Today, Explained - The Real Housewives of Today, Explained
Episode Date: August 30, 2023Taking cues from striking actors and writers, reality TV stars are lobbying for better treatment from networks like Bravo and Netflix. This episode was produced by Siona Peterous and Hady Mawajdeh, ed...ited by Jolie Myers, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by David Herman and Patrick Boyd, and hosted by Sam Sanders. If you liked this episode, check out Sam’s pop culture podcast Into It from Vulture and the Vox Media Podcast Network: https://bit.ly/intoit-tex Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained Support Today, Explained by making a financial contribution to Vox! bit.ly/givepodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, I'm Sam Sanders, and I'm guest hosting Today Explained.
Seeing a reality star on social media is not that unusual.
But a reality star on Instagram calling for her colleagues to unionize?
Well...
These are the ten terms that I propose.
Subject to modification, I did not buy the idiot guide to starting a union in 24 hours.
That's Bethany Frankel, OG Real Housewife, and now Labor Agitator.
The minimum should be $5,000 per episode.
Well, go off, Bethany.
Talent should receive a 10% raise each season.
Now, to be clear, Bethany is just one star, and that does not make a revolution. But a giant lawsuit calling for major changes to the way reality TV treats its cast and crew members,
that could end up forcing some big systemic change.
A reality TV reckoning.
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Today! Today Explained!
NBCUniversal received a letter.
It was from two high-powered Hollywood attorneys with scary reputations.
They were talking about a lawsuit, and they were lobbying some pretty gnarly accusations. In the letter, they allege that NBC has this pattern of, quote,
grotesque and depraved mistreatment of its reality stars.
They say, quote, that these individuals have been mentally,
physically victimized by NBC and threatened with ruin if they speak out about their mistreatment.
That's Claudia Rosenbaum.
I cover pop culture for Vulture, New York Magazine. In addition, I'm an attorney.
Claudia has been following the twists and turns of this case very closely.
And there's more in that letter. They accused NBC of attempting to manufacture instability
by applying cast members on the show with alcohol
while also depriving them of food and sleep
and denying them mental health services
and covering up acts of sexual violence.
There are allegations of revenge porn, fraud, false imprisonment.
When you see those kind of words in a letter,
as an attorney, what do you think happens next? Yeah, they're pretty severe allegations and,
you know, they haven't gotten into any specifics and they haven't said what shows they're referencing or what reality stars they're talking about. They've been pretty vague.
They're just saying, you know, we're doing an investigation.
But these lawyers could be talking about any number of reality stars.
Because NBCUniversal makes a lot of reality TV.
It owns Bravo.
So, you know, they've got the entire Real Housewives empire.
How do you know what's good for me?
That's my opinion! They've also got the below- Housewives empire. How do you know what's good for me? That's my opinion!
They've also got the below deck diaspora.
I've never heard of any yacht ever having a foam party.
Foam parties should probably just stay where they belong.
In 1997.
They got Project Runway.
Make it work.
Go, go, go.
And like a million other shows.
Also in BC Universal is a parent company of! and Oxygen and Telemundo, and you
get it. Lots of networks, lots of shows, lots and lots of reality stars. So far, NBCUniversal is not
saying much about this, but they have released a bit of a statement. NBC has said that they're
committed to maintaining a safe and respectful workplace for their
cast and crew on the reality show.
They say they've taken appropriate workplace trainings in place and any complaints have
been brought to their attention and they've investigated them and, you know, situations
have been dealt with and they provided medical and psychological support to cast members
if needed.
But the thing about reality TV is you can watch it,
which means you can see some of this stuff play out, like how an endless stream of alcohol
might put cast members in dangerous situations. There was this one recent episode on an episode
of Below Deck, Down Under. It's a Bravo show. This scene got a lot of attention.
The first thing I thought about when I got out of bed.
Money and alcohol.
So in this episode,
a crew member named Margo
gets trashed.
She's literally passed out
in her cabin.
Another crew member named Luke
walks into her cabin
naked,
gets in her bed,
and producers,
they intervene.
Open, open, open.
We can't do that.
We can't do that.
We can't do it. We can't do that. They kick Luke out of Margo's room and kick him off the whole show.
You need to get up, mate.
You need to go. You need to get off the boat tonight.
Really?
Yeah.
Like that night, he was asked to leave the boat.
And when he came back the next day, he was told that he was fired. You know, they did take swift action in that situation when, you know, there was something
so wrong happening in front of their eyes, they, you know, took immediate action.
So yeah, the producers stepped in here, but cast members getting wasted is a big part of this show.
It's baked in. It's like there's a yacht, there are crew members, there's booze,
which means dangerous situations are maybe almost baked into the show. This is the kind of thing
these lawyers are talking about. By the way, these lawyers, they're kind of a big deal.
