I have heard some of the trashier reality shows will do things like blur somebody's underwear to make it look like they are naked.
Of course, some of them really are naked (Tai decided to strip on Survivor this season, and sometimes people's clothes accidentally get pulled off in some of the challenges).
And honestly, I think it'd cost way more to script these shows than to just point a camera at crazy people, incentivize them to yell at each other then edit them to tell a narrative.
The "clips" episodes of Big Brother are obviously scripted. I find it utterly impossible to believe that Evil Dick and his equally evil daughter, Danielle, would have just sat around the dining table and reminisced about their former housemates for an hour. They couldn't stand any of them, it was mutual, and they couldn't stand each other. So this sudden "Do you remember when so-and-so said/did this on Day 45?" (and then the clip follows) is so incredibly, obviously
fake.
I'm not disputing that reality TV is stupid, I just think that you're giving TV networks way too much credit by suggesting they could get hundreds of people to uphold their confidentiality agreements for that long. If the FBI can't keep a secret, you think Survivor could do it? I also think the actors they could get cheaper than regular ol' attention whores would be less convincing morons, and if you ever saw Joe Schmoe you know what I mean.
There's an interview on YouTube in which Jeff Probst mentions the idea they
briefly had for a "Celebrity Survivor" season. Of course it would ostensibly have been for charity, but I just can't see anything like that working. It's iffy enough when people like Lisa Welchel go on the show and pretend to not be a well-known former child actress. She only got away with it as long as she did because most of her tribemates were too young to remember
The New Mickey Mouse Club and
The Facts of Life. Some of the older players realized fairly soon, though. It was only at the end when it looked like the guy they voted off might out her true identity, from sheer spite.
I think it's most likely this. One way to look at it is that producers are looking for drama, so they'll pick some that might have talent, some that might just be passable, and those that are terrible and they put all that in a melting pot and let it simmer. The votes might just be a tiny part of it that they use as leverage for that drama.
To use the Dragon's Den/Shark Tank as an example, the ones to get deals are very few compared to the ones that don't. Some barely get by , some look like they're about to get a deal and blow their chances, some are presented as laughing stocks. And that's on top of all the auditioning they do for appearing on the show when they do auditioning tours. They pick a bit of everything in order to make it entertaining.
Even with those that do end up getting deals, some end up falling through on them as we learn in some updates. The "reality" here in this sense are the products actually making it on store shelves and the stories there are genuine. Those that don't end up making deals always end up finding a way after appearing on the show due to exposure. The success stories are fairly inspiring. We have at least two local people that have presented on the show that have made deals, one of them mining lunchboxes and the other, women's mining overalls.
Gah. I wonder how much of Kevin O'Leary's ridiculous wannabe-Prime Ministerial ambitions his American audiences have heard about. He dropped out of the CPC leadership race too late to keep his name off the ballot, so some twits will waste votes on him.
I was in London Drugs a couple of months ago and happened to glance at some of the boxes in the breakfast cereal aisle. One of the clerks pointed at what I was looking at and said, "That was on Dragon's Den!". I told her I'd never buy anything with such a revolting name (it was rather disgusting, and no, I don't remember what it was; I just wondered WTF the marketing people had been thinking when they chose that name).
Sounds interesting.
The Amazing Race is about the only RTV show I have really gotten into. I think I got into that show about the season when they had that midget lady as one of the racers.
We have a thread going about the current seasons of Survivor and The Amazing Race.
They're over this week, but Big Brother is starting next month.
Of all the CBS 'reality' shows, I think The Amazing Race comes closest to being completely unscripted. Some of the contestants on that are just too nasty and stupid and compass-challenged to not be genuine.
There's someone I know on another forum who would be so perfect for the Canadian version of The Amazing Race (Canadians aren't eligible for the American shows). He's well-traveled, isn't afraid of either heights or eating weird food, and loves interesting new experiences. No luck yet in nagging him into it, but maybe some day...