The New Zealand Herald

Did MAFS just spell the end for The Bachelor?

Linear shows feel kitsch next to open-style format’s gritty realism

- Duncan Greive

The first season of Married at First Sight NZ is over, and I for one am an absolute wreck. For the past three years, I’ve been part of “The Real Pod”, a podcast which has chronicled reality television in New Zealand on a weekly basis.

Normally we end a season marvelling at how hilarious and absurd it all was. Shows like X Factor, The Block and The Bachelor were funhouse mirror reflection­s of music scouting, home renovation and the search for love respective­ly. They were reality TV in name only, and the dominant notes they hit were comedic first, dramatic second — often distantly so.

Not so Married at First Sight NZ. These were undeniably real relationsh­ips: messy, unpleasant, ill-starred and very occasional­ly extraordin­arily sweet.

This was a harrowing television — a hard-boiled reality TV The Bridge to The Bachelor’s more approachab­le SVU. This is likely because MAFS NZ is, in fact, a franchise of the Danish series Gift ved forste blik, and represents a swing away from the heavily controlled and formulaic style which dominated the 00s reality scene toward something much more gritty and uncontrive­d.

Conceptual­ly the first wave of reality TV was akin to a platform game: a linear progressio­n; regular and known obstacles; a certain and controlled finale. The new generation is closer to the open world style of the Grand Theft Auto franchise: the participan­ts set their own agendas to a far greater degree, have more agency and thus behave more like humans do. Married at First Sight, which ended on Monday, saw experts pair six couples and married them on first meeting. Then followed the results in what they dubbed “the experiment”. It is probably not news that it ended badly for almost all concerned. Every relationsh­ip bar one had a degree of toxicity. Most had dangerous, not-fit-for-humanhabit­ation qualities — perhaps because they met their peers before their spouses, and thus often had stronger bonds with them. A group became known as “the pretty committee”, led by Ben, who was near sadistical­ly cruel to the hapless Aaron. Ben repeatedly emphasised to his handsome young husband what a repellent creature he found him as we watched through cracks in our fingers. Vicky treated Andrew like an unwanted pet (“mine keeps trying to kiss me”), while he tried to smother her with unrequited love. And those were nominally

amongst the most successful relationsh­ips — the rest flamed out long before the show was over.

And yet all this unpleasant­ness was somehow redeemed by watching Brett and Angel for a few minutes each evening. They were exquisitel­y matched and unable to contain their exploding happiness, and you found yourself mooning over them as you might a newborn.

If they had all been so happy this would have been a very tedious television show. Yet the success rate was too low for comfort: in the US franchise, 10 out of the 15 couples matched have opted to continue life together after the cameras stopped rolling. Here, it was just the one out of six. The looming failures hung heavy in the air throughout and gave it a doomy quality which even Brett and Angel couldn’t leaven.

Yet while I hope they get a more even spread of success and failure in future, I also would watch regardless.

The latest franchise being shopped round? Pregnant and Platonic.

Something about this format felt like it instantly rendered The Bachelor NZ too kitsch to continue. Having experience­d reality TV which makes a far more honest attempt at portraying real life, it will be hard to go back into the dorky contrivanc­es of The Block NZ.

If you look at the game above the games of these shows, reality TV is one of the genres in New Zealand most exposed to market forces. Unlike drama and comedy, which are largely funded by the public purse, most franchised reality shows only get made when there is an accompanyi­ng commercial case. Thus they rise and are culled with more frequency and ferocity. And when the wind changes it can sweep through the whole sector, rendering a particular style redundant in a flash.

Just as the talent shows faded a few years ago, so the linear Survivor and Bachelor franchises might nearly be done, felled by the higher stakes of the likes of Married at First Sight.

Yet with new frontiers comes new ethical challenges. The latest franchise being shopped round? Pregnant and Platonic, aka “Pregnant to a Stranger”. Which might be a Bridge too far.

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