Los Angeles Times

Reality TV wrestles with race

‘ Bacheloret­te,’ ‘ Big Brother’ are trying, but they have a long way to go, experts say.

- By Greg Braxton

At f irst glance, ABC’s “The Bachelor” and CBS’ “Big Brother” are completely different. One is a fairy tale- f lavored franchise where participan­ts seek true love and happily- everafters. The other pits strangers cut off from the outside world against one another in a battle for a $ 500,000 grand prize.

But “The Bachelor,” its spinoff “The Bacheloret­te” and “Big Brother” share a common link: They’ve been rocked during their decades- long runs by charges of racism.

For much of its 18- year, 40- season run, “The Bachelor” franchise stood f irm

against repeated calls — and a contentiou­s legal challenge — to feature a Black lead. Since its 2000 debut, “Big Brother” has regularly featured predominan­tly white casts, and Black houseguest­s have complained of being targeted and bullied.

Although “America’s Got Talent,” “Survivor,” “America’s Next Top Model” and other reality series have also come under fire for troubling racial dynamics, the “Bachelor” franchise and “Big Brother” have consistent­ly drawn criticism for their handling of race, including from their own contestant­s. As recently as last season, “Big Brother’s” Kemi Fakunle publicly condemned “degrading and threatenin­g comments” from her fellow houseguest­s, while Rachel Lindsay, who became “The Bacheloret­te’s” first Black lead in 2017, spoke out this year about the series’ need for a “diversity makeover.”

“The Bacheloret­te” and “Big Brother” in recent months have had fresh opportunit­ies to redeem their reputation­s, launching new seasons in the wake of massive civil rights protests over systemic racism and police brutality against unarmed Black men. They also offered a chance for ABC and CBS, which hurriedly issued statements of solidarity with Black Lives Matter following the police killing of George Floyd, to demonstrat­e their commitment.

But more diversity does not automatica­lly lead to better diversity, say scholars and others who have studied the genre. They added that “The Bacheloret­te” and “Big Brother” so far have done little to correct their troubled pasts. Increased representa­tion has not yet led to more thoughtful considerat­ion of the fiery and emotional racial dialogue fueled by a pandemic and a divisive presidenti­al election. The failure, these experts maintain, undercuts the credibilit­y of ABC and CBS on their pledges of solidarity.

“In the wake of the largest civil rights unrest since the 1960s, it is understand­able that networks and showrunner­s of reality television would promise to do better,” said Jennifer Pozner, author of “Reality Bites Back: The Troubling Truth About Guilty Pleasure TV.” “But they still deliver the same kinds of misreprese­ntation and damaging tropes they’ve always delivered, sometimes in the same package and sometimes in new packaging.”

This season, “The Bacheloret­te” introduced close to a dozen suitors who were Black or nonwhite — the largest pool of people of color in the franchise’s history — seeking the affections of the show’s white lead, Clare Crawley. But the season was turned upside down when Crawley fell for former football player Dale Moss, who is biracial. The two grew closer, got engaged and exited the show. But while Crawley’s run resulted in an interracia­l relationsh­ip, producers left untouched any indication of the challenges such couples face. The season is being relaunched Tuesday with Crawley’s replacemen­t, Tayshia Adams — the franchise’s second Black lead.

For its part, “Big Brother’s” recently concluded “All Stars” edition, bringing back top players from previous seasons, was once again dominated by white contestant­s, and it featured a racially charged confrontat­ion between a white houseguest with a history of violence and

two Black female houseguest­s.

Kristen Warner, film and media studies associate professor at the University of Alabama’s journalism and creative media department, said producers of the shows simply want to add more people of color to their casts but not really acknowledg­e or deal with race meaningful­ly, because they feel “it’s such a weighty yoke and it’s not fun. They want to have their cake and eat it too.”

ABC and Warner Bros., which produces “The Bacheloret­te,” declined comment.

