MovieChat Forums > The Bachelor (2002) Discussion > Why don't black guys want to do this sho...

Why don't black guys want to do this show?


Twenty one seasons and no black man has wanted to be the Bachelor, I wonder why that is.

Is it the women they choose?

reply

Have black men been asked to be The Bachelor and they all said no? I'm genuinely asking, I have no idea.


"Your petty vengeance fetish will have to do withOUT Mr. Groin!"

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

[deleted]

I think Jubilee would have had a good shot at being the Bachelorette if she had played her cards differently.

reply

Agreed. Wasn't she a war vet or something? The Bachelor demographic loves stuff like that. Unfortunately she had low self esteem and it just didn't work out. I hope she's ok.

The only reason I think they should go for more interesting backgrounds is cause it makes for a more interesting season lol. Everyone seems to love Bachelor Sean's season, and it was the most diverse one. My favorite contestant on that season was Selma Alameri. She was a knockout and was really funny when she actually got screen time. And she happened to be middle eastern.

Nick Viall seems like the type would will date women of different backgrounds, so we'll see how his season goes.

reply

[deleted]

Yawn.

reply

[deleted]

This is turning into my favorite season, actually.

I appreciate your passion and dedication in copying and pasting into every Bachelor board every day, even if I don't think it will ultimately have an impact on someone picking an Asian person.

reply

[deleted]

I feel like the producers just haven't offered the position to a black person. They didn't even want to give it to Caila.

reply

[deleted]

It has to do with ratings. Most viewers are white due to being a majority and are going to be more interested in watching mostly white folks. So unless there was a BET version of the show, it just wouldn't do well enough

reply

Agreed. Also, as far as I'm aware, no black contestant has ever made the final 4. I think if there was a really popular black contestant who came 3rd/4th in their season the producers might gamble. But until that happens, it won't happen.

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

black guys wouldnt put up with the whining and game playing...I was told by a black couple who watches with us..if some girl came up gossiping he would say" Babe I dont need this *beep* and cut her first chance he got.

reply

That's probably true.

It doesn't seem like black guys are as popular with the white ladies in the States as other parts of the world though.There's probably going to be a part pacific Island/part maori bachelor in the New Zealand version this year, the equivalent of a black guy I guess, and all the comments from people are that he's wayy better looking than the two white guys who were the 'stars' of the first two seasons.

reply

[deleted]

As a black man, I am not TV attractive but if I was, I would go to the casting calls and apply.

But also, as a black man I would be annoyed by manufactured and random drama. I would probably also defy the producers' picks to keep certain women for views (LOL, but I bet bachelors are legally bound by contract), and I am sure a couple of other non-black men would feel this way too.

But I am sure black men have applied for The Bachelor, and I am sure while producers thought considering a non-white bachelor, they know it will stir up a lot of online controversy...... like a black stormtrooper times five.... lol okay maybe not times five but we would see #thebachelor and #whitegenocide next to each other a lot on twitter......

reply

white America has no issue with watching a white man with black and other non white women, but raise bloody hell if they saw a black man making out with numerous hot white women.

ABC is basically a white supremacist network

reply

[deleted]

[deleted]

[deleted]

[deleted]

reported!

reply

The Bachelorette Continued Its Streak of Eliminating Black Contestants Early

by Liam Mathews | Jun 21, 2016 1:52 PM EDT

On Monday's fifth episode of The Bachelorette's 12th season, JoJo Fletcher eliminated Grant Kemp, the last remaining black contestant. The firefighter from San Francisco was also the last remaining nonwhite contestant. The season's other four nonwhite or biracial contestants had been eliminated previously. The eight remaining contestants are all white men.

Kemp's dismissal kept a notorious Bachelor and Bachelorette streak alive: no black person has ever advanced past Week 5. As Fusion reported, 59 percent of black contestants are eliminated by Week 2. JoJo's season started slightly more diverse than previous seasons, with five men of color in the cast out of 26 (there have been seasons of The Bachelorette with none). JoJo herself is half-Persian. But, unfortunately, the show reverted to form. The Bachelor is usually picked from the final four contestants, so if that tradition continues, the next Bachelor will again be white.


The franchise has had Latin stars and winners, and has had at least made cursory attempts to improve diversity. Creator Mike Fleiss has said that black people just don't audition for the franchise as often as white people. And since the week-by-week selection is based on the Bachelor's or Bachelorette's personal preference, the show's producers can't force him or her to choose in a way that fulfills a quota. The stars aren't even necessarily being racist. This season, for example, the black and biracial contestants -- Jake, Christian and Grant -- didn't appear to be proactive in their attempts to woo JoJo and didn't have strong enough personalities to earn a lot of screen time. The show can try to set up black contestants to succeed, but ultimately it comes down to the contestants and the star whether or not they advance.

That is, unless the show breaks tradition and casts a black Bachelor. That seems to be the only way the show can override its programming. UnREAL, the thorn in The Bachelor's side, already did it. Perhaps ABC and Warner Bros., the studio that produces the franchise, are hesitant to let a black man star for fear of alienating the show's predominately white audience that they worry may not relate to a black Bachelor.

But the producers need to give the audience a chance. They may be pleasantly surprised with how people react. And if ratings go down a little bit, A) the show will survive one down season and B) it will compensate with positive press. It's time for the franchise to step up. As The Wrap's Beatrice Verhoven and Rasha Ali deftly put it, "The Bachelor and Bachelorette are all about the fantasy of finding a perfect soul mate. When only white people are represented, the show sends a signal, intentionally or not, about who in our society is attractive and lovable."

Grant Kemp would be a good Bachelor. He's handsome and funny and charming. He may not be the best Bachelor ever, but let's face it, the best Bachelor ever isn't coming from JoJo Fletcher's season. He may as well make history another way. It was just announced that Grant will join Bachelor in Paradise this summer, so maybe that can be his chance to make a case for himself as the Bachelor. It probably won't matter, though, and the next Bachelor will be another bland white guy.

reply

[deleted]