Saying âI doâ to official âBacheloretteâ spoilers
When the 12th season of âThe Bacheloretteâ premieres Monday night, some fans of the reality-romance franchise wonât be experiencing Joelle âJoJoâ Fletcherâs journey for the first time.
Call them the spoiler-savvy.
âThe Bachelorette/Bachelorâ franchise is âreally the only reality show out there that is getting spoiled accurately and on a consistent basis, season in and season out,â said Steve Carbone, who in his seven years of running the spoiler website RealitySteve has become almost as much a part of #BachelorNation as its rose ceremonies and âmost dramatic moments ever.â
What fans of the show have been experiencing for the first time this year is a sort of âofficialâ spoiler feed courtesy of Mike Fleiss, creator of âThe Bachelorâ and âThe Bachelorette.â Since production started in mid-March, the show runnerâs more than 61,400 Twitter followers have been getting fairly regular photos from and observations about Fletcherâs season.
Among Fleissâ behind-the-scenes tidbits: âIt was a fantastic Night One!!! JoJo was amazing!!!,â âNot sure what it is about JoJo, but Iâve never seen so much mancryâŚâ and âFeeling very good about JoJoâs chances of finding true love!!!â Pictures have included JoJo in a bikini on a beach, JoJo wrapped in a blanket on an airplane and JoJo in a flannel shirt, hanging out with a horse â or maybe it was a donkey?
Among the more eyebrow-raising tweets from @fleissmeister? âJust saw JoJo... Never realized that she has such a gorgeous figure. What a bonus!!!,â âJoJo is putting on her makeup. Not that she needs itâŚ,â and âNice ass.â (Please let it have been a donkey).
âI think heâs just having fun. I think itâs interesting,â said Courtney Robertson, the woman whom Ben Flajnik proposed to on the 16th season of âThe Bachelorâ and who was labeled a âvillainâ during that cycle. Fleiss is âkind of like a big kid,â she added.
So is Fleiss trying to sate the publicâs hunger for spoilers, or has he just been generating buzz for Fletcherâs new season? Carbone says the latter.
âHeâs really not giving anything away,â the blogger said. âI look at it as, heâs just trying to generate interest in his show during the off-season.â
One example of a major spoiler: On Feb. 15, viewers of âThe Bachelorâ Season 20 officially learned which four women would be going on hometown dates with bachelor Ben Higgins; readers of RealitySteve had known the names of the final four since Carbone published them online on Oct. 28.
And that makes Carbone persona non grata. âObviously, the franchise hates Reality Steve,â Robertson said with a chuckle. âThey go above and beyond to protect not only the showâs secrets but the final reveal.â
With âThe Bacheloretteâ in production, Fleiss was not available for an interview, an ABC spokesman said.
Any show that’s about human behavior and double-crossing and hubris, its value is not about the result, it’s about the process.
— Nicholas Christenfeld, psychology professor at UC San Diego
Spoilers can come from sources or from social media. When the franchiseâs recognizable lead and his or her (eventually recognizable) suitors are on location, regular people notice. And they do things like take pictures and post them on social media.
Robertson had an example from her season. âThere were 20 of us traveling through airportsâ with a cover story that they were part of a volleyball team, she said. As instructed, they had their first and last names in big letters on their luggage â until one day the producers told them to strip the name tape off their bags immediately. âThey figured it out,â she said. âThatâs how they were spoiling.â
But perhaps the producers need not worry so much. According to Nicholas Christenfeld, a professor of psychology at UC San Diego who has researched the role of spoilers relative to literature, the leaked tidbits could just as easily be called enhancers. âAny show thatâs about human behavior and double-crossing and hubris, its value is not about the result, itâs about the process,â Christenfeld said.
Of course, fans of âThe Bachelorâ and âThe Bacheloretteâ know that the franchise is, if nothing else, all about the journey.
While he didnât have data specific to reality TV, Christenfeld said that when people know whatâs going to happen in advance, their enjoyment can be enhanced by âseeing how they trick you, how they set it up â youâre in on the game now.â
Tipping the cards is nothing new after all and often meets with a measure of success. There are movies people watch over and over again and enjoy each time. And the plots of Shakespeareâs plays are well known, Christenfeld said. âIt doesnât remotely ruin it for you.â
And as for Fleissâ foray into the spoiler arena? âThis,â Robertson said, âtells me heâs excited about this season, and he is trying to build expectations.
âAnd ratings.â
Follow Christie DâZurilla on Twitter @theCDZ.
âThe Bacheloretteâ
Where: ABC
When: 9 p.m. Monday
Rating: TV-14-L (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 14 with an advisory for coarse language)
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