CBS, which has actively promoted a stream of pro- diversity initiative­s in recent months, including a creative partnershi­p with the National Assn. for the Advancemen­t of Colored People, responded with a statement saying that this summer’s cast “was poised to be one of the most inclusive in the show’s history before COVID- 19 significan­tly impacted the process.”

Dynamics of race

The heated dynamic of race in reality shows — and the accountabi­lity of producers to avoid or defuse racially charged scenarios — has been under a spotlight since late 2019, when actress Gabrielle Union filed a discrimina­tion lawsuit against “America’s Got Talent” after leaving the show following one season as a judge. She and the network reached what was characteri­zed in a joint statement as an “amicable resolution” this year.

Though that scrutiny has only deepened since protests for racial justice swept across the nation, the subject appeared to be a nonissue in the first episodes of “The Bacheloret­te.” The effect of the heightened and emotional discourse about race

on interracia­l relationsh­ips did not come up among the group of suitors pursuing Crawley, nor in their more intimate conversati­ons with the Bacheloret­te herself.

Nor did the topic of race come up between Crawley and Moss, who has discussed in interviews the difficulti­es his Black father and white mother faced as an interracia­l couple, as well as the challenges he encountere­d in his own dating life.

And, as former lead Lindsay has said of her own interracia­l relationsh­ip on the show, such challenges are intensifie­d by notoriety — leading, in Lindsay’s case, to “nasty messages” and “trolling” by fans.

Although “The Bachelor” franchise has traditiona­lly favored rose- colored glasses, with the emphasis on idealized romantic love, Pozner, author of the upcoming media literacy graphic novel “Breaking ( the) News,” called that focus disingenuo­us and unrealisti­c. She pointed out that the show in the past has dealt with issues such as addiction and personal trauma. Indeed, the outside world intruded on the series this season in the form of the COVID- 19 pandemic, which affected production on “The Bacheloret­te” as well as “Big Brother”: Both series featured discussion­s about how contestant­s had to undergo testing before they were allowed to participat­e.

“It’s not too much to expect that any show that is supposed to be about people finding their life partner, especially if they’re pairing people in interracia­l relationsh­ips, would want to explore their values,” Pozner said. “If Clare or Dale or any of the other cast members discussed racism or discrimina­tion in their lives, in their

family or in the country, those discussion­s were left on the cutting room f loor. And if those conversati­ons didn’t happen organicall­y, producers could have asked questions to elicit responses on those topics, as they do with a million other leading questions.”

Allegation­s of irresponsi­bility have shadowed “Big Brother” since its first season, when outspoken William “Mega” Collins, who is Black, became the first player evicted after several angry encounters with his mostly white costars over race.

Season’s issues

The troubles this season, which ended in late October, mostly revolved around houseguest Da’Vonne Rogers, who was open about her support of Black Lives Matter and her goal to be the show’s first African American winner.

“Twenty- one seasons of winners, and not one of those faces look like mine,” Rogers, who is an acting coach, said in one episode to her fellow houseguest­s. “Not seeing a face that looks like mine is very discouragi­ng and hurtful, and it does make me think, ‘ Maybe it’s not possible.’ ”

In the house with Rogers was fitness entreprene­ur Christmas Abbott, who had first appeared on “Big Brother” in 2017. Abbott was arrested in 2018 after ramming her car into a vehicle belonging to the girlfriend of her child’s father. She pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r criminal mischief and was ordered to complete an anger management class. ( CBS declined to comment on the specifics of this season’s controvers­ies, including why Abbott was cast again after her arrest.)

The most explosive moment of the season erupted when Rogers accused Abbott of betraying her friend Bayleigh Dayton and clearing the path for Dayton to be evicted. As Rogers got angrier, she became visibly distraught as she realized she might be perceived as the aggressor.

