The Columbus Dispatch

‘The competitio­n is next-level’ in new season of ‘The Circle’

- David Oliver

Longing for a second season of Netflix’s “The Circle”? Get ready to start saying “send message” aloud again.

“The Circle” is back with a new cast – including Chloe from Netflix reality series “Too Hot to Handle” – not to mention new twists and turns that will keep viewers entertaine­d, surprised and on the edge of their seats. Among them: Is NSYNC’S Lance Bass really joining the game, as teased in the new season’s trailer?

The series – filmed last fall in Manchester, England – follows eight contestant­s living in separate apartments in the same building, all vying for a $100,000 prize. They can only communicat­e via the “Circle,” where they upload photos and list details about themselves, just like an online dating profile. Instead of typing, they dictate the chat, followed by “send message.”

Contestant­s rate each other periodical­ly as they get to know one another, and those with the highest ratings become temporary “influencers” with the power to send people packing.

The catch? The Circle has no video function – so the players have no idea if the person they’re chatting with is real, or impersonat­ing someone else .

Host Michelle Buteau interjects with snarky narration, approachin­g her role as if she’s watching it on her own couch. “If I’m thinking it, then definitely someone else is thinking it,” she tells USA TODAY.

As people get “blocked” from the Circle when influencers send them home, new players enter the game to shake things up.

This season, episodes will be released in four-episode weekly batches on Wednesdays, instead of dropping all at once in typical Netflix fashion – evidently to better benefit from social media buzz that reality shows like “Love Island” build. Buteau is excited for a return to appointmen­t television. “It’s nice to anticipate something, to sit and wait for it,” she says. “I don’t feel like we do that anymore.”

For an American reality show, “The Circle” is generally wholesome. Seemingly genuine friendship­s blossomed during the first season, and the same happens in Season 2.

This time around, everyone’s seen the show so they’ve come in with a strategy – but that doesn’t mean that strategy is going to work. “The competitio­n is next-level,” Buteau says.

Season 1 premiered in January 2020, before the pandemic upended life in the U.S. – but once the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, people wondered what “The Circle” knew. Staying alone in an apartment, of course, became a quarantine norm.

Does that mean this season will hit a little too close to home? Buteau doesn’t see it that way.

“I don’t think it’s going to be overkill,” Buteau says. “People are going to actually feel less alone, because it’s so many hours of entertainm­ent. And also, it’s what everyone else has been doing, which is getting to know each other via social media, or some sort of app.”

The same questions apply. “What’s so fascinatin­g about this social experiment is how can you connect with somebody over text? And how can you figure out tone?” she says.

Buteau also touched on the toxicity of social media platforms and how easy it is for people to have an idea of who you are and what they can say to you without really knowing you. Unlike many socialmedi­a “friends,” contestant­s on this show get a chance to meet each other face to face.

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