logo
Love is Blind UK hosts: 'People are just sick of the swipe culture'

Love is Blind UK hosts: 'People are just sick of the swipe culture'

RTÉ News​20 hours ago
Netflix's hit dating show Love is Blind UK is back for a second season with husband and wife duo Matt and Emma Willis at the helm, who say the massive popularity of the series is partially down to people being jaded by online dating apps and "swipe culture".
The series began in 2020 in the US, where there have been eight seasons, and spawned a host of international spin-offs, including Brazil, Sweden, Mexico and Japan, with the UK edition premiering last year.
The second season of Love is Blind UK sees UK and Ireland-based singletons choose someone to marry "sight unseen" after a whirlwind period of dating in Pods, where an opaque wall separates the contestants.
Speaking to RTÉ Entertainment, Emma Willis, best known for presenting Big Brother, Celebrity Big Brother and The Voice UK, said she was "super excited" to be back for another run.
"I'm pumped and ready to see who walks down the aisle!" she said. "I love it. I feel like we're just peeping through the window of someone's personal life. It's great."
Her husband and co-presenter, Busted star Matt Willis, agreed wholeheartedly.
"You know, I think we're both very much into love," he said. "We love watching our friends fall in love. Emma's the matchmaking queen, if she can match anyone up, she will. So this is kind of a perfect job. It's just a really great thing to be part of."
"It's lovely to watch it in the flesh as well. We get to watch it all unfold," Emma continued. "We have the best job on in it really, because we see them at the beginning, we dip in along the way and then we see them again a year later to see how's it's gone and if they're still together."
The first season of the UK version of the series stood out as the contestants, for the most part, seemed to be in for the right reasons, and not, say, to achieve a certain type of overnight fame.
For Matt and Emma, what do they think draws people to apply for the show in their droves?
"The thing we hear again and again is that people are just sick of the dating world," Matt said. "It's a very different terrain out there to when I met Emma, you know, and I can't imagine it.
"And look, for some people, it's really working, some people are finding love on the apps and they definitely are a good thing. But I think a lot of people are just so sick of this 'swipe culture'.
"They want to find something true, want to find something real, want to know the other person wants it to. And this is that show."
"Going on emotion rather than visuals, I think it's something really special," Emma agreed.
The physical barrier of the wall really does seem to lead to intense bonds forming quickly between the contestants. It's something that's difficult to imagine as a viewer.
"There's something about that Pod," Matt said. "When we went in there, it's this glowing purple wall that you stare at and fall in love with. And I get it!"
"It's really calm and the air is warm, it's that kind of perfect temperature to make you feel comfortable and it's really peaceful," Emma interjected.
"There's no external noise. So when you think about yourself being in a pod where you could hear your own breath, it's like that. But the only thing you can hear is one other person. It's mad, really isn't it?
"Once you go in one, you can understand how they let their guard down, because you can't see any cameras either."
Despite becoming acquainted with the contestants, they weren't able to call who might end up together after the Pods.
"I was really surprised," Matt said. "I made a list of people, I started to match them up and had a piece of paper with lots of names written down. I got it way wrong! Nothing was right."
"Yeah but you've done that on visuals haven't you!", Emma teased.
"I try not to, you can't guess," she added. "You can't meet a bunch of people for the first time for 10 minutes and then look at their picture and go 'Oh, they're gonna be together, they're gonna be together.' Matt loves that game!"
As for what people might expect this season - the hosts didn't hold back.
"There is lots of beautiful romance, and there is drama," Emma said. "It's a gentle start and then it really kicks off. That's all I'm going to say."
"It's a slow builder," Matt observed, before promising plenty of "gossip juice".
"It's pure people watching, isn't it?" Emma commented of the enduring love for the series. "And I think there's nothing nicer than watching people fall in love.
"I know everybody likes drama and controversy, but watching a love story unfold in front of your eyes - that's pretty special. We all love rom-coms, don't we? Whether you admit it or not, this is like a very long rom-com."
And as for advice for anyone considering applying for the third season of the Netflix dating series?
"If you're apprehensive, just do it, give it a go," Emma said. "Please go in there with good intentions and be open, be open to the process. And be open to the person or the people that you're talking to.
"I know that is much easier said than done for some people but if you're gonna go into something like this then go in open and ready to immerse yourself."
"And I'd say don't play it cool," Matt added. "That's a killer piece of advice for most of life. Just show them who you are, don't try to be someone else."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Major blow for Amanda Holden as hit TV show is axed despite huge ratings
Major blow for Amanda Holden as hit TV show is axed despite huge ratings

