The New Zealand Herald

Anna Murray

First Dates is . . . easy to dip in and out of with no long-term commitment required — much like the dates themselves.

- Continued from A40

following. I should know because I was a card-carrying member of the Survivor superfan club once upon a time.

Way back in 2001, when Survivor was still the new sensation shaking up everything we knew about television, my cousin and I got hooked on season three while travelling in Canada. So great was our obsession, we reschedule­d our flights out of the country when we realised we would otherwise miss the season finale.

In our defence (although I’m not sure there is one), this was years before you could catch up on a TV show online. Would I do the same thing now for an opportunit­y to watch the final of Survivor? Not a chance. And not because it’s now easy to find and enjoy an episode of a show after the fact, or because I potentiall­y got a life in the interim.

It’s because after nearly 18 years, I’ve more than had my fill of Tribal Councils, schoolyard-esque backstabbi­ng and comically convoluted challenges, even if this second series of the New Zealand version looks more promising than its inaugural run. Given its age, the format simply can’t help but look and feel fatigued.

First Dates, on the other hand, is a premise that’s still a spring chicken by comparison. It’s also a refreshing­ly simple concept. There’s no immunity idols, alliance skuldugger­y or jumping through literal hoops. You simply turn up at the First Dates restaurant, have dinner with a total stranger, engage in some awkward chat (helped along by a liberal sprinkling of shots) and then decide on camera if you want to see your date ever again. Unlike the Survivor viewing experience, First Dates is also a charming slice of TV that’s easy to dip in and out of with no long-term commitment required — much like the dates themselves. And while we’ve probably all had a first date that makes 40 days in the wilderness with no food or shelter look positively enticing, that’s not the case (yet) in this second season of First Dates NZ.

Brave daters featuring in the first episode include ZM radio host PJ Harding, whose amusingly awkward banter could not be better suited to the strange environmen­t that is First Dates; Natalie, a 21-year-old who is terrified of tomato sauce; and Jimmy, a timid 24-year-old data scientist who’s never, ever, been on a date and has googled some pick-up lines as preparatio­n for his big moment.

Then, there’s 61-year-old Sue, who is looking for a new dance partner in life, and Barry, a lonely 60-year-old widower, who shows the younger generation­s how it’s done, turning up to the First Dates restaurant in his best suit with a bunch of flowers at the ready. Watching Baz and Sue’s flirty banter and seeing them so delighted that another shot at love and companions­hip might be on the cards is a pleasure. It may not be the $250,000 prize on offer over at Survivor New Zealand — but it might just be priceless. Survivor New Zealand screens Sundays at 7pm on TV 2; First Dates NZ screens Thursdays at 8.30pm on TV 2

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