Mark Garagos and Brian Friedman. Just so you know a little bit about Mark Garagos,
I mean, he's represented Michael Jackson, Winona Ryder, Chris Brown, Usher.
And Friedman has in the past represented Bethany Frankel, Diplo, and Chris Harrison when he was fired from The Bachelor.
Megyn Kelly when she was taken off her show.
So they're both familiar with these type of cases.
Now the backdrop to all of this is that TV networks and streamers like Netflix are having to lean really hard on reality shows right now.
Because of the writers and actors strikes, reality shows are cheap and easy to make and not subject to these strikes.
They don't need unionized actors or unionized writers to be made.
If it wasn't for reality shows, I don't know what people would be watching.
We just have The Bachelorette wrapped up.
In a matter of moments, I'm about to be the happiest person.
It's just crazy.
We've got new episodes of Below Deck airing.
We've got new episodes of Real Housewives of Atlanta.
I was shocked, honey.
I was in tears almost.
And it has a white refrigerator.
I was like, oh, not a white refrigerator. Girl,
please put your shoes on. Let's go find you a home, honey. Real Housewives of New York,
Real Housewives of Orange County. So there's like a constant slate of new reality shows,
while the other shows have been basically taken off the air. So if you want to watch something
new, you're turning to them right now. So reality TV is very important right now.
Maybe so important that the stars should get paid more?
The minimum should be $5,000 per episode.
Bethany Frankel, what are you doing here?
Talent should receive a 10% raise each season.
She's asking to get paid.
Frankel is about as big a reality star as you can get.
She's one of the original cast members of The Real Housewives of New York, and she has a brand, Skinny Girl, for the gal, guy,
they or them who likes their cocktails with a side of body shame. But her latest enterprise
is labor agitation. These are the 10 terms that I propose, subject to modification. I did not
buy the idiot guide to starting a union in 24 hours.
A union for reality stars.
Minimum pay, seasonal raises, residuals, a bunch of other things.
But the message here is that these shows make a ton of money,
and the cast do not.
You know, it's your life story.
So it's, you know, your life that you're giving them exchanged.
And they don't really have control.
Reality TV is heavily produced, heavily formatted, and it is a rough and tumble job.
Just ask anyone who's been successful in reality TV.
And you are not hiding behind the words of someone else where no one's going to bother you or cancel you if you say something in a moment of just being truly who you are
or make a mistake, you are completely and utterly always exposed and your life and career could end
in an instant by just one wrong word. Frankel says that countless reality stars have called
her up about the union and they've told her they are so down. But we are not getting a lot of other
manifestos on Instagram like Frankel's or outspoken support for the idea of a big lawsuit.
This might have something to do with another boogeyman of reality TV, the NDA.
One of the things that could be preventing people from coming forward and talking is around three weeks after Garagos and Friedman sent their original letter,
they sent a follow-up letter on August 20th to NBC counsel demanding that there are these contract
terms that are sort of like, in a sense, NDAs that are keeping some of these people from coming
forward and talking to them. And so they demanded in their letter that NBC
just make some broad sweep and release these people from these what they call illegal
nondisclosure agreements that they said are in place to hide civil and criminal wrongs.
So is a reality show reckoning actually on the way? A financial glow up for cast members?
Better protections for
cast and crews? We'll know more when this lawsuit actually drops, if it does, and we'll see if
Bethany can find power in a union. But the thing is, if reality TV does change, if it's fairer to
the stars, safer for everyone, is that the reality TV that we, the viewing public, actually want to watch?
I asked my co-pilot Claudia Rosenbaum all about this. And I asked because I wonder what actually
is the fix for some of the conceits of these shows. If the conceit of Below Deck is they're
stuck on a boat for weeks at a time, living and working together, and there's alcohol, is there any way to clean up that business model?
Yeah, and I don't know whether that's what people tune in to see.
I mean, when you're watching The Bachelor, if someone's drinking too much and saying crazy things, that's going to make the headlines of the show, and that's going to be what, you know, catches people's attention.
So it's part of what like draws in the ratings.
So it's a definite, it's difficult to figure out a fix.
Coming up, someone working on a fix.
He is a guy who worked on a reality TV show you may have heard of,
Love is Blind, on Netflix.
He actually was a contestant.
Nick Thompson, yes, that Nick.
He has stories.
After the break.
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Waking up in the morning, thinking about...
Today Explained.
Love is Blind on Netflix is huge.
A cultural juggernaut.
Perhaps because the premise is a little bonkers.
Welcome to Love is Blind!
The pods are officially open.
A bunch of single people hang out in these rooms called pods.
They talk to other single people from their pods.
They date them from their pods.
