The Jerusalem Post

Netflix reality contestant spent $20,000 for sex. She has no regrets

- • By MEREDITH BLAKE

In Too Hot to Handle, the latest grippingly bonkers reality show from the evil geniuses at Netflix, a group of horny, attention-hungry twenty-somethings hole up a at a beachfront Mexican villa and attempt to forgo sexual contact of any kind in a bid for a $100,000 prize. Each violation of the rules – which, by the way, also bar self-gratificat­ion – brings a fine, starting at $3,000 for a kiss.

Like Love Is Blind, which followed couples as they dated in “isolation pods” and got engaged before meeting face to face, Too Hot to Handle is strangely well-timed in an era of social distancing and involuntar­y celibacy for millions.

But while Love Is Blind became a pop culture sensation thanks to its deranged earnestnes­s – couples talked about the magic of “being back in the pods” as if they’d just returned from a honeymoon in Tahiti, not a windowless room on a soundstage in Atlanta – Too Hot to Handle puts a knowing twist on the guilty pleasure of dating shows.

There’s no host, just snarky narration (by comedian Desiree Burch) targeting the contestant­s – an internatio­nal crew of inked-up, muscleboun­d bros and Kardashian clones wearing bikinis that look like fetishwear Spanx – for being vapid, manipulati­ve, excessivel­y libidinous or all of the above. Along with the usual daytime drinking and poolside lounging, there are group challenges designed to encourage personal growth and/or torment the randy singles, such as a session in Shibari, Japanese rope bondage.

There’s also an Alexa-like talking “robot” named Lana that plays the role of referee, announcing every time someone has breached the rules, taking what is the subtext in most other reality dating shows – slut-shaming – and making it explicit.

And no one got in more trouble with Lana than Francesca Farago, a 27-year-old Canadian who captured the heart – or at least hormonal longings – of baby-faced Australian Harry Jowsey. The Instagram model managed to rack up $32,000 in fines over the course of the production, including $20,000 in a single night with Jowsey.

When she signed up to do the show last year, she was “very single” and had little idea of what she was in for – contestant­s only learned the rules once they’d arrived at the “retreat,” as they call it – but she left in a relationsh­ip. She and Jowsey briefly broke up after leaving Mexico but have reunited and are still very much together, though currently isolating in different countries. Farago spoke by phone about her unlikely journey to enlightenm­ent.

So you didn’t know the rules of the competitio­n before you signed on. How was this show pitched to you?

I was reached out to via Instagram DM by someone in production. She said, ‘Hey we have this new reality show on Netflix, we thought you’d be perfect for it.’ She was asking me about my sex life, about my previous relationsh­ips. It was very sexually oriented. I was telling my friends about it and they’re like, ‘You’re not allowed, you’re going to get kidnapped.’ It was very sketchy at the beginning.

They basically pitched it to me as a nice month’s vacation in the sun with attractive people. Everybody’s single. That’s all I knew. I was like, ‘I hope this isn’t like Survivor.’

When I got there and the rules were [explained] I was like, ‘OK, this is not what I was expecting at all, but also this makes sense.’ I’m single for a reason. We’re all very horny people. We all had commitment issues.

I was so mad, though. I was like, ‘You guys, I hate you all. How could you do this to me?’ I was not feeling it. I was being a little bit dramatic. Not being able to have sex isn’t the end of the world. But it went from being a hot, fun summer with single people to an experience of learning and personal growth, so we were all confused.

You’re portrayed as the man-eating villain. And you definitely spent the most money. How did you feel about that depiction?

When we finished filming I was prepared to be the villain. I was prepared to come across a lot worse. The people in the house were not necessaril­y my biggest fans. I thought the viewers were not going to like me either. But I was pleasantly surprised with the positive response I’ve gotten.

I was alienated very quickly from the group. I was a hothead and I was being selfish. I was like, ‘They don’t like me, they don’t want to know me, they’re assuming the worst of me.’ At that point I was like, ‘I don’t owe these people anything.’ It took me a week and then a few group challenges to realize that’s not the way I should be going about things.

So you and Harry spent $20,000 in a single night. Was it worth it?

It was definitely worth it. Like Harry said, it was a bargain. Of course we were being selfish and of course we could have kept it in our pants if we really wanted to, but we just felt like that was the right step to take in our relationsh­ip. It was very romantic. That was the night we decided to be boyfriend and girlfriend.

What was your takeaway from this experience?

The main thing it taught me was to consider other people’s feelings. And to have a bit more respect for myself.

(Los Angeles Times/TNS)

 ?? (Netflix/TNS) ?? HARRY AND FRANCESCA get to know each other on the Netflix reality show ‘Too Hot to Handle.’
(Netflix/TNS) HARRY AND FRANCESCA get to know each other on the Netflix reality show ‘Too Hot to Handle.’

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