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Major blow for Amanda Holden as hit TV show is axed despite huge ratings

NETFLIX dating show Cheat: Unfinished Business has been axed, despite being one of the most streamed shows on the platform. The glossy series, starring Amanda Holden and Paul C. Brunson, was filmed in Majorca, Spain and saw eight ex-couples who broke up because of infidelity head to a luxury retreat to work out their differences. 4 Amanda Holden has been dealt a huge blow as her glossy TV show has been axed Credit: Getty 4 Cheat: Unfinished Business has been given the boot by Netflix after just one series Credit: PA 4 She fronted the show alongside Paul C. Brunson Credit: Netflix However, The Sun on Sunday can now exclusively reveal that the show has been given the boot and won't be returning for a second series. A source said: "Despite Cheat being popular with audiences Netflix has decided to pursue new show formats. "Bosses love Amanda and are in talks with her on three different show ideas, so it's likely fans will see A lot more of her on the platform in the future. "They're trialling lots of shows on their entertainment slate and trying to find out what works." They continued: "Amanda is still very much one of the hardest working women in showbiz and is booked & busy for the foreseeable future. "On top of hosting the UK's biggest radio show Heart Breakfast every weekday, it recently overtook Radio 2, BGT auditions commence in October. "Plus, Amanda is currently filming Series 4 of Alan and Amanda in Greece while her brand-new prime-time quiz show ,The Inner Circle, launches on BBC1 in October." Meanwhile, Paul has had huge success with his podcast We Need To Talk, and making waves as a dating expert on Celebs Go Dating. A Netflix spokesman confirmed: "Cheat: Unfinished Business won't be returning." Amanda is currently enjoying a family getaway in Corfu, Greece - where she has been filming with Alan - and has been enjoying downtime with her two daughters - Lexi, 19, and 13-year-old Hollie. Watch the shock moment Love Island's Biggs admits to CHEATING on Rebecca - leaving her in tears on Amanda Holden's new Netflix show Lexi has been signed to Kate Moss's modelling agency Storm since she was 16, and has been seen on runways as she looks set to follow modelling as a career. Amanda previously opened up that she gets confused for the older sister of her two young daughters but admitted Lexie doesn't always appreciate the comments. 'I think they find it a bit embarrassing,' she admitted to The Sun in April. 'Lexi said that there are a lot of people at uni who make cheeky comments, which I find very flattering. 'Hollie doesn't really give a damn. But I do have to walk behind her. "She doesn't want anyone to know I'm her mother!'

Oasis fans in Dublin: ‘It was a lot of money but it's also a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing'
Oasis fans in Dublin: ‘It was a lot of money but it's also a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing'

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Oasis fans in Dublin: ‘It was a lot of money but it's also a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing'

