proposed to after three or four one-on-one dates. Weird? Sure. But then there are the group dates. Creepy. The host gets paid something in the bygone-Joe range to say little more than "Ladies/Gentlemen,...the final rose" and "Minnie/Mickey, take a moment to say your goodbyes." And then there are the icky handwritten invitations from the host, encouraging the Bachelor(ette) and his/her final three to spend the night in the Fantasy Suite. Not all at once, but over consecutive nights. Still mighty sleazy.


I should hate this show. It's drivel. It's beneath me. Heck, it's beneath my dog.


And yet I love it. Well, maybe "love" is too strong. Sticking with the show's lingo, I'm starting to really have feelings for it.


Oh, how can I justify the time wastage? To be fair, I multitask to reality shows, especially during the frequent commercials and all the "Coming up..." clips that precede these commercials, the creation of producers who fear that viewers' attention spans will drift elsewhere. (Guess they've got a good take on the target audience.) As the show airs on Monday nights, I have the easiest-of-the-week versions of Sudoku and the The New York Times Crossword to trick my mind into thinking I'm a brainiac. I also sort through piles of papers that have mysteriously taken up floor space since the last "Bachelorette". And, if I am really restless, there's always dusting. (After they cure cancer and the common cold, I hope they get to work on extinguishing dust. By golly, give them a decade's worth of Nobel Prizes.)


Whoa. "The Bachelorette" and the Nobel Prize in the same post. Seems I've strayed.


The multitasking argument doesn't hold up. Why not clean while watching more highbrow fare such as--let me check the TV schedule--"Gossip Girl" or four consecutive episodes of "Cake Boss"?


The truth is I can relate to "The Bachelorette". There, I said it.


Years ago, I had plenty of single friends, gay or female. We would go for dinner, grab a coffee, walk the seawall and talk about our dating dilemmas. Or non-dating dilemmas. Each encounter, each brush-off had entertainment value, but the talks also allowed us to comfort and commiserate. And, to prevent each of us from hitting rock bottom, the other would add a timely, "What about so and so?" to keep hope alive.


Yep, good times.


But the single friends have gotten married or they live in far off exotic places like Boise or they've taken dating off the conversation menu. Now I go it alone.


And that explains my loyalty to "The Bachelor(ette)". People can speculate all they want about how real the show is. What I see is people getting excited about possibilities. This could be the one. Casting aside the over the top gimmicks (Anyone want to buy a mask on eBay?), there are relatable awkward dates and promising encounters between the dating world's walking wounded. And after each inane rose ceremony, there's the castoff's painful limo ride where an eager producer sits off camera with a box of Kleenex.


Watching any Reject Ride, I feel I am not alone in being alone. Turns out others feel the same--not just the unrequited wooer, but many a viewer. As I clicked over to ABC's website, I discovered you can watch past episodes or simply the ouster segments, entitled "The Diaries of the Departed".


There's Lucas, the cool, reserved Texan: "Rejection's never fun but...you always look for that better day."


And Ryan, the excitable, optimistic water heater expert: "I'm shocked. Um, uh,...hey, you know,...sometimes I guess people don't feel it. Now I want someone more than you have any i-- (choking up) I want to find that person....Someday."


Last night it was preppy, wordsmith Ames: (Covers eyes, hands shaking; recovers) "I feel pretty numb. I've fallen in love with somebody who clearly didn't fall in love with me back. And...I just wonder, you know, what it was. I was really excited to see what was gonna happen between the two of us next. And that's something I'm never going to get to know. I was just hoping to share a lifetime of adventures with this beautiful woman. Now I'm back to sharing a lifetime of adventures with myself...which is, uh...less enticing."


Oh, boys, I can relate. Ames, I'm choking up myself. Less enticing indeed.


There, I've done it. I think. I've justified my addiction to "The Bachelor(ette)".


Haven't I?

4 comments:

Rick Modien said...

Pitiful, Rural Gay, pitiful.

Okay, I'm with you on the dust thing, for sure. I love your articulate and clever writing. Keep it up. Very engaging.

But I know exactly why you watch this silly show:
1). The men are hot; and
2). Misery loves company.

Oh, God, what can I say to stop you from wasting your time on this dreck? Isn't it enough that all but one or two of the relationships concocted on these series have actually lasted (Trista and Ryan--I think they're still together)? Don't you find that even the least bit depressing? Isn't it incentive enough to stop, stop, stop the insanity?

Oh, brother. Speaking of which, do you watch "Big Brother," too? Oh, please, no...

Rick Modien said...

Hey, buddy. I used something from our exchanges last week in a new post this week. I hope you don't mind. I was not referring to you in the post but to gay men in general, who place, in my opinion, far too much emphasis on being physically attracted to someone before showing any real interest.
As well, I have a link to your blog at the end of that post. If you'd prefer I remove it, let me know. Otherwise, I hope to bring you more traffic. I love your writing, humor, and spirit, and I want others to see it, too.

Aging Gayly said...

Use anything from my blog, any odd little bit. I don't mind. And a link is greatly appreciated!

True, the men on The Bachelorette are hot. That's probably why I first tuned in. But it is about the dating, both the hope and the misery. The guys could be plain or ugly and looking for love and I'd watch. (Not like a show I think was called "Joe Average" where unattractive dweebs pursued hot women. What a spectacle.) There was something like "A Dating Story" on a cable channel that I enjoyed but I never knew when it was on.

I like when a date goes well, in my own life, on reality TV and in romantic comedies. And when it doesn't, well there's something to be said for familiarity...

Rick Modien said...

Okay, I have a confession to make. I watched the first season of "joe Average," and, you're right, it was a spectacle. That said, some good points came out of it, too, although, for the life of me, I can't remember what they were. Something about, you can't judge a book by its cover (I think). Or, beauty is only skin deep, but ugly goes right to the bone (thanks, Joan Rivers).
At any rate, I appreciate you allowing me to use your blog as inspiration for my own posts. Thank you.