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PLEASE NOTE: The Reality TV World Message Boards are filled with desperate
attention-seekers pretending to be one big happy PG/PG13-rated family. Don't
be fooled. Trying to get everyone to agree with you is like herding cats,
but intolerance for other viewpoints is NOT welcome and respect for other
posters IS required at all times. Jump in and play, and you'll soon find out
how easy it is to fit in, but save your drama for your mama. All members are
encouraged to read the
complete guidelines.
As entertainment critic Roger
Ebert once said, "If you disagree with something I write, tell me so, argue
with me, correct me--but don't tell me to shut up. That's not the American way."
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"Reality Blurred on the Bachelorette"
Erik Barmack 25 desperate attention whore postings DAW Level: "Beauty Pageant Celebrity Judge"
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01-10-05, 10:27 AM (EST)
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"Reality Blurred on the Bachelorette" |
This is from Reality Blurred (my favorite reality weblog): The Bachelorette 3 debuts tonight. The Bachelorette 3 moves the franchise to New York City as Jen Schefft starts her search for her soulmate. Again. We're supposed to, like, pretend that she didn't already find the love of her life on The Bachelor 3, get engaged, and then break up with him. "I was nervous about putting myself out there again. But I thought, why not try and see what happens? I'd regret not doing it," Jen tells the New York Daily News. Non-ironically, she adds, "It worked for me once, though it didn't have the happiest ending, but why not try it again?" So why are we stuck with Jen once again and not a fresh new face to make fun of? Creator Mike Fleiss says, "She was very popular , and we hope a lot of the people who liked her will watch her again." In his scathing critique of the franchise, The Chicago Sun-Times' Phil Rosenthal says that we'll hear about that endlessly: "You'll lose track of the number of times Harrison stresses that Schefft is 'America's sweetheart,' 'beautiful,' 'sexy,' 'one of America's favorite bachelorettes' and so on." About the franchise's viability and changes, such as its move to New York, Fleiss says, "There's been literally 18 copycat shows, almost identical copycats. As the people who created this genre, we have to pump new life into this." Whoa, pumping. Should be a good season.
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