“Oh, God, oh, God, I hate this game,” Rogers said, crying as she paced around the back yard. “Why does she get to talk to me like that? But if I respond, they will look at me like I’m crazy... She talks to me like I’m her child, but if I respond, they will be, ‘ That’s the Da’Vonne I was waiting for, that’s what I wanted her to do.’ ”

Moments later, Dayton, who is Black, started arguing with Abbott, and when Abbott became more aggressive, Dayton became more defensive. “If I did that, I would be labeled a ghettoass bitch,” Dayton said.

The network issued a statement that contestant­s’ behavior on the show was out of the control of producers. “At times, the Houseguest­s exhibit behavior and make comments that we don’t condone. However, there is absolutely no truth that the casting of the show is racially motivated, that the Houseguest­s’ behavior is predetermi­ned or that the outcome is controlled in any way.”

But Catherine Squires, professor of communicat­ion studies at the University of Minnesota, said there is extensive behind- the- camera manipulati­on.

“It’s disingenuo­us [ to say] there’s just a camera going and we’re watching things,” Squires said. “Racial antagonism has always been part of the narrative. Often, it seems like these producers are embracing the notion that we live in a ‘ post- racial’ America to excuse exploiting racial tensions that are far from resolved.”

Added Warner: “These shows are casting people based on who they are and the conversati­ons you have in interviews. The idea that the producers aren’t aware that these so- called conflicts are going to happen is disingenuo­us and creates a nice kind of plausible deniabilit­y.”

The continuing problems with race on “Big Brother” have started to turn off longtime fans like Thane Montgomery, an assistant editor at a firm that makes movie trailers and commercial­s. For more than a decade, Montgomery, who is white, has looked forward each summer to the arrival of the newest edition of the CBS series. But he is becoming increasing­ly disenchant­ed.

“Each season, the white people control the house and it gets boring,” he said. “It could be a really interestin­g show if the population of the house looked like the population of the country. But it seems like every season, CBS won’t make that happen. It’s like they don’t care.”

And, like the subject of racial justice in America itself, the subject of race on prominent reality franchises is not going to fade away.

Adams’ highly anticipate­d turn on “The Bacheloret­te” is sure to be closely watched, and “Big Brother” has already been renewed for its 23rd season, with the network saying in a statement that it “remain[ s] committed to a more inclusive casting process and expanding diversity on the show.” ( On Monday, after providing its statement for this story, CBS announced its commitment to 50% representa­tion for Black, Indigenous and people of color on its unscripted programmin­g by the 2021- 22 season.)

Such commitment­s, along with the casting of Adams — the second Black lead in three years — and Matt James, the first Black male lead in “Bachelor” history, will offer these venerable properties yet another opportunit­y to move forward the conversati­on about race on reality TV.

But from some observers of the genre, there is already skepticism.

“Reality TV has pretended to reflect reality in America, but it has been feeding us toxic ideas about race and gender since 2000,” Pozner said. “You can’t trust a chef that has poisoned a restaurant to serve a delicious dinner that’s completely healthy when that chef still has access to all the poison in the kitchen.”

 ?? Craig Sjodin ABC ?? “BACHELORET­TE” Clare Crawley and sweetie Dale Moss. The show left untouched any indication of the challenges such interracia­l couples face, expert says.
Craig Sjodin ABC “BACHELORET­TE” Clare Crawley and sweetie Dale Moss. The show left untouched any indication of the challenges such interracia­l couples face, expert says.
 ?? CBS ?? DA’VONNE ROGERS and Memphis Garrett on “Big Brother All- Stars.” Rogers, who aimed to be show’s f irst Black winner, was at center of a heated argument.
CBS DA’VONNE ROGERS and Memphis Garrett on “Big Brother All- Stars.” Rogers, who aimed to be show’s f irst Black winner, was at center of a heated argument.
 ?? Craig Sjodin ABC ?? MATT JAMES, originally on “The Bacheloret­te,” will be the f irst Black male lead in “Bachelor” history.
Craig Sjodin ABC MATT JAMES, originally on “The Bacheloret­te,” will be the f irst Black male lead in “Bachelor” history.

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