All hail Queen Sam.
After forcing us to endure three seasons of the blatantly anti-feminist, yet highly addictive The Bachelor, Channel 10 has thrown the women of Australia a bone or fourteen by flipping the the show’s premise and putting a woman in charge of the rose pile.
The first episode of The Bachelorette premiered on Wednesday night on the network, with Australia’s newest sweetheart Sam Frost meeting her suitors for the first time.
Among them were the obvious hotties, including but not limited to, Dave the Plumber, an absurdly suave bald man named Alex, pro-footballer Michael, current favourite to win Sascha and super villian in the making male model David (now departed).
There were also the notties: Guy with bad hair and an owl, quirky/terrible musician Will (who is clearly just Ben Lee preparing to launch his comeback tour) and Shane, who arrived by skateboard in a Hawaiian shirt for some reason (also, now departed).
Missed last night’s episode? Read Rosie’s recap here.
After meeting and greeting her potential beaus, Sam spent a bit of one on one time with each of them at the cocktail party, laying ground work with some, while the others were forced to stand around, bristling with testosterone and bro-ing out with one another.
Honestly, it was nice change of pace from watching a group of uncomfortably dressed women forced to stand around, chinking champagne glasses and waiting for their moment with the cardboard cut-out that is every Bachelor to date.
For three cycles of The Bachelor, feminists Australia-wide have struggled to balance their conflicting love of bad TV with their discomfort at watching their sisters forced to compete with one another (in increasingly contrived and demeaning ways) for the affections of these guys:
Top Comments
I have to say I love both, but am enjoying the bachelorette more
But have you noticed that despite Sam's "authority" many of the men try to take charge of each encounter?