And the whole time, you don't get to see the person that you are ostensibly falling in love with.
There's something about your voice.
That's what everyone keeps telling me.
But until you are ready to propose.
You're holding
my mother's engagement ring.
Remind me,
how long was it
from the first conversation
with this person
to engagement?
So it's about 10 days.
Oh my God.
That's Nick Thompson.
He was on season two
of Love is Blind.
He got engaged and he got
married on the show. Now Nick has a lot to say about what it's like to star on a reality TV show.
And he wants everyone, the networks, the streamers, us, the viewers, he wants us all to do better.
So we talked to Nick about his experience. And I began by asking him what it felt like to show up to the house where they all were staying on that first day.
This is Nick. Who's this?
It's Trisha.
Hey, Trisha.
It all happened so fast.
Well, it's a set, so it's not actually a house.
But you live in an apartment.
So when you're doing the pods, you're actually just on set for like 18, 20 hours. And then you get sent back to
a hotel room. Stop in the hotel room. No, Nick. Yeah. They lied to me. I know I'm ruining everything.
I thought y'all were all just in like an apartment building for the whole time.
So, so like, tell me about this set and tell me what that was like and tell me what it was like
to go from a hotel room to a set for 18 hours a day? Exhausting.
You don't even know what day it is. You don't really know what time it is.
You're you're sort of shuffled around.
You don't have access to any technology or the Internet.
It's very isolating.
So when you first arrive, you go to set.
You're not allowed to talk to any of the cast members.
So you're already starting to be isolated.
You give up your phone, you give up your wallet,
give up your passport, you give up any money you have,
you know, any real form of identification or ability to be a consumer and purchase anything.
You're not given a hotel room key when you get sent to your hotel, so you're not allowed to leave
the hotel room without permission. You can't really comprehend what it's like to be isolated like that.
It's basically like solidary confinement,
and you're just stuck there with your thoughts.
So, you know, it's a slow build.
So when you get there, you're, okay, you can't talk to him.
Okay, give us your phone.
We knew we were gonna give the phone.
None of us knew we weren't gonna have our wallet
or any identification, which, I mean, imagine that.
Imagine it's like the Texas Chainsaw
Massacre. You finally get away from Leatherface and then you get a car that stops you and you're
like, oh my God, I've been held captive by a reality TV show, right? Like what's going to
happen if you leave? You literally can't leave. Did you ever expect before you went
onto Love is Blind that you would come out of that show
and that process comparing it to the texas chainsaw massacre
that's probably the most thought-provoking question i think i've ever answered
and they scare you into not wanting to leave either because if you leave during production
you owe them 50k in damages stop stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop. Are you serious, Nick? Netflix is going
to make you pay them $50,000 if you choose to leave your reality TV prison cell.
Without a producer's permission, yes.
Did you have any idea that that was one of the stipulations of your contract when you signed it?
I read the entire contract.
I had to have some amendments made.
Oh, yeah.
But when you're reading this contract, because it's so unreal and outside of the realistic life that people live, that you really don't even comprehend what these contracts are saying until you look at them in retrospect.
So, like,
for example, I knew I was giving my phone up. I did not know I was giving up my wallet. I did not know I'd have to give up all my credit cards and my IDs so that they don't tell you until you're
already there. What were the producers doing in the midst of this extreme isolation for all the
contestants? From before you even go on the show, your producers are treating you like
they're your friends and they're getting to know you. But what they're really doing is getting to
know what levers to pull, getting to know your triggers, getting to know your insecurities,
getting to know how they can get you to do the things that they have predetermined that they
want you to do. And so, you know, I think you get a little bit of the friendly vibe from that. They also don't want you to actually leave.
So they try to toe that line of warden and line of I'm your friend and I'm here to help you find love and find out what's best for you.
And, you know, I'm not going to manipulate you into saying or doing anything.
And then that's what their that's what their job is, quite frankly.
What was the worst thing the producers did to you, in your opinion?
They didn't do anything deliberately bad to me.
They were very damaging to Danielle.
I sat in the closet.
I locked the door.
I shut this and I sat in the closet and cried.
They were saying things to her, asking her questions,
like just killing her confidence and trying to exploit her insecurities.
And I mean, she had a panic attack in Mexico.
They made her look crazy.
They didn't tell me she had a panic attack and told me to go talk about the party I was
at with all the couples.
And she was just coming down from it.
I don't know, maybe an hour earlier.
Yeah.
I mean, it looked like you were having fun.
Looked like?
Yeah.
What do you think I was doing out there?
I was bored.
You watched it?
Yeah.
Well, I watched part of it.
No, no psychologist, no mental health expert, no one, just producers. But we were all struggling.
We were all struggling as it was going on. We were struggling in anticipation for an airing.
