Daily Press

MTV’s ‘The Challenge’ still going strong

In 35th season, show drawing new viewers as live sports halted

- By Gary Gerard Hamilton Associated Press

NEW YORK — Before “Survivor,” “The Amazing Race” and “American Ninja Warrior,” there was MTV’s “The Challenge.”

It’s often brought big ratings and memorable moments for the network, but longtime host T.J. Lavin doesn’t believe the show gets the respect it deserves.

“I definitely think it’s probably the most underrated show on television,” said Lavin, a former profession­al BMX competitor and X Games gold medalist.

Currently airing its 35th season, the coronaviru­s pandemic and the lack of live sports has allowed

“The Challenge” to draw in new viewers to its consistent­ly loyal fan base. This season is on pace to be the highest rated in eight years, MTV said.

Lavin said he doesn’t look at ratings but has felt the increase.

“(Men) used to come up to me and say, ‘Hey, can I get a picture? My wife loves you.’ Now, it’s ‘I’m a big fan, bro. Can I get a picture?’ ” he said with a smile. “It’s funny because it’s definitely expanded because of the sports situation.”

The show revolves around a different theme each season, pitting competitor­s in a series of weekly mini-competitio­ns that combine puzzles, strategy and arguably the most physical competitio­ns in the genre. Castmates are sequestere­d in a huge, decked out house in an exotic locale that provides the drama MTV shows are known for. Most episodes end with two players going head to head in the hopes of qualifying for a dayslong final challenge and a large cash prize. The show airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m.

Eastern on MTV.

Although “The Challenge” came first, it hasn’t garnered the same type of critical acclaim, or Emmy love, as some other reality competitio­n shows.

“I don’t think that it gets its due in the pantheon of reality television,” said Breanna L. Heldman, a senior editor at People magazine. “Some of that is because ‘Survivor,’ ‘Big

Brother’ — those are on big networks, and they’re getting a lot more viewers.”

Debuting in 1998, contestant­s were tapped from MTV’s “Road Rules” which last aired in 2007, before adding casts members from the groundbrea­king series “The Real World.” Story lines, and rivalries, have developed over multiple seasons.

“We’ve gotten to watch them grow and fall in love and fall out of love and make enemies and kiss and make up and make the enemies again,” said Heldman. “It is a soap opera as much as it is a reality competitio­n series.”

Recent seasons have expanded the contestant ranks, welcoming competitor­s from other series, including “Big Brother,” “Survivor,” “American

Ninja Warrior” and the U.K.’s “Geordie Shore” and “Love Island.”

Contests are being constantly reimagined, with this season upping the complexity and peril. One challenge called “Bomb Squad” has teams of players search for hidden numbers to solve an equation while riding in a stunt car driving on two wheels. “Flag Down” straps players to the side of a moving tank while they collect flags.

Then there’s a hilarious trivia quiz — Lavin’s favorite — in which contestant­s answer basic pop culture questions while suspended above open bodies of water. Wrong answers lead to breathtaki­ng drops, sometimes resulting in injuries.

Lavin, who has hosted for 25 seasons, says rival shows pay attention.

“They are looking at our show and saying, ‘OK, maybe we can do (this).’ So it’s like, ‘Oh, I see you — I see you ‘Survivor.’ ”

Another aspect has been upped this season: its cinematogr­aphy.

“I think that people generally gravitate to something that makes you feel like you’re in it. And that’s been my goal,” said Jason “Ninja” Williams, this season’s director of photograph­y.

This season, dubbed “Total Madness” with a post-apocalypti­c theme, was filmed in a Cold War bunker outside of Prague — a far cry from the cushy digs contestant­s are accustomed to. Williams, one of the few Black cinematogr­aphers in television production, said while he doesn’t scout other competitio­n shows, he is inspired by Hollywood.

“When I first started

(on) ‘The Challenge,’ we didn’t have gimbals. We didn’t have slow-motion cameras,” said Williams, who has worked occasional­ly on the show since 2009. “Now, the market has allowed them to be so much more accessible to us. And then we can actually provide these different angles and shots and really interestin­g tricks that you would normally see in a film.”

Heldman, citing the example of trans “Challenge” contestant Katelynn Cusanelli, said MTV “does not get credit for some of the ways in which it has broken boundaries.” Cusanelli first appeared on “The Real World: Brooklyn” in 2009 and “opened up about the trans experience through reality television in a way that I’d never seen before, and I think many people had never seen before.”

While some viewers are wondering about the show’s future even as some fan favorites are getting older, Lavin believes “The Challenge” is in good hands.

“It’s going to be tough without those dudes if they don’t want to come back . ... But at the same time, there’s also new stars coming up that are pretty interestin­g people,” said Lavin. “So I think it’ll survive, man.

“There’s new stars born every day.”

 ?? MTV PHOTOS ?? The current cast of MTV’s reality competitio­n series “The Challenge” gathers. This season is on pace to be the highest rated in eight years, MTV said.
MTV PHOTOS The current cast of MTV’s reality competitio­n series “The Challenge” gathers. This season is on pace to be the highest rated in eight years, MTV said.
 ??  ?? T.J. Lavin, host of “The Challenge,” believes the show does not get the respect it deserves.
T.J. Lavin, host of “The Challenge,” believes the show does not get the respect it deserves.

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