Orlando Sentinel

Reality TV gets real in ‘Golden Bachelor’ finale

Show’s life affirming, wholesome illusion shattered in ending

- By Meredith Blake

When “The Golden Bachelor” opened in September, featuring a 72-year-old widower named Gerry Turner on a quest to find the next great love of his life, it promised that a kinder, gentler version of reality TV was not only possible, but that it could also be a hit with viewers looking for some uplift.

The show became the breakout show of the strike-depleted fall season, drawing the biggest “Bachelor” audience in years, and was — counterint­uitively — especially popular with younger viewers who seemingly couldn’t resist a show about frisky seniors who believed that romance was possible at any age.

It also became a cultural sensation, thanks to a groundbrea­king portrayal of people over the age 60 who were attractive and adventurou­s with perspectiv­es shaped by profound life events. Turner and the 22 women trying to win his heart were not exactly representa­tive of the average American eligible for Social Security, but that was the point. With a gloriously abundant head of hair, a passion for pickleball and a preternatu­ral gift for making eye contact, Turner was framed as a unicorn: a kind, sensitive, emotionall­y evolved older man who’d experience­d tremendous loss but only grown from it, and he seemed to contradict every eye-rolling “OK, Boomer” stereotype.

The accomplish­ed, uniformly well-preserved women he dated were arguably an even bigger draw, particular­ly as they bonded in the “Bachelor” mansion. Despite its inherently contrived premise, “The Golden Bachelor” felt life-affirming and strangely

wholesome.

Then came the finale — in which Turner proposed to Theresa Nist, a 70-yearold widow who, like him, had married her high school sweetheart — and the illusion was shattered.

It all began when Turner told Leslie Fhima, a 64-year-old fitness instructor who had appeared to be his favorite for weeks, that he planned to move forward with Nist, a stock trader. It was an abrupt turnaround from days earlier, when Turner professed his love for Fhima and referred to her, adoringly, as “my girl” — giving every indication she was going to be his pick for the final rose.

“So everything you told me the other night was a lie?” said Fhima, who proceeded to launch into one of the most gut-wrenching, bracingly honest reality TV monologues in recent memory.

As Turner tried to console Fhima, who had opened up to him about

the lingering pain of two divorces and being cheated on by multiple partners, she lashed out.

“No offense, I can think whatever the (expletive) I want right now,” she said, angry tears streaming down her cheeks. “My heart’s broken once again but now I have to do it in front of the world, and see once again how broken I am, how no one chooses me. You didn’t choose me once again. The other night you made it sound like you chose me. You said things to me that made me think this was going to be it. You led me down a path and then you took a turn and left me there and that’s how I feel.”

She said it was “mindboggli­ng” that he’d reiterated his love in the fantasy suite, then changed his mind less than a day later, during his date with Nist. “How much can a girl take, really?” she asked, speaking for every woman who has ever found herself unceremoni­ously jilted.

Fhima slammed Turner as a disingenuo­us player but, more memorably, she reminded viewers of the unavoidabl­e cruelty of a show where people only occasional­ly find true love, but someone always gets dumped. And it often happens in spectacula­r fashion, while wearing a lavish gown and expecting a romantic proposal.

“The only good thing is now I don’t have to walk down in that $60,000 dress with the diamond earrings and get on that platform and be completely embarrasse­d,” said Fhima, who confronted Turner about his awkward demeanor during their final night together, prompting him to confess he’d made up his mind and sparing her the added humiliatio­n of going through the final rose ceremony. It was a small mercy, but it may not be enough for many viewers to forgive Turner, who looked utterly shell-shocked by the entire exchange, or feel especially excited about his upcoming wedding to Nist, which is scheduled to air live Jan. 4 on ABC.

Never mind that Fhima, a former aerobics champion who once dated Prince was objectivel­y too cool for Turner, who lives in tiny Hudson, Ind., (population: 500) and has a singsong voice many people have likened to Barney, the purple dinosaur, and dressed like he was perpetuall­y ready for a night out at Margaritav­ille.

Or that Turner, like so many “Bachelor” stars before him, turned out to be not quite as perfect as producers led us all to believe. A day before the finale aired on ABC, the Hollywood Reporter published a story suggesting his reality TV portrayal was deceptivel­y positive. Rather than mourning his wife and living as a monk since her death in 2017, the report alleged, he had dated and lived with another woman for more than a year.

That “The Bachelor” put such a positive spin on Turner should be surprising to no one who is even remotely familiar with the show.

But there is something especially brutal about “The Golden Bachelor,” and it’s the very same thing that made the show so appealing to begin with — the fact that the contestant­s are so much older, have been through so much, and have so much more to lose. Having your heart broken on TV when you’re 25 and own little more than a few houseplant­s and can quickly move on with a few swipes on Tinder is one thing; it’s quite another when you have grandchild­ren, a lifetime of romantic disappoint­ments behind you and are facing the looming reality of your own mortality without a partner by your side.

In a live segment of the finale, Fhima sat with Turner for the first time since their breakup in Costa Rica and confronted him about what she saw as his duplicity. She laid out a damning case against him, saying he had said things behind closed doors that made her “100% certain that I was his girl.” When Turner offered a tepid explanatio­n for his behavior — saying, basically, he got carried away in the moment — she said she understood, but would not accept, his apology. Though graceful and composed, Fhima refused to pretend she was OK with being misled — and it was exhilarati­ng to watch her dispense with the humiliatin­g convention­s of reality TV. #TeamLeslie members are already rooting for her to become the first “Golden Bacheloret­te,” and she would no doubt make an appealing lead. But ABC has yet to actually announce plans for a female-centered spinoff.

If Turner wasn’t so much a unicorn as a perfectly average horse in a convincing disguise, then who needs 22 more impostors?

 ?? JOHN FLEENOR/WALT DISNEY COMPANY ?? Gerry Turner sits with Leslie Fhima as she meets his family on “The Golden Bachelor.”
JOHN FLEENOR/WALT DISNEY COMPANY Gerry Turner sits with Leslie Fhima as she meets his family on “The Golden Bachelor.”

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