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Reality TV Glows Up

New York magazine

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October 12-25, 2020

Docuseries are television’s latest prestige offering, but they’re not so different from their trashier predecessors.

- By Kathryn VanArendonk

Reality TV Glows Up

THERE’S A SCENE IN HBO’s NXIVM-cult docuseries, The Vow, that turned my initial idle curiosity into absurd, all-consuming obsession. At the end of the first episode, a former cult member named Mark Vicente gets emotional in the middle of a talking-head interview as he describes how NXIVM destroyed the early, tender part of his marriage. “I feel like my life with Bonnie was stolen,” Vicente says. “Bonnie got there first.” He’s referring to her realization that the organization they had devoted their lives to was a cult. Then, without any warning, the show skips back in time to an earlier moment of rupture between the couple, when Bonnie laid out her concerns about NXIVM to Mark. “There’s a lot of things I’m starting to see about the organization,” she tells him, while Mark tries to talk her off the ledge: “C’mon, boo. C’mon, c’mon.” “I think some things are going to crumble,” Bonnie says.

Cut to closing credits.

I was so compelled I let my kids’ breakfast oatmeal congeal in the pot behind me while I watched. This, I realized, is the way producers on The Bachelor would have told this story. That sounds gross and bad! A thoughtful docuseries about human vulnerability and the search for meaning being reduced to the mega drama of a reality dating-competition show? That move, though—the talking head and the cut to the scene as it unfurled with no demarcation between them, followed by the punch of an episode ending—that’s a reality-TV classic, a bread-and-butter edit for a Real Housewives meltdown. In its documentary sensibility,

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