Waterloo Region Record

Game of love

Waterloo man ready to compete in the Bachelor Winter Games

- DEBRA YEO

“Bachelor Nation,” meet Bachelor World.

With global attention focused on the Olympic Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, ABC is aiming to siphon off eyeballs for some tongue-incheek counterpro­gramming in Vermont with: “The Bachelor Winter Games.”

Cast members on the “Bachelor” spinoff hail not just from the U.S., but from Germany, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Finland, the U.K., Japan, China and next-door neighbour Canada.

The show will contain winter sports — biathlon and ice dancing for example — but most of the games will be of the romantic, rather than athletic variety.

“The show cannot be about competitio­n,” host Chris Harrison told the media on a recent conference call.

“That was the kind of fatal flaw with “Bachelor Pad” ... is that it became a game show. And it became about the money and the twist at the end.”

He was referring to that failed spinoff ’s cash prize of $250,000 (US), which the last man and woman standing had to decide whether to share as a couple or keep for themselves.

“Well, ‘The Bachelor’ and ‘The Bacheloret­te’ are successful because there is no twist. It’s always about relationsh­ips and so ... ‘Bachelor Winter Games’ has to be about, at the end of the day, relationsh­ips,” Harrison said.

To that end, only 10 to 15 per cent of the four-episode show is devoted to sports competitio­n. And “when we say these are competitio­ns, there needs to be air quotes around them,” added Harrison.

“Some of the countries, if you look at Finland and Sweden and Canada, obviously these are winter sports (countries) and this is what they do. But for a lot of the people, we were teaching them to ski and then we threw them down a mountain in a downhill skiing competitio­n. So again, the word competitio­n needs to be used very lightly.”

That didn’t stop producers from staging a cheeky, fauxOlympi­c style opening, with its own anthem and a parade presided over by “Bachelor” royalty Trista and Ryan Sutter, who met on the first season of “The Bacheloret­te” and have been married for almost 15 years.

Some bona fide U.S. sports profession­als were called in to assist: anchors Hannah Storm and Ashley Brewer, figure skating pairs champions Tai Babilonia and Randy Gardner, and figure skating medallist (and former Tonya Harding frenemy) Nancy Kerrigan.

Harrison said he and Storm go “full ‘Anchorman.’” while commentati­ng on the sporting events. “Like you really have to be serious about it or else it’s not going to be funny. And so while Ben (Higgins) is trying to skate and stay up in this ridiculous speed skating, I would call it a costume more than a uniform. We treated it as if it was Dan Jansen and Eric Heiden racing for the gold.”

The learning curve on the series involved more than athletics, for both the cast members and the producers. The other countries participat­ing in games follow the “Bachelor” TV formula, but “there’s huge difference­s,” Harrison said. “Look at ‘Bachelor Japan,’ ‘Bachelor China,’ if

there is one kiss during the season that’s a big deal.

“So, obviously, there are cultural difference­s, religious difference­s, all kinds of things we had to take into account . ... But to me, the beauty of this was it was bringing all of these cultures together and let’s tear down the borders — not in a political way — it was just a really cool way of getting to know each other.”

Higgins, who was The Bachelor in 2016, agreed: “There was just this ... community of people that came together (from) all over the world to build relationsh­ips and that’s exactly what it ended up being, and I think for that it was a huge success.”

Success in the Bachelor world, of course, means coupling up.

Harrison revealed that more than one couple emerged from the series, including some internatio­nal relationsh­ips.

Canadian competitor Kevin Wendt, for instance, is rumoured to have formed a bond with an American cast member.

Harrison called the show “some of the best television we’ve ever produced, which scares me because now, instead of a one-off, I think we might be doing this every winter now.”

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 ??  ?? Canadian Kevin Wendt
Canadian Kevin Wendt

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