
This week’s episode of the The Bachelor = so many crying
girls. The Bachelor is overflowing with sexist themes, racial tension, framing,
and plentiful examples of poor race and gender representations in the media; it
isn’t a surprise that this week’s episode gave me the perfect material on which
to write a blog. In sum, the girls were getting really desperate this week. More
and more of them were being kicked off and the remaining girls were panicking.
One of the things that stood out to me most this episode was how much the girls
fought with each other. They lied and purposely sabotaged one another
ruthlessly. The episode brought this quote by Chimamanda Nigozi Adichie to mind
“But why do we teach to aspire to marriage, and we don't teach boys the same? We
raise girls to each other as competitors, not for jobs or for accomplishments. Which
I think can be a good thing, But for the attention of men.”
One of the women, Leah, was the only girl left to have not
been asked on a one on one date. Her anger and desperation caused her to
purposely undermine the woman who seemed closest to Ben. It’s pretty obvious
that this whole show encourages these types of interactions, feeding off the
drama. It almost seems as though the whole point of the show is to orchestrate the
ultimate cat fight and then broadcast the breakdown. After Leah sabotaged her
competitor she was kicked off by Ben. Chaos ensues and the producers get their
money shot: Leah’s major breakdown. The episode revolved around the devolution of
Leah. It isn’t surprising but it is depressing. This episode of The Bachelor
(or any episode really) is an excellent example of Reality TV capturing that
perfect money shot.
This blog post truly captures the toxicity of reality television and its perpetuation of social constructions that are detrimental to our society as a whole, as well as the way individuals gain perspectives about topics such as race and gender. The stereotypical roles that are being played out are exaggerated and falsified in order to continue to suppress and oppress certain groups of individuals, and this needs to change.
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