"In recent years, dating-show contestants have seemed less interested in an earnest search for 'the one' and more interested in the screen time necessary to garner enough followers to become full-time influencers," says Hanna Matyiku-Nuñez. "It’s the Rose Ceremony to the FabFitFun Box sponsorship pipeline. It seems, however, Love Is Blind contestants are there for the right reasons — or at least rightish reasons. (They did sign up for a reality-TV show, after all.) For starters, airtime is not guaranteed. We are not even introduced to all the contestants — if the pod experience ends with an engagement, Netflix might not even show it!" Matyiku-Nuñez adds that unlike other reality dating shows, villains don’t prosper on Love Is Blind. "Villains make great TV, historically," says Matyiku-Nuñez. "In most, if not all, other reality dating competitions, producers ensure baddies stay around long enough to create drama. It’s to the point where many dating-show contestants strategically play the villain role for screen time. It’s why season after season of The Bachelor viewers find themselves yelling at the TV."
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TOPICS: Love Is Blind, Netflix, Reality TV