Surviving on a deserted island is hard. Just ask the participants of ‘The Island’. Or maybe don’t. Hosted by survival guru Bear Grylls, this show has a group of men showing off their wilderness skills on a remote island where they have to build shelter and find food and water. It’s obviously hard, but the show makes it look easier. By faking.
The production had to make sure the island had enough food and water for the duration of the shoot. As it turns out, they just created a freshwater pool and imported animals for the men to hunt. Survival is a lot easier when it’s fake.
The Amazing Race
Couples of various relationships and backgrounds go on a journey around the world and compete against each other in different challenges. The winning couple receives a very real million-dollar cash prize.
While the challenges and hardships in the show are genuine, there is some fakery going on in the casting process. For one, it seems to favor people who are already financially settled because otherwise, they wouldn't be able to afford to be away from work for the duration of filming. Unfair, but that's the way the cookie crumbles.
The X Factor
The songs are real, the singers are real (though we never know how realistic holograms can really be), the audience is real. Simon Cowell is definitely real. No one could make him up. However, there is something they don't tell you about the auditioning process.
The auditions you see on TV are essentially moot because the contestants are pre-screened with some 'filler' candidates for entertainment value and supposed credibility. Apparently, the elusive X factor is being pre-screened and knowing how to keep it on the down-low.
Alaskan Bush People
'Alaskan Bush People' follows the Brown family, who were supposedly born and raised in the Alaskan Bush. However, it didn't take long for contradictory reports to surface.
For starters, the family's neighbors told the media that the family has once lived in the modern Alaskan Icy Strait Lodge. Then there are testimonies stating that the family's so-called Bush home was only used for filming and they didn't really live there. And finally, the media has discovered that the Browns had lived outside of Alaska between 2009-2012, making their legal status as Alaskans questionable. Authenticity is out the icy window.
Made in Chelsea
No, not the Chelsea in New York, the one in London. Although it doesn't really matter because it's totally fake. That's right, all this drama of young people with too much money and time on their hands is as fake as Kylie Jenner's lips.
Former participants actually spoke against the producers and the way they script different happenings and create drama where there isn't any. One of them has even gone on record saying that they filmed fake dinners early in the morning. Sounds heavy on the stomach. And fake.