The E! Networks’ ‘Famously Single’ brings together sever celebs who haven’t yet met their match and tries to set them up with various romantic prospects. Or so the producers would have you think.
The show features the stars’ dates, recaps, and therapy sessions to help maintain the feeling of reality. However, the celebrities aren’t exactly talented actors, and the dramatic happening depicted in the show are often artificial. Artificial and fake.
Big Brother
CBS's 'Big Brother' is the ultimate reality show. It features strangers in a house with 24/7 cameras and different weekly challenges and public eliminations. Too bad it isn't real.
Well, to a certain degree. Yes, the participants are being constantly filmed, which makes completely faking it a little hard. However, the footage used in the regularly scheduled episodes is edited to favor some of them. Only viewers who subscribe to the nonstop online stream were able to get the full picture and context and spot the fake themselves.
Wife Swap
'Wife Swap' was incredibly popular. Not only did it have multiple seasons with a massive following, but it also had a spin-off show with four celebrity seasons. The format involves two households swapping matriarchs with viewers watching the dramatic conflicts ensue.
Changing house rules for a family is bound to create some conflict, but the producers amped those conflicts, according to past participants. Production meddling has gone as far as targeted editing and even showing supposedly married couples who weren't partners in real life! We call fake.
Cribs
Back in the day, MTV dominated the reality show market by coming up with various reality shows that involve celebrities and their insanely luxurious lives. 'Cribs' ran for more than a decade, and featured the houses of many popular entertainment figures.
However, a woman named Janette Verla sued MTV after her leased house was promoted as Ja Rule’s fake crib. They may be luxurious, but they’re also very fake.
Fixer Upper
Producers of 'Fixer Upper' weren’t going to risk investing much time and resources only to fail at finding a house for their participants. Most of the show’s houses were already purchased before filming began, but it gets even worse.
Homeowners were reportedly required to pay extra to keep their new furniture, and the production team often skipped renovating various rooms for the sake of cutting down expenses. Now that’s a fixer-upper and a fake one at that.