This year, we’ve seen a marked shift in the reality TV we’re watching.
While home cooking juggernaut My Kitchen Rules has had a stranglehold on the Australian public since, well, what feels like forever – this year it’s sliding at an alarming rate, to a rival program about fake marriages.
Channel Nine’s Married At First Sight‘s metro audience has climbed a massive 16.6 per cent in 2017, while Seven’s MKR has shed more than 20. So… why?
The explanation is both simple and slightly mind boggling.
A show with faux weddings feels more authentic than a show about ‘real people cooking real food’ right now.
A quick glance at the MKR Facebook page proves this point; longtime viewers have grown frustrated with the show’s heavy tilt towards concocted feuds, and are voicing that MKR no longer feels like a family-friendly food show, but a scripted and sensationalised drama.
Perhaps this was a deliberate decision made by a production team keen to meet high ratings targets, to deliver a show high on confrontation and low on substance, or perhaps the air of transparency has crept in slowly and surprisingly, only reaching an obvious level now.
Regardless, one thing is apparent: MKR‘s current format appears to be an alchemy of reality and fiction, and while that may pay off instantaneously for shallow plot lines, in the long run it’s pissing off loyal fans in droves.
LISTEN: The Binge discusses MKR. (Post continues…)
“I feel for the judges,” one viewer, Jo-Ann, writes on the show’s social media platform. “They are required to sit there and listen to all this crap because that is what the producers want. The producers of the show think controversy is the only way to attain ratings and have fallen off the premise of the show… manufacturing and promoting bad sportsmanship and general childish behaviour is not doing the show any favours.”
“This show has fallen a long way from its original season,” writes another, named Saxt.