Has anyone here ever seen this show? The premise was shocking, and I saw the first season, or at least a lot of it. They have 'experts' match up people as potential spouses. I've seen bits and pieces of later seasons since streaming services became available.
For the first season, I noticed they got a couple of 90th percentile for good looks women on the show for the brides. I figured they would do that to guarantee looks would not be an issue. I can't really tell with the men. The 'experts' they had were a psychologist, sociologist, and 'religious adviser'. The religious was a humanist, which isn't even a real religion.
Recently, I started watching one of the seasons. Now, the main expert is a pastor. They keep showing him over and over again saying these couples are going to have to decide whether to stay married or to get a divorce. I find that rather shocking for a pastor to say-- to keep suggesting divorce as an alternative. Maybe it's editing, but he says it in clips, too. He's like the main 'expert' on the show. They got rid of the psychologist. You'd think for secular experts, a psychologist would be the way to go. They keep the sociologist. That's okay, but that seems a little less likely to be directly related to matching couples, IMO. She meets with the people, too. Is she supposed to be a 'clinical sociologist'? I don't think that's a thing. And one of the matchmaking experts is a sexologist, too.
You look at the people they match up, and a lot of them are really nice people. But this season has a hothead who was just engaged, and it turns out the ex-fiancee was pregnant. So he goes into the marriage with a baby momma. They couldn't tell he was a hothead or do a little digging to find out if someone was engaged two months before when they match people up? They could ask if anyone had had sex in the past 9 months as criteria for matchmaking.
I also notice that divorce is an option for some of these people. Why would the experts bother to match them up? And one of the men they matched up was divorced? Matching someone up with any kind of divorce history without telling the other party is a grave offense, IMO. I haven't seen them match any single parents up. Maybe that crosses the line, even for the 'experts.'
The pastor seems like a nice guy personality wise, but he sure does not seem to have an aversion to suggesting divorce. I would also be offended if I were the couples and someone basically gave my partner permission to divorce me because they were the 'experts' who matched me up. I'd tell them that I was in a marriage, not an 'experiment'-- that such terminology was demeaning, and then ask each one of them, "Do you want to divorce your husband?" "Do you want to divorce your wife? Do you want me to go meet with your wife and suggest she divorce you?"
If they were going to do a crazy show like this, and they cared more about keeping the people together, they could do something like include the parents in the decision making so someone who really cared, had a vested interest, and maybe knew a little bit about the bride or grooms type and deal breakers they didn't think of and get some input. They could even include siblings and friends. The couples would also go in with buy-in from family, which could create a different dynamic.
They also have people who aren't attracted, physically, to their partner. The pastor tries to convince them that attraction will grow. About looks, they started casting more regular folks for looks over time. Looks are so objective and are a big deal for a lot of people. So they would either have to really screen people carefully to make sure they care nothing about looks or else get model-looking people and make sure they fit the other partner's type. I generally liked the looks of women deemed by society to be attractive by the most part, but in the early '90's when I became an adult, I did not find Jamie Lee Curtis to be attractive, and I did not think that Julia Roberts was that pretty to me personally, or Cindy Crawford. There were certain people's looks that just didn't match my own tastes as far as attraction goes. I think a lot of people can be quirky about looks they find attractive or unattractive.
What I don't get is why people trust 'experts' with such a poor track record to put their marriages together. A slight majority agree to stay together at the end of the show, but I think overall the divorce rate is higher than that of the general population. Wikipedia says, "Over the thirteen completed seasons of MAFS, 49 couples have been matched. 29 of them (59%) chose to stay married on Decision Day, out of which more than half have since divorced, filed for divorce, or announced their divorce. As of December 2021, this left only 12 couples married, making for a current overall success rate of 24%." That's pretty lousy.
For the first season, I noticed they got a couple of 90th percentile for good looks women on the show for the brides. I figured they would do that to guarantee looks would not be an issue. I can't really tell with the men. The 'experts' they had were a psychologist, sociologist, and 'religious adviser'. The religious was a humanist, which isn't even a real religion.
Recently, I started watching one of the seasons. Now, the main expert is a pastor. They keep showing him over and over again saying these couples are going to have to decide whether to stay married or to get a divorce. I find that rather shocking for a pastor to say-- to keep suggesting divorce as an alternative. Maybe it's editing, but he says it in clips, too. He's like the main 'expert' on the show. They got rid of the psychologist. You'd think for secular experts, a psychologist would be the way to go. They keep the sociologist. That's okay, but that seems a little less likely to be directly related to matching couples, IMO. She meets with the people, too. Is she supposed to be a 'clinical sociologist'? I don't think that's a thing. And one of the matchmaking experts is a sexologist, too.
You look at the people they match up, and a lot of them are really nice people. But this season has a hothead who was just engaged, and it turns out the ex-fiancee was pregnant. So he goes into the marriage with a baby momma. They couldn't tell he was a hothead or do a little digging to find out if someone was engaged two months before when they match people up? They could ask if anyone had had sex in the past 9 months as criteria for matchmaking.
I also notice that divorce is an option for some of these people. Why would the experts bother to match them up? And one of the men they matched up was divorced? Matching someone up with any kind of divorce history without telling the other party is a grave offense, IMO. I haven't seen them match any single parents up. Maybe that crosses the line, even for the 'experts.'
The pastor seems like a nice guy personality wise, but he sure does not seem to have an aversion to suggesting divorce. I would also be offended if I were the couples and someone basically gave my partner permission to divorce me because they were the 'experts' who matched me up. I'd tell them that I was in a marriage, not an 'experiment'-- that such terminology was demeaning, and then ask each one of them, "Do you want to divorce your husband?" "Do you want to divorce your wife? Do you want me to go meet with your wife and suggest she divorce you?"
If they were going to do a crazy show like this, and they cared more about keeping the people together, they could do something like include the parents in the decision making so someone who really cared, had a vested interest, and maybe knew a little bit about the bride or grooms type and deal breakers they didn't think of and get some input. They could even include siblings and friends. The couples would also go in with buy-in from family, which could create a different dynamic.
They also have people who aren't attracted, physically, to their partner. The pastor tries to convince them that attraction will grow. About looks, they started casting more regular folks for looks over time. Looks are so objective and are a big deal for a lot of people. So they would either have to really screen people carefully to make sure they care nothing about looks or else get model-looking people and make sure they fit the other partner's type. I generally liked the looks of women deemed by society to be attractive by the most part, but in the early '90's when I became an adult, I did not find Jamie Lee Curtis to be attractive, and I did not think that Julia Roberts was that pretty to me personally, or Cindy Crawford. There were certain people's looks that just didn't match my own tastes as far as attraction goes. I think a lot of people can be quirky about looks they find attractive or unattractive.
What I don't get is why people trust 'experts' with such a poor track record to put their marriages together. A slight majority agree to stay together at the end of the show, but I think overall the divorce rate is higher than that of the general population. Wikipedia says, "Over the thirteen completed seasons of MAFS, 49 couples have been matched. 29 of them (59%) chose to stay married on Decision Day, out of which more than half have since divorced, filed for divorce, or announced their divorce. As of December 2021, this left only 12 couples married, making for a current overall success rate of 24%." That's pretty lousy.
- 1
- 1
- Show all