I used to watch, "The Bachelor," and, "The Bachelorette," as well as their spin-offs, religiously. Eventually, I grew tired of the franchise's predictability. Besides occasionally dipping my toe in the metaphorical franchise pool once in a while when something looked interesting ("Golden Bachelor,") I simply drifted away from the franchise to other shows. A lot of people seem to share the same story, with it not being any particular scandal the franchise weathered that made them quit (and there were some big fiascos, just ask former host Chris Harrison if that NDA he signed for a big paycheck ever expires), they simply were bored. Perhaps that is why the latest season of, "The Bachelorette," was designed from the start to tweak the formula and outright break some rules. Someone who had never been on the show (that has happened with later seasons of the Bachelor version) and was, in fact, known for different reality series (that has not happened) would be the Bachelorette. A woman named Taylor Frankie Paul. Popular on, "The Secret Wives of Mormon Housewives," she was the first Bachelorette lead to have a wrap sheet due to a, "2023 arrest, in which she ended up pleading guilty to one count of aggravated assault, per the local Salt Lake City Fox affiliate. She took a plea agreement, which dismissed two counts of domestic violence in the presence of a child, a class-A misdemeanor charge of child abuse, and a misdemeanor charge of criminal mischief...That 2023 incident kick-started her Mormon Wives career, as it was chronicled on the very first episode of Hulu’s reality hit. But then it resurfaced in the news cycle last week via a leaked video." Oh no.
TMZ released a video from 2023 that showed, "Paul engaging in violent behavior toward her ex-boyfriend, Dakota Mortensen. The video captures Paul putting Mortensen into a headlock and kicking him. She is then shown throwing three stools at Mortensen while a child cries in the background. Mortensen tries to comfort the child, but Paul refuses to let him." The fallout from this resulted in ABC canceling this 22nd season of, 'The Bachelorette," a mere three days before its scheduled premiere. The whole show had been filmed, edited, the post-production was done, and a lot of money had been spent only for a metaphorical collapse inches from the finish line of making it to air. There were ads running with clips from the show being broadcast already. Hell, they still have magazines at Target on the shelves promoting the show as I snapped a picture of today:
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| "She's Not That Innocent," turns out to be weirdly prophetic. |
This is a PR mess for ABC and a monetary fiasco. Oh, and the fifth season of Paul's original Mormon Wives show has paused development for now due to an apparently recent incident of her engaging in domestic abuse towards Mortensen, yet again, after, "The Bachelorette," finished filming. Is ABC really going to flush the whole season down the drain and take a big loss, or possibly try to present it with disclaimers? Is this simply the end of the, "Bachelor/Bachelorette," franchise as we know it due to a last-ditch effort to inject some life, turning out to be a deadly concoction, instead?
I, personally, don't think ABC will give up completely on Bachelor Nation, as even with this latest shitshow, there is still way too much money to be made. ABC played with fire, picking someone who already came with controversy, and got burned/had this blow up in their faces. The network can try and lean into this, making the show less about fairytale romance and instead focus on flawed individuals looking for love (they aren't role models), or try and run in the opposite direction towards the veneer of wholesome, "I'm only here for the right reasons!" kinds of love that even diehard fans ain't buying after this many years of broadcast. Hell, maybe in the end this scandal could somehow help. Lord knows I'm suddenly more interested in watching Taylor Fankie Paul hand out roses (and possibly uppercuts) than I was a couple of weeks ago due to all the hubbub.





