I think most of us were a little uneasy at the very least. But when you're filming,
you just don't realize it's happening because you're just slowly being chipped away from a mental and physical perspective because you're exhausted. You're
not sleeping right. You're not eating right. You're not getting exercise. It just takes its
toll on you because you start to wonder like what's real and what's not. And then you watch
the show back and it's like you're getting gaslit because you're like, that didn't happen that way.
I did not say that to that person. They left out context of that scene and that is that's a hard thing to to go through yeah one
of the things i've heard or read and i want to say it pertains to the show that you were on
was the amount of alcohol always around and the absence of other fluids like water what was going
on there so from the moment you get there all the way until
you're you're like on set when you're back home, like you, you have limited access to food and
water. It's definitely not at your discretion. But there's just always alcohol. And if there
wasn't alcohol, alcohol showed up very shortly thereafter. That was actually one of the
policies was that if if you're filming, there's alcohol available.
Wow. Wow. All right. I hear you saying all of this. There are going to be some people who hear
this and say, you signed up for it. This is a show about people being in pods, isolated to find love.
You saw the first season, they had alcohol there. People will
say since the days of the real world, reality TV has kind of worked with like alcohol and drama.
What do you say to folks who are just like, you know what, Nick, you signed up for this?
Here's what I will say. You, again, don't know what you're signing up for, right? You don't
realize what the isolation is going to do to you. You don't even know that you're not going to have adequate access to food and water. I mean, I'm also
very keen on the fact that you cannot sign away your basic human rights, right? I don't even
really have a lot of patience for the you signed up for it crowd anymore because you don't know
what it's actually like until you live it. How much did you make from doing the show?
$10,000 when you include After the Altar, which when you're in the pods equates to about $7.14
a minute or an hour. Nick.
I feel, you know, I feel like there needs to be a lot of change in this industry. And, you know,
as you alluded, all the way back to real world days, all the way back to, you know, and I've actually,
unfortunately talked to people from like talk shows in the eighties who have had
extremely similar situations where they're being put into scenarios or they're have no
idea they're getting into. So I think we need change. And that's kind of where I find my fire.
So I think we have to, we have to get some basic labor practices around these reality shows
because they're making billions of dollars. Love is Blind is the most watched reality show in the
world. And there's no residuals. There's no excess payment. They're pumping out two seasons a year
now. First and foremost, there needs to be lawyers that can review these contracts.
We have to get these contracts to not just completely benefit the production companies.
I mean, if you read these things, there's like 30 pages, mine's like 30 pages long.
And there's, like I said, 50K if you leave. I think one of the most important things we need
to do is actually support people in their mental health and wellness, because no matter what the
show is, it takes a toll on your mental health. You're making these insane life-altering decisions every day in a
pressure cooker environment. And so I think we need to have independent mental health support
before the show, during the show, and then after the show. People are dramatic in general. We'll
still have the drama. It's just maybe we won't damage people from an emotional or physical perspective while we do it. So you have a group organizing to help reality stars past, current,
and future. And I'm sure you've seen by now this legal letter about workplace protections for
reality show stars. Do you think we're on the cusp of some big change in the way these
companies treat reality TV contestants? I think it's coming whether they want it to come or not.
More and more people are obviously speaking out. And I think all of us coming together is going to
be what forces change in the industry, because the time is now for a variety of reasons. But
one of them is with Hollywood on strike, there's just more reality TV being produced.
And if there's more reality TV being produced, that means there's going to be more people
that are mentally and physically damaged coming out of these shows.
We're in this moment where we need to stand together, understand that we have rights as
human beings, understand that we are workers and we are making a plethora of cash for these production companies and we
deserve protections and rights and negotiating power and all sorts of you know typical labor
laws that somehow reality tv production has escaped that was nick thompson he got married
on netflix now nick helps run an advocacy group for people who are about to star, are starring, or have starred on reality TV.
It's called UCAN.
U-C-A-N.
They are pushing for a lot of the things that Nick has already talked about.
Plus, a union.
Nick, call Bethany.
Trust me.
Also, we reached out to Netflix and the production company that makes Love is Blind
just to see if they wanted to respond to any of this.
We didn't hear back.
Our show today was produced by Siona Petras, Hadi Mawagdi, and edited by Jolie Myers.
It was engineered by Patrick Boyd and David Herman, and fact-checked by Laura Bullard.
Also, listeners, I host another podcast I think
you might want to check out. It's called Into It. It's from Vulture. And we have an episode out
right now with the novelist Brandon Taylor. We talk all about how you write a book in the age of
BookTok and Twitter X. We also discuss his new book and why the book discourse in general just feels off. It's a fun,
smart, good chat. He's great. We're great. Go check it out. Into it. All right. This is Today Explained. you