Looks like the US is having some major problems with their main man on the latest season of The Bachelor. Some major ‘everybody hates this Bachelor because he is a total douche’ kind of problems.
Juan Pablo is a Venezuelan soccer player with a young daughter, which is basically The Bachelor’s version of the man jackpot; sexy, exotic sports star meets sensitive single dad. Except then he goes and does things like call gay people “more pervert” and treats his doting selection of women on the show like total crap.
Social media has been buzzing with dislike for the current US Bachelor, but that hatred exploded even further this week when Pablo slept with with a woman on the show, then told her in front of the cameras that he regretted it and was disappointed that she had broken the ‘rules’.
The man dating (and making out with) several women at once, had sex with a woman then shamed her for being too slutty.
Everybody knows that The Bachelor is a show that has some weird issues with sex. The whole show is basically about parading 25 women in front of a man and having him test each one out until he selects his ‘perfect’ match. Sex is implied, but only on the show’s terms: towards the end, when there’s about three women left, in a ‘romantic’, rose-petal strewn ‘overnight suite’.
Clare, the ‘slutty’ contestant in question, decided to deviate from those unspoken rules. Here’s how it went down:
Juan Pablo had been showering her with almost exclusive attention all day. He made out with her in front of all the other girls, before inviting her back to his hotel room for some more making out in his pool. Feeling like she had something special going with him, Clare then decided to sneak up to Pablo’s hotel room in the middle of the night.
Top Comments
Tangent re comments below - if we're trying to address and change the casual use of words like 'slut', then why are so many women still comfortable calling a man a douche or a douchebag, as though feminine hygiene is something disgusting and abhorrent? These words also have power and shouldn't be used in a derogatory way. Using vagina-specific terms such as douche, douchebag, pussy and cunt as insults just reinforces the sense of shame that women are told they should have about their bodies.
Tangent re comments below - if we're trying to address and change the casual use of words like 'slut', then why are so many women still comfortable calling a man a douche or a douchebag, as though feminine hygiene is something disgusting and abhorrent? These words also have power and shouldn't be used in a derogatory way. Using vagina-specific terms such as douche, douchebag, pussy and cunt as insults just reinforces the sense of shame that women are told they should have about their bodies.
I think 'douche' is different - it refers to an outdated practice that is not hygienic, and is regarded by most people as a pretty dumb thing to do. Hence the insult.