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‘The Bachelor’ Producers Finally Address Racism Against Show’s First Black Bachelor

They admitted that the season with Matt James, the show's first Black bachelor, "went wrong on so many levels."

Producers of โ€œThe Bachelorโ€ are finally addressing the big racism elephant in the room. In a new interview with LA Times, the team behind one of the worldโ€™s biggest reality TV franchises acknowledges a โ€œvicious cycleโ€ of racism that has plagued the series and its subsequent spin-offs.

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As Variety points out, executive producers Claire Freeland and Bennett Graebner sat with the LA Times, admitting to the outlet that going 15 years without a Black lead added to an unfortunate culture on the series and in the fandom. โ€œItโ€™s hard to say out loud, that people of color didnโ€™t see themselves represented, that they did not see โ€˜The Bachelorโ€™ franchise as a safe place,โ€ Graebner said.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t have a Black lead in this franchise for 15 years, and thatโ€™s inexcusable. It created a vicious cycle, and itโ€™s taken a lot of work to get back to a place where we feel at least weโ€™re working for the positive.โ€

The producers specifically address the season starring Matt James, who was the first Black male lead of the series. In case you missed it, Jamesโ€™ season was set to make history for the franchise, but was plagued with various controversies as old pictures of the showโ€™s frontrunnner Rachael Kirkconnell at an โ€œOld South-themed fraternity formalโ€ resurfaced. The controversy broke the show wide open, with then Bachelor-host Chris Harrison stepping away from the series after receiving pushback for publicly defending Kirkconnellโ€™s past actions.

Specifically saying that they โ€œlet Matt down,โ€ Graebner explained, โ€œThat season went wrong on so many levels. We did not protect him as we should have. The finale of that season was the darkest day Iโ€™ve had on this franchise. Here was this great Black man, and we should have been celebrating his love story. Instead, what we saw was a man burdened and overwhelmed by issues of racism. It was really sad for me personally.โ€

Both producers confirm in the interview that casting another Black bachelor is a โ€œpriorityโ€ for them moving forward to โ€œcorrect mistakesโ€ from Jamesโ€™ season. The interview comes days before a brand new season of โ€œThe Bacheloretteโ€ is set to air, which features the first-ever Asian Bachelorette in the series.

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