So far season 20ās Charity is doing a good job playing the game, but expecting her to āfixā an entire broken franchise is unfair.
Photo: Craig Sjodin/ABC
Bachelor Nation is in crisis. The venerable reality dating franchise has been dogged in the past few years by scandal after scandal, flashier competitions getting more buzz, and, most egregiously, boringness. Ask any passing Bachelor fan how the most recent seasons have been and youāll likely be met with a hearty shrug of ambivalence. To be fair, the TV landscape looks much different in 2023 than it did in 2002, when the first season of The Bachelor aired ā hell, The Bachelor looks unrecognizable from its 2002 self with multiple spinoffs spawning an entire microindustry of influencers whose careers are based on their proximity to Bachelor Nation. Keeping up with the shows can feel like a full-time job. There are podcasts and blogs and stan accounts and recaps (hi!). But to what end? Following the season-20 premiere of The Bachelorette, Vultureās resident evangelists (and, yes, apologists) Devon Ivie and Emily Palmer Heller gathered to discuss the state of the franchise as well as our hopes and suggestions for its future.
Devon Ivie: Itās become evident over the past few seasons that Bachelor Nationās viewership is waning. You can feel it in the lukewarm real-time social-media chatter, and see it in the cold, hard facts of ratings. I miss the quality of meme/news cycle that used to churn out with every episode. Why do we think this is happening?
Emily Palmer Heller: Iāve been experiencing that. People in my life who are passing Bachelor fans are like, āOh, I havenāt been watching. Iāve heard itās gotten pretty bad.ā It hasnāt gotten bad; it just doesnāt know what it wants to be.
DI: A proper crisis of identity.
EPH: Part of the problem is shows like Love Is Blind and Love Island are much more gimmicky, which allow them to be more straightforward about how silly this all is, while The Bachelor franchise is still trying to sell us on the romantic fantasy. Itās still trying to convince us that this is a normal way to meet people and have a big, romantic love story. Love Is Blind and Love Island still have successful couples, but theyāre much more interested in playing with the ridiculousness of the dating-competition concept. The Bachelor keeps messing with its formula because it doesnāt know how to grapple with that ridiculousness.
DI: The last time a Bachelorette lead married her winner was the relentlessly wonderful Rachel Lindsay, while Matt James and Zach Shallcross ā who were mocked for their boring seasons ā are still with their winners. Thereās no correlation between how entertaining a lead is and their romantic success. But to your point, think about the last time this franchise made an active decision to change its formula: It was Gabby Windey and Rachel Recchiaās dual Bachelorette season, where the producers put the burden on them to develop their own framework for how it would work. Imagine that! Hey, weāre going to present you ladies with an opportunity to grow and change this format, but weāre doing nothing on our end to help you. In hindsight, Clare Crawley deserves major credit for leaving in the way she did. You can put that on the Mount Rushmore of Bachelor Nation Endings.
EPH: For Gabby and Rachelās season, the producers werenāt producing. Part of the fun of these shows is in figuring out how stories get told; I always like to say that these shows arenāt scripted, but they are written. I think the producers have gotten really gun shy after receiving so much backlash for things like a bad vetting process, overserving contestants, and fumbling issues around consent, and now theyāre nervous to actually produce. So now weāre just watching the same stories over and over again. Thatās not interesting. I donāt want to see another story line about someone whoās there to just get followers. Letās be honest, thatās the reason youāre all here. Itās actually more insane to be like, āIām here to find a wife,ā than to be like, āYeah, I want to quit my job and become an influencer and this seems like an easy way to do it.ā
DI: After the whole Rachael Kirkconnell controversy, it almost felt like viewers were becoming producers in their own right. They vetted a contestant and unearthed consequential information that these hired professionals failed to do. That tells you everything you need to know.
EPH: Part of why itās less fun for me to watch now is that the fan conversation has become so much about digging up gossip on people and the show.
DI: Yeah, like āgotchaā sleuthing.
EPH: The show expects me to keep up with that? I remember during āWomen Tell Allā last season, Jesse Palmer brought something up as if all of America knew what was happening, about one of the contestants having defended blackface in the past. I donāt really follow the blogs so I was just sitting there like, āSir, I donāt know what youāre talking about. You need to tell me what youāre talking about.ā
Ivie: People arenāt online all the time. Iām not. But there are parallel shows happening simultaneously, the one that ABC is airing and then whatever is going on in the internet abyss. To get the full experience, you now have to follow both of them.
EPH: The show is canon. Everything happening outside of it is not. I understand that doing the digging is a fun activity for a lot of people, but thatās not how I enjoy the show. To make that a necessary part of the viewing experience is really frustrating and alienating to a lot of people.
DI: That brings us to the big question: What do viewers actually want from this franchise at this point? When itās an anomaly of a season if thereās a love connection that lasts, and everyone is going on the show to seek fame and play their luck with a new career opportunity, should we just view it as an amusing social experiment?
