Nelson Mail

TV series tests whether love truly is blind to someone’s looks

- Lisa Bonos

The hottest thing in dating right now is not being able to see the person you’re talking to. Yes, that’s the premise of Love Is Blind, Netflix’s popular reality TV dating show that puts singles in pods where they can talk but not see one another. The only way to reunite without the divider is to chat so long that you fall in love and get engaged.

But the appeal of sightless dating goes well beyond Netflix. Married at First Sight, which pairs off strangers in unions that they have eight weeks to decide to keep or ditch, is gearing up for its 10th season.

And a New York comedy show called UpDating has attracted large crowds to watch two strangers fumble through their first date while blindfolde­d.

So the eyes may be the ‘‘windows to the soul’’, but clearly we’re realising that sight alone won’t lead us to our soul mates. Can taking it away ever, briefly, correct for our overly visual superficia­lity?

The hosts of UpDating – Brandon Berman, 25, and Harrison Forman, 28 – think their show resonates with audiences because a lot of them are on dating apps.

‘‘You’re just seeing a picture to decide if you like someone or not,’’ Forman said. ‘‘On a blind date, it’s the opposite. You’re still judging – but it’s by personalit­y, vibe, energy.’’

The first half of UpDating, two daters converse while blindfolde­d. Then the blindfolds come off, and everyone gets to see the reaction.

Will, a 30-year-old New Yorker said he went on the show to deliberate­ly take himself out of his comfort zone.

‘‘If you’re an attractive person in a large city with so many options, you get chosen so easily just because you’re hot,’’ Will said.

‘‘When you just have to rely on your wits, you really find out if you’re a fun person or not.’’

He found the experience a bit jarring because he wasn’t just talking to one person, as he might on a first date, he was talking to his date and an audience of about 80.

Will’s date, Emily Beard, 24, thought he was more attractive when she couldn’t see him. ‘‘I really did like him blindfolde­d, but once they came off I was like: ‘Oh, God, no’.’’

The problem? She’s into a more clean-cut look, and Will’s hair was longer than she generally goes for.

Even while blindfolde­d, much of their conversati­on focused on height. Beard’s a taller woman who likes to wear heels. They

haven’t been out again.

The disconnect between blind and visual dating was the entire premise of Love Is Blind.

This is still television, so of course everyone is convention­ally good-looking.

But what’s more striking, and perhaps where the blind aspect was applied even more strictly, was in terms of the calendar.

These daters had fewer than 40 days to date, get engaged, live together and then make a decision at the altar: We’re getting married or parting ways.

That’s not just an experiment in whether love is blind to physical attraction, it’s a question of whether love is blind to how a person, and a relationsh­ip, unfolds over time.

Even though some of those pod conversati­ons were deep and revealing, they’re just the beginning of a connection.

The pod talks were reminiscen­t of people on first, second and third dates using the famed ‘‘36 questions’’ as shortcuts to intimacy.

Those questions, which went viral in a New York Times Modern Love column in 2015, might help forge a bond between two people.

But no amount of conversati­on is a perfect substitute for the intimacy of time.

Sure, this person you just met seems to want the same things, but can they put their needs aside to attend to yours?

What are they like in a crisis? How do you handle being apart?

What will you do if she has a jealous or mean streak? How does he talk to his mother?

Dating apps have encouraged first impression­s to be so heavily based on looks that many daters never land in deep-question territory.

Cameron Hamilton said the superficia­lity of app dating is what led him to Love Is Blind. ‘‘I was doing the dating apps, and I was finding myself picking the wrong people,’’ he said.

‘‘I was making quick judgments based on how they looked and was ignoring their personalit­y.

‘‘So I thought that this might be a chance to get to know someone on a deeper level.’’

Perhaps the show’s daters were giving one another more time to connect than they would have if they’d been swiping on Tinder. But emotional connection­s can be just as fleeting as the physical ones.

The show’s more telling conversati­ons happened once the daters were back in real life. At one point, Damian Powers and Giannina Gibelli shouted at one another in separate rooms, from the kitchen to the bedroom.

For his fiancee, Jessica Batten, Mark Cuevas set up a romantic spread – rose petals strewn about and a nice meal – with each of them on opposite sides of a wall.

Jessica remarked that the gesture was so romantic. But these two couples, who had trouble having difficult conversati­ons face to face, also happen to be ones who didn’t make it.

On the other side, Amber Pike waited until she was engaged to Matt Barnett to tell him about her student loan debt and shaky work history.

The late revelation reinforced just how little these people knew about one another. He seemed concerned but not so much as to break their commitment. He must’ve seen more potential in her and the two of them together, than he saw reason to flee.

Which might be the most reassuring thing about this crazy experiment. After all, any relationsh­ip, whether you’re marrying after 40 days or after four years, will deal some wild cards along the way.

It doesn’t matter so much what those twists or challenges are, so much as how you deal with them – and whether you’re both willing to take them on together. – The Washington Post

Dating apps have encouraged first impression­s to be so heavily based on looks that many daters never land in deep-question territory.

 ??  ?? Love Is Blind is hosted by married couple Vanessa and Nick Lachey.
Love Is Blind is hosted by married couple Vanessa and Nick Lachey.

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