UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

View previous topic View next topic Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by Grammarianna Wed Aug 05, 2015 8:58 pm

[size=36]UnREAL Turned The Bachelor Into Literature
The show, a fiction about a fiction about reality, revels in its own ambiguities.

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Lead_960[/size] 



  • By MEGAN GARBER
     

  •  AUG 4, 2015




“We killed somebody, didn’t we?” Rachel, a producer on the Bacheloresque showEverlasting, asks Quinn, the show’s executive producer, in the final episode ofUnREAL’s first season.

Quinn is taken aback. “Yeah,” she replies, after a pause. She pauses one more time. “Let’s not do that again.”

If you haven’t been watching Lifetime’s dark satire of dating shows and reality TV and pretty much the entire romance industrial complex, I won’t say who was killed, or who the killer “we” may have been. The “we” in question is unclear anyway. And that, actually, is part of what makes UnREAL so well worth watching. The show, by turns sassy and sardonic, revels in its own ambiguity. It takes the tired tropes of the reality show—which are also the tired tropes of the soap opera, which are also the tired tropes of the melodrama—and freshens them.



In the show’s first season, someone, yes, gets killed. Someone, yes—actually, many someones—gets cheated on. There’s lying and behind-the-back-ing and power struggling and lawsuits and horseback riding and bulimia and British aristocracy and sex in trailers. There’s manipulation and vulnerability and a deep belief in romantic love and an even deeper mistrust of it.

UnREAL is a fiction about a fiction about reality; as such, it would have been easy for its writers to focus on the ironies embedded in that format. The stuff of The Bachelor (and The Bachelorette and Married at First Sight and My Fair Brady and Dating Naked and all the other shows in their vein) is, after all, eminently mockable. The “Rose Ceremonies”! The “Fantasy Suites”! The candles! The talking-head interviews with contestants! The cryings-in-the-backseat-of-limos! The drama both intensely human and ridiculously manufactured! “Let’s give them something that they want,” Quinn tells her crew in UnREAL’s pilot episode, going on to list as elements of that “something” ponies and princesses and romance and love, and going on after that to remind everyone that “it’s all a bunch of crap anyways.”



But UnREAL doesn’t just mock the conventions of treacly dating shows. It meets those shows on their own terms, focusing, in particular, on one element they all share: They are, maybe more than anything else, mysteries. Highly stylized and ritualized mysteries, yes, but mysteries nonetheless. Who will the Bachelor(ette) pick at the end of the show? What surprises will transpire when strangers find themselves, suddenly, married to each other? 



UnREAL takes the uncertainties at the center of the marriage plot—will they? won’t they?—and infuses them into its own production. There are not only ambiguous outcomes, but also ambiguous relationships and ambiguous power dynamics and ambiguous character motivations. You’re never quite sure who’s on whose side, or what the line is between honesty and manipulation. The characters themselves are never quite sure, either.

At the center of it all is Rachel, the woman who first appears in UnREAL wearing a “This Is What a Feminist Looks Like” t-shirt, and who professes to be participating in the morally questionable behavior that is apparently required of a good Everlasting producer only under duress. Who, despite the talent she has for that role, insists that she would rather be producing “a show about women who have careers and actually talk about them” and/or “saving AIDS babies.”

What does she really want, though? Is she a hero or an anti-hero? “You know how I always used to say that the show is bad for you, and how it brings out the ugliness in you?” Jeremy, her on-and-off love interest, asks her in the season’s final episode. “I was wrong, Rach,” he says. “It’s you that’s ugly.”



Is she? Is everyone else, too—all these writers and producers and executives and shooters and actors-in-the-guise-of-actual people, all these participants in a charade that, week by week, both celebrates and cheapens romantic love?

The show doesn’t say. It does, instead, what the best literature does: It leaves itself open to interpretation and argument. It asks its audience to think, and analyze, and come to their own conclusions. It makes a point of its own ambiguity.


UnREAL does what the best literature does: It leaves itself open to interpretation and argument.


In one of the final scenes in last night’s season finale, Rachel—having been betrayed (or maybe protected?) by Quinn—collapses in a chaise next to her mentor. They’ve just been joking (but maybe not joking?) about the fact that they probably shouldn’t murder someone for the sake of the show. Rachel stares (and maybe glares?) at Quinn. There’s a long and pregnant pause. (Maybe even a literal one, Rachel having slept with at least two guys on set and UnREAL being, on top of everything else, a soap opera.) Rachel’s stare is intense. The silence is awkward. The whole thing starts to become just slightly painful to watch.

“I love you,” Rachel says, finally. “You know that, right?”

Quinn is taken aback. “I love you, too,” she replies. She pauses again.

“Weirdo.”

It’s a strange moment, and a compellingly confusing one. Was that a gesture of forgiveness from Rachel? Was it a confession of friendship and sisterhood? Was it a simple acknowledgment that Rachel and Quinn have become, on top of everything else, accomplices?

Or was it, as the vaguely menacing tone of the whole thing might suggest, a threat?

We don’t know. We won’t know—for a while, and maybe ever. All we can do is think and theorize and, of course, tune in next season.
Grammarianna
Grammarianna

Posts : 194
Likes : 55
Join date : 2013-03-03
Location : Greater Vancouver area, B.C. Canada

Back to top Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty Re: UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by singlyme Thu Aug 06, 2015 7:39 am

Wow.  This writer really hit the nail on the head.  Her thoughts were a reflection of my own, with one exception:  While I may think and analyze, I'm not able to draw any definite conclusion about what's really under Rachel's skin.

singlyme
Power User

Posts : 2054
Likes : 339
Join date : 2013-03-10
Location : PA

Back to top Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty Re: UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by rkc1960 Fri Aug 07, 2015 11:12 am

I agree...but maybe it's just like the writer said about the last scene, we may never really know what is Rachel's true self and feelings.
rkc1960
rkc1960
Power User

Posts : 1325
Likes : 544
Join date : 2013-03-19

Back to top Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty Re: UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by Moonbat Wed Jun 29, 2016 8:55 am

I just watched the final season 1 episode last night.  I had kind of forgotten about the show until I saw the three main characters on Good Morning America the other day.  Kind of surprised to see them on there seeing as how Unreal kind of makes fun of two of ABC's favorite shows but they treated them quite nicely!  I have to admit that the final S1 episode had plenty of plot twists and turns and I'm looking forward to watching S2 now.

Now, about Rachel... I'm a little worried about how quickly she's willing to step over her moral conscience anytime there's an opportunity to climb her ambition ladder.  Does she hate herself afterwards? Of course, but like any addict she's going to keep doing it again and again.
Moonbat
Moonbat

Posts : 132
Likes : 46
Join date : 2016-01-04

Back to top Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty Re: UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by rkc1960 Sun Jul 03, 2016 1:11 pm

The thing is with Rachel, she may disregard what her conscience is telling her is right to reach her ambitions, but Quinn this season has been even more disturbing then last season. She doesn't seem to have a conscience whatsoever. On the last episode she made it quite clear that she doesn't care what it takes to get her manipulated show done, even if it means physically hurting someone on purpose. And a comment she made about Chet's baby son was pretty disgusting. This season she is pure evil.
rkc1960
rkc1960
Power User

Posts : 1325
Likes : 544
Join date : 2013-03-19

Back to top Go down

UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature Empty Re: UnREAL turns The Bachelor into Literature

Post by Sponsored content


Sponsored content


Back to top Go down

View previous topic View next topic Back to top

- Similar topics

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum