Ottawa Citizen

Bacheloret­te comes to Canada

- VICTORIA AHEARN

Prepare the roses and the tissues: The Bacheloret­te Canada is headed to W Network and will include Canadian Jillian Harris, an alum of the U.S. version who has some sage advice for hopefuls.

“I think people are scared of what people will think of them, but I think if you believe in yourself as a person and you think you’re fun and exciting and you’re a great catch, you really have nothing to lose,” said the finalist from 2009’s The Bachelor and star of 2010’s The Bacheloret­te.

“I think people are afraid of rejection, but rejection is really good for the soul ... You never want to be with somebody that isn’t a good fit, and the show really helps you find people that are a good fit.

“For me, I did find love, and then it didn’t work out, but I gained so many other things from it.”

Corus Entertainm­ent announced on Thursday that it’s commission­ing the dating series from Good Human Production­s Inc., and plans to première it next fall.

It’s the first Canadian version of ABC’s The Bacheloret­te franchise, and it comes after two seasons of The Bachelor Canada aired on City.

Corus says it will announce in the coming months who will star on the show, which follows one woman’s search for love among 20 men.

Interested bachelors can apply online and through upcoming casting calls across the country.

Harris, who lives in Kelowna, B.C., said she will have a role in the show but she doesn’t know what it is yet.

She’d love to host, but she isn’t sure she’d have time for it, given her current starring role on the real estate series Love It or List It Vancouver.

Such opportunit­ies are the perks of once being on The Bacheloret­te, she said.

“That’s one of the things I’m most grateful for from the experience, is that I have a voice and I’m able to have a brand and make a career from it.”

Harris said interested bachelors should be prepared to take about eight weeks off work, in case they make it far, like she did.

They, along with the bacheloret­te, should also be prepared for the low points.

“Being on the show brought some of the best parts of my life and some of the worst parts of my life,” said Harris, 35.

If love is the main agenda, “it’s possible” to find it, added Harris, who hopes the show will “be a little less formal” than its U.S. counterpar­t.

“The Bacheloret­te U.S.A. is all about the big mansions and the fancy dresses and the fancy dates. I would like to see this as truly Canadian,” she said.

“I want to see the bachelor and bacheloret­te go fishing in Tofino (B.C.), or camping in Tofino and be able to tell funny fart jokes or go to a hockey game.”

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