Guilty Pleasure: UnReal, the Fake Reality Show

UnReal Season One comes out on DVD (plus Digital HD) on January 26.03139823232280_z_unredclu
A very long time ago, before reality TV was called “unscripted,” before story producers tried to join the WGA to get the same respect from Hollywood as the rest of Hollywood, before it was a genre that got any respect at all, I met a reality TV producer at a party. At the time I was a young video producer, making the behind-the-scenes looks into films that you now see as bonus features on DVD’s and YouTube. I hated reality TV.

I asked her “How long do you think this fad will last?”

She laughed, even though I wasn’t kidding. “Forever, I hope. I need to pay my rent.”

The joke, obviously, was on me because that’s how I eventually paid my own rent. I have never enjoyed watching reality TV as most people think of it: dating shows and real housewives and Kardashians don’t interest me in the least. But on the few rarely-watched shows that I produced in some capacity, I was happy to take a paycheck, even if it meant working grueling days and overnights and dreaming in Avid tracks.

UnReal is a scripted series – let’s make that distinction very clear – that dramatizes the lives of the crew and cast involved in making a hit reality show. I was hooked after the first episode’s opening scene.

In a busy control room at the “Bachelor”-like mansion that is the set of the fake reality show “Everlasting,” the executive producer barks orders, the AD’s repeat her, the crew spins into action, and thus a new season of America’s favorite dating competition begins. Meanwhile, all the side-eye and wisecracking of the crew is the focus here, and that’s a world I lived in for not very long, but long enough that someone yelling “Speed!” makes me shut right up so I don’t ruin the take.

Now that reality TV is so entrenched in our culture, and thousands and thousands of shows have been produced since its beginnings, enough people have worked on, are working on, or know someone who is working on or has worked on a reality show that there’s a nice target audience built right in for UnReal. But the storytelling is strong and melodramatic enough that the series can be entertaining for any watcher, even those far removed from the weird subculture-within-a-subculture that is reality TV, or if you’re being precious about it, “unscripted.”

There are love triangles, cattiness, first-class manipulation, lack of sleep and meals of potato chips, diet soda, and booze. There are also story lines about mental illness and suicide, eating disorders, race, feminism, mortality, and unwanted sexual advances. Naturally. No show I ever worked on was as dramatic, but who wants to watch a true-to-life drama about producers locked into little rooms watching 36 hours of footage to find one  nugget of action that will make it on air? The truth is boring. UnReal is not.

The stars of UnReal are Rachel and Quinn, a field producer and her seasoned boss, who manipulate each other as hard as they work the contestants on their reality show. The best scenes in the entire first season include the ones in which Quinn coaxes the super-bitch out of Rachel, who still has enough of a conscience to make her the show’s relatable hero. “I need my dragon well-rested,” Quinn tells Rachel, as she takes her off the clock and sends her to bed.

There’s plenty of sex and partying, but I couldn’t help wondering how Rachel and other crew members managed to get in the mood, exhausted and stinking as they must have felt after back-to-back 16-hour days.

I guess it’s youth. And also, it’s not real. That’s what makes UnReal so delicious.

UnReal
Season One
DVD – $26.98 from Lionsgate
January 26

Celebrate National Popcorn Day With Gaslamp Popcorn! [giveaway]

popcorn day

In celebration of National Popcorn Day, Gaslamp Popcorn has offered a free shipment of popcorn to a lucky reader of Agoura Hills Mom! My family tested the product out before I accepted, of course, and the results were immediate and obvious:

 

kids with gaslamp popcorn

Everyone loved it. The family favorite was the Kettle Corn flavor, but I also loved the White Cheddar. And, confession: I had to stop working on this post to go and get some popcorn and eat while I wrote. Looking at the pictures made me hungry, and there was a bag of Gaslamp Popcorn’s Cinnamon Caramel Popcorn still burning a hole in my pantry!

 

gaslamp popcorn bowl

Gaslamp popcorn was originally made in the actual Gaslamp district of San Francisco. It’s gluten-free and non-GMO. Gaslamp Popcorn can be purchased online or at your favorite Ralphs, WinCo, Safeway and Vons now!

gaslamp popcorn

You can win your own shipment of Gaslamp Popcorn here! Just leave a comment on this post – one entry per family please – and a winner will be chosen at random and notified by email. How are you celebrating National Popcorn Day? Entries accepted from now until 11:59 PM on Monday, Janary 25. Good luck!

All images except the one of my crazy kids are courtesy of Gaslamp Popcorn

This Isn’t Your 80’s Carmex

Remember Carmex, those little pots of medicine-y lip balm that you’d carry around in your backpack in the wintertime when the air was cold and dry, because your sensitive skin made your lips extra susceptible to getting chapped? And the way you got used to that medicine-y smell and taste and started to kind of crave it a little, and feel out of sorts when you realized you left it in your locker or at home?

original carmexJust me?

Huh. Well, even if you’ve never heard of Carmex before, if you’re a person with lips, you should try it. It’s all modern and fabulous now, coming in tall thin tubes with great decoration on the outside.

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In fact, my kids both really liked the less girly tubes and each one claimed a tube for himself. Both of my boys get pretty chapped lips, so I’m glad.

The flavor has had an update too – it still has that Carmex-y scent, but they’ve added aloe, vitamin E, and shea butter to a soft vanilla flavor. Carmex Moisture Plus also has an SPF of 15. These are available for $2.49 per tube at drugstores.

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I received a glam care package to facilitate this feature. All opinions and obsessive lip balm applications are my own.