EPH: When The Bachelor started, they actually tried to find āthe most eligible bachelorā in America and match him with women who were compatible. There was an expectation of a long-term relationship. Now itās just an incestuous influencer parade. The roots of this show arenāt even in consideration anymore; itās just about who makes good TV. And I donāt necessarily need that to change ā I want to watch good TV! My mother-in-law has said to me, āI donāt like the way you guys watch this show,ā by which she meant analyzing peopleās behavior in the context of a reality dating show. For me, the armchair relationship diagnostics is the interesting part; I enjoy watching people try to communicate their feelings in a very high-pressure environment. āOh, they didnāt handle that very well.ā āOh, that was actually really mature. I liked that.ā Thatās fun to me. The romantic fantasy isnāt interesting to me at all, but I think the show believes thatās what the audience wants. Theyāre trying to sell the fantasy, but we know this isnāt how successful relationships are built.
DI: This reminds of something Trista Sutter told me a few months ago. As part of the franchiseās foundational love story, she immediately validated the process and gave contestants something to look up to as a gold standard for two decades. She still believes that true love can be found on the show, and suggested instead of recycling through previous contestants, someone should be plucked from obscurity again as a reboot of sorts. What do you think of a change like that?
EPH: I donāt like the idea of a total reboot. I watch The Bachelor and The Bachelorette like spring training for Bachelor in Paradise. I like having recurring characters who we get to see grow and change, for better or worse. But I do like the idea of the lead being someone weāve never met before. Thatās a very fun idea.
Something thatās been bugging me for a while is the feeling that once youāre the Bachelor or Bachelorette, youāre done with Bachelor Nation. You canāt come back for another try. If it didnāt work for you, sorry, that was your chance. Once youāve been the main character or once youāve gotten engaged on the show, if you break up, it didnāt work for you, thatās it. Itās the flip side to the other accusation that gets thrown around a lot is, āOh, this person is only here to become the next Bachelor or Bachelorette.ā Which is fine. If you want to go to the show, go to the show.
DI: We need to retire some phrases at this point. āTheyāre not there for the right reasons.ā Who is? āThey just want to be the lead.ā Who doesnāt? We can joke about how repetitive the cycle is, but when the same exact things are being said for the past ten or so years, thatās a failure of production. The seasons blur together because itās the same conflict every time.
EPH: Thereās no variation in the drama. From the first episode of season 20, it seems like Charity is doing a good job of avoiding some of those pitfalls, but expecting her to āfixā an entire broken franchise is unfair.
DI: Speaking of expectations to fix the franchise, Jesse Palmer is now comfortably into his reign as new host. If we were to give him a performance review, what would it be? Honestly, this whole transition away from Chris Harrison made me realize how inessential the job was. Chris wasnāt an Alex Trebek or Pat Sajak figurehead. The job doesnāt even require a skill set of specific knowledge like Padma Lakshmi brought to Top Chef. Jesse shows up, stands around, makes a few comments, and leaves. Thatās all the job was, besides being an occasional sounding board for contestants, who seemed to only do it by requirement.
EPH: Thatās interesting because for a while it seemed like the producers, like you say, wanted the host to be a real confidante for the lead. But it was less of a consideration for the lead and more a way to get story lines out there. It was very clear by the end of Chrisās tenure that he was checked out. My husband would always joke, āThis man put his suit on five minutes ago and has a cocktail ready on the side.ā He was hitting his mark and then he was out. So I do appreciate that Jesse is trying to do a good job, though I think youāre right that the host doesnāt need to be as much of a main character. But hereās another thought: Thereās no reason that the different versions of the show canāt have different hosts. If Jesse Palmer hosts The Bachelor, Tayshia and Caitlyn can host The Bachelorette. I very much enjoyed the coven vibes they brought to the show.
DI: It seemed like they wanted to foster a genuine sisterhood.
EPH: And then we could have rotating celebrity guest hosts for Bachelor in Paradise. Iāll admit that if I were producing this show, I wouldāve chosen Ben Higgins instead of Jesse Palmer. He was very good at being the Bachelor and I think heād be good at being the host.
DI: I donāt know what to think of the show airing at 9 p.m. now instead of 8 p.m., but my gut tells me itās not a good sign that ABC is burying it an hour later.
EPH: Itās not a good omen, especially given that its new lead-in is Claim to Fame. When Claim to Fame premiered, it was on after The Bachelorette, which is how I ended up watching a couple episodes while I was doing dishes afterward. So my more charitable view of that is theyāre just trying to get more eyes on a newer reality show.
DI: As long as I continue to see bite-size previews for The Good Doctor keeping me up to date on Dr. Shaun Murphyās life, I have no complaints. The man has come a long way. Iām really proud of him. Heās married with a baby now. I wonder if he knows he has the entire Bachelor Nation rooting for him.
EPH: Good for Dr. Murphy. I havenāt watched more than ten minutes of that show, but Iām happy for him.