7 reality shows that turned out to be wrong
Reality TV is the guilty pleasure of every modern person. Unfortunately, like most things in life, some of these shows have become fake later.
Reality TV is the guilty pleasure of every modern person. We slave to work, go home at our comfortable sofa with this glass of white wine that is just the right temperature and examines a ridiculous reality program to realize that our life is really not filled with drama or crazy. This helps us put things in perspective, and it's just a really good pleasure.
Unfortunately, like most things in life, some of these shows have become fake later. This can go from a simple boost of producers to sharp scripting events, but it's a bit disappointing anyway. Let's take a look at shows of reality that are not as real at all.
1. PIMP my turn
As much as we want to believe that one day Xzibit will take our old Shabby cars and renovate them at ridiculous levels of Street Swag, some former candidates have had something to say about the makeover of cars. Provides that cars are renovated only very superficially and that the actual machine and technical failures are left intact. Sometimes cars come home even with more technical failures than with. Ouch!
2. Hell cooking
Let's start with good news: Gordon Ramsay's colorful explains are 100% authentic. Which is not authentic, it is the circumstances around the spectacle itself. Participants have often been organized to total insulation and forced to work long hours to artificially increase their stress levels. As they were monitored 24/7, this increased the chances of juicy dramatic scenes. And now, you know how sausage is made.
3. PIONS STARS
We all know this store since the innumerable memes that it has engendered and the biggest hook of the series is essentially people who think they have struck gold with random objects they have found about it is almost almost nothing. Sadness is that these transactions are struck in advance in advance and people who sell their objects already know the price they will get when they feel the contract. Thus, while the disappointment on the show could be wrong, our disappointment in the show is all the more real.
4. Catfish: the TV show
Just like the internet relationships that the inhabitants of this show have, the show in itself is not quite honest with us. While the show stems from the idea that they are contacted by people who are chased and trying to find the catfish, it is often the opposite. It has been made public that producers are not rarely contacted by the person who makes the cat (alleged), only to find and contact the victim.
5. Cradle MTV
This hurts so many ways, but yes, the cradles of MTV have also been staged. In fact, most houses presented in cradles were rented by MTV. Sometimes the real owners have not even known that their houses were going to be on the show! Some celebrities also took the rental of someone who they knew for the show because they did not even have a house or have a house in the neighborhood at that time.
6. Hunters of the house
You will probably think that it is difficult to simulate anything on a real estate show where families must decide between three houses, but in fact, even that is often a lie. Sometimes one of the houses has already been acquired by the participants and it is enough to slap the other two houses on that to give you the illusion of competition. Producers have admitted this to speed up the process and actively throw participants who already have a home. Some of the houses they add, are not even selling in the first place. It's a right scam.
7. The bachelor's degree
Yes, dear readers, even love can be a lie. Online of what you are probably waiting for a television show on reality, a former participant has claimed that the selection of the baccalaureate of the potential love of his life is mainly based on the daughter's assessments in question with the public . Think of a famous or extravagant person, and not the actual clove of the relationship relationship. I guess when everything falls, the thing we like everyone else is a good TV that gets high assessments, right?