Reality TV
Critic’s Notebook
The Cruel Abstraction of “Beast Games”
On a competition show made by the YouTube sensation MrBeast, the people are faceless and the challenges are vicious.
By Naomi Fry
Cultural Comment
How “The Boyfriend” Distills Gay Romance
The Japanese dating show captures friendship, heartbreak, and the perils of having a hot roommate.
By Simon Wu
The Weekend Essay
The Surreal Simulations of a Reality-TV Restaurant Empire
It’s a reunion every night at the “Vanderpump” establishments in Los Angeles.
By Naomi Fry
The New Yorker Radio Hour
Emily Nussbaum on the Beginnings of Reality TV
The staff writer picks three pioneering entries to the genre. “If you hate reality television,” she says, “I’m trying to talk to you.”
The Weekend Essay
How “The Real World” Created Modern Reality TV
The rules governing everything from “Big Brother” to “The Real Housewives” started three decades ago, with a radical experiment on MTV.
By Emily Nussbaum
The Political Scene Podcast
How the Reality-TV Industry Mistreats Its Stars
Lawsuits and the labor movement come to reality TV, by way of the Netflix hit “Love Is Blind.”
The New Yorker Radio Hour
“Love Is Blind,” and Allegedly Toxic
Lawsuits and the labor movement come to reality TV, by way of the Netflix hit. Plus, Ilana Glazer’s buddy movie tackles the realities of pregnancy, motherhood, and friendship.
On Television
Jerrod Carmichael Finds the Outer Limits of Confessional Comedy
Through an uncanny hybrid of access journalism and fourth-wall breaking, the comedian created an HBO series that was impossible to look away from.
By Carrie Battan
On Television
“The Contestant” Is More Than a Cautionary Tale
The new Hulu documentary charts the rise of one of the earliest reality-TV stars and the ethically queasy production choices that cemented his fame—but it’s elevated by its interest in what came afterward.
By Inkoo Kang
The New Yorker Interview
Alan Cumming Wants Us All to Let Go
The actor, author, cabaret performer, and host of the hit reality series “The Traitors” says, “I think American people, especially, are slightly ashamed of abandon.”
By Rachel Syme
Cultural Comment
“The Curse” and the Magical Thinking of the Speculative Economy
The Nathan Fielder–Emma Stone series is about whose predictions about the future go unchallenged and whose fates are decided as consequence.
By Jennifer Wilson
Dept. of Popular Culture
Bravo in the Flesh
More than a hundred and sixty reality stars descended on Las Vegas, for BravoCon, where they were pulled apart by their harshest critics, who also happen to be their most diehard fans.
By Doreen St. FélixPhotography by Sinna Nasseri
Cultural Comment
The Real Message of “The Real Housewives”
Since the show’s rise during the Great Recession, it has fulfilled a pedagogical role in women’s media. The lesson it imparts is: you better work, bitch.
By Jennifer Wilson
Postscript
Rubbernecking for Jerry Springer
He was sweeter than Howard Stern, realer than Phil Donahue. His coolness gave his show its plausible deniability.
By Doreen St. Félix
The New Yorker Interview
Prue Leith Can’t Resist
The judge of “The Great British Bake Off” offers thoughts on British food and British politics, plus a word about the “Mexican Week” episode.
By Helen Rosner
Shouts & Murmurs
Some Ways We’ve Made “The Kardashians” a Totally Different Show from “Keeping Up with the Kardashians”
Nannies will be given their own designer wardrobes. But make no mistake: they will still not be shown on camera.
By Tom Smyth and Leah Roth
Infinite Scroll
“Is It Cake?” and “Old Enough!,” Reviewed: Two Paths for the Netflix Reality Show
A trompe-l’oeil dessert competition and a showcase for Japanese toddlers milk drama from the thinnest of conceits, with varied results.
By Kyle Chayka
On Television
According to “The D’Amelio Show,” Being Famous on TikTok Sucks
In the Hulu reality series, Charli and Dixie D’Amelio live in a constant state of fear, overwhelmed by social-media hate and plagued by stress-induced psychosomatic pains.
By Naomi Fry
On Television
How “Bridgerton” and “The Bachelor” Coupled Romance with Race
In Netflix’s period drama, the racial element was cannily calibrated; in the reality-TV series, it threw the love story off course.
By Lauren Michele Jackson
Satire from The Borowitz Report
Trump Excitedly Accepts Democrats’ Offer to Star in New TV Show
The former President said that the “most amazing” aspect of his new show would be the number of networks broadcasting it.
By Andy Borowitz