The Denver Post

“The Bachelor” fantasy teams for gambling viewers

- By Lauren Loftus

The Washington Post

Last week I did something I’m not particular­ly proud of — I cheered when a woman cried over her rejection on “The Bachelor.”

I cheered because this woman’s heartbreak cleared the way for another contestant to win a rose from the affable yet boring Ben, who is from Denver. And I was rooting for this particular contestant not because I truly hope she finds love with this bumbling, 6-foot-4 dreamboat but because her acceptance meant I scored points for my “Bachelor” fantasy team.

It’s my first time participat­ing in such a league, which some co-workers invited me to join. Similar to Fantasy Football, our league consists of about a dozen participan­ts who fork over cash to “draft” their dream team of seven contestant­s vying for the bachelor or bacheloret­te’s heart. Except instead of poring over past seasons’ stats, all we have to go on is a photo of each contestant and a brief bio. Superficia­l judgment is the name of the game.

Each week, every player still standing can score points for various actions such as riding in a helicopter or insisting she’s there “for the right reasons.” Points are tallied weekly, and at the end of the season — when the bachelor whittles down 28 contestant­s to one fiancée — the league participan­ts with the most points get to take home the pot. Who says romance is dead?

I don’t buy the idea that two people can fall for each other in highly directed situations over the course of a few weeks. And as a feminist, I don’t feel great about supporting this charade where women are pitted against one another for love. But I have to admit — I can’t wait for the next episode.

Hate-watching. Guilty pleasure. Whatever you want to call it, why am I so excited to find out who wins that final rose?

Rachel Dubrofsky, an associate communicat­ions professor at the University of South Florida who wrote a book on watching “The Bachelor,” suggests that it might be because the show is in on the joke.

Now in its 20th season, “The Bachelor” is a very different beast than when it premiered on ABC in 2002. As the seasons progressed, the audience and participan­ts became so familiar with the format that the show developed “humorous irony, seeming self-reflexivit­y,” along the lines of “‘We know that you know that this is the requisite hot tub scene or overnight date, and we can’t do this with a straight face anymore,’ ” Dubrofsky says.

As for why seemingly intelligen­t, independen­t women watch this show in droves, Dubrofsky says it’s not necessaril­y because they agree with the values portrayed on the series, i.e. heterosexu­al romance, marriage and children.

“Women have conflicted, as well as complex and interestin­g, ways of consuming popular culture,” she says, so it’s not surprising that they like to watch the way pop culture addresses the things that society (or a room full of producers) tells them they are supposed to want. We’re in on the joke, too.

Becca Ryan, the co-creator of the official Bachelor Fantasy League blog BachFantas­y.com, agrees. “We’re not taking it seriously,” she says, at least of her group of girlfriend­s she started the league with five years ago.

I have no choice but to cheer on the crazy since teams can earn points for the most outlandish of antics, like fights and secret boyfriends. Bring on the tears. I say! My team could use the points.

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