Like many younger Oasis fans in Ireland, Eve Daly-Brennan and Alex O'Neill have their dads to thank for introducing them to the band's music. The pair travelled to Dublin from Cork for Saturday night's sold-out Croke Park show, having managed to nab tickets in the presale. 'I grew up with them,' Daly-Brennan says. 'My dad got me into the good stuff straight away, Rock 'n' Roll Star. This means the world. I've seen Liam Gallagher twice now.' Alex O'Neill (left) and Eve Daly-Brennan pictured on Grafton Street in Dublin before the first Oasis gig in Croke Park 'I've listened to them forever,' O'Neill adds. 'I went to see Liam last year because I never thought I'd get to see Oasis live. When she told me she got the tickets, I was dying. I was so excited.' READ MORE Standing on Grafton Street, O'Neill and Daly-Brennan had committed to the uniform of the day. Droves of concertgoers are easily identifiable in Oasis jerseys, T-shirts, jackets and bucket hats. Those in need of more gear queued for a pop-up Oasis merchandise shop at St Stephen's Green. 'What they can do when they come together is incredible,' O'Neill says. 'My dad would always talk about when he saw them in Cork. I was always so jealous and now I get to be the one up here.' 'My dad is going so it'll be an emotional one for the two of us,' Daly-Brennan adds. 'Live Forever has always been my number one. Some Might Say, Cast No Shadow, Talk Tonight – I'm going to be crying I'd say.' It will be an emotional occasion for many, and a particularly nostalgic one for long-time friends Jason Watson and Jimmy White. The former, sporting a Shelbourne shirt, lives in Dublin but grew up in London, where Watson remains. Jimmy White (left) and Jason Watson (right) 'In the 90s, I was big on the chart music and Britpop and the whole thing,' Watson says. 'It's just a throwback to them days really. Not just Oasis, but it reminds me of the bands that were out like Pulp and Blur. We used to have the battle of the bands in the charts and everything. It's just throwing it back to them days.' [ 'Seeing Oasis live in 1996 changed everything ... I changed my clothes, hair and walk' Opens in new window ] He added: 'Music is different now. Back then, we used to go to record stores and buy records. It meant a lot more. The charts were out every week ... It's being able to step back in time a little bit and feel like that again.' 'When I was at school I had the hair and I was in a band,' says White. 'It was everything growing up. It's sort of the soundtrack to my teenage years, so it'll be a bit of nostalgia today. The first gig I went to was in '97 and they were supported by The Verve, so it'll be repeated today.' Much has been made of the ticket prices for the tour, jokingly addressed by Liam Gallagher on the opening night in Cardiff when he asked fans if it was worth paying £40,000 for a ticket. There is a sentimental attachment to Oasis, however, that relegates any thoughts of overspending. 'It was a lot of money but it's also a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing,' White says. 'You can make back money later on when you're older, but you can't buy these times, can you? It'll be a shared moment.' 'I've got a mate who passed away unfortunately,' Watson says. 'He used to do a bit of singing and that in his local pub, and he liked Champagne Supernova. I think when that comes on it'll be a bit emotional.' For Kevin and Becky O'Brien, who live in Leicestershire, Oasis hold a special place in their personal history. 'We walked down the aisle after we got married to Wonderwall,' she says. 'My son sang it at the wedding.' Kevin and Becky O'Brien, who travelled to Dublin from Leicestershire for the Oasis gig Originally from west Cork, Kevin has been in the UK for the last 30 years or so. Wonderwall will be an obvious highlight of the show, but he is also hoping to hear Half the World Away, the theme song from sitcom The Royle Family. 'I remember Oasis back in the '90s when they first became big,' he says. 'I was there when they played support for R.E.M. in Slane back in '95 or '96. Even before they were the main headliner.' Matt Miller travelled farther than most to get to Croke Park. Hailing from San Francisco, it took an 11-hour flight for him to reach Dublin. [ Mother from Mayo, father from Meath: How Irish are Oasis? Opens in new window ] 'I figured the best crowd would be the Irish crowd,' he says. 'It's kind of a homecoming for the Gallaghers. Matt Miller flew 11 hours from San Francisco to Dublin to see Oasis 'I've been a fan since I was a kid. I never got to see them when they were together. Being in the US, we didn't get as many opportunities, I guess. I've seen Liam and I've seen Noel separately, but I've never seen them together. I was up until three or four in the morning waiting for tickets. I had to find a way to make it.' Oasis do have US dates lined up over the coming weeks, but Miller says the relationship with their music is different here. 'People know Wonderwall,' he says. 'They might know Champagne Supernova and Don't Look Back in Anger. Maybe those three, but that's it, so it was cool being at the pubs last night where everybody was singing all the songs.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store