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Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people
Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people

Sydney Morning Herald

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people

There's a fair bit to love about The Dating Game – the pearly-white smile of host Jim Lange, the groovy beat of Spanish Flea, the 'flower power' decals. It was also television's first ever dating game show, debuting in 1965. From there, however, it arguably goes astray. If the 'lucky girl' isn't asking the three anonymous bachelors what they would do if she ' squeezed them real hard ', she's wondering what their mothers would say if they discovered their son's body was deemed 'the eighth wonder of the world'. Sexual and superficial, these were the trademarks of retro dating shows like The Dating Game, Blind Date and Australia's Perfect Match. But perhaps even more concerning was the frequent objectification of contestants, particularly the women, as well as the serious lack of diversity and participant screening. After all, The Dating Game is where serial killer Rodney Alcala famously featured in 1978. To resurrect a show like this would require some serious reworking. But that hasn't deterred Conor Gallacher who, together with Melbourne-based friends Alex Reid and Xander Allan, created Human Love Quest, today's answer to The Dating Game. 'The old shows seemed to just involve a lot of cheesy answers, like they 'enjoy long walks on the beach'. Who actually says that?' Gallacher says. 'The things our contestants say are based in either the mundane or the important, but it's always based in some level of reality we can relate to … So, someone could ask what their last relationship taught them about themselves and then follow it up with the order they put on their socks and shoes.' Human Love Quest 's aesthetic and premise are nearly identical to the old-school shows – three hopefuls vie for the attention of one solo contestant who sits behind a partition. It even features Perfect Match 's Dexter the Robot. However, that's generally where the comparison ends. It began as a monthly live show at the Brunswick Ballroom, and has now evolved into a three-show extravaganza at ACMI. Gallacher says it's confessional in a non-exploitative way, and unlike the '60s iterations, it represents modern-day diversity, thus allowing any adult (regardless of gender, background and sexual orientation) to apply.

Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people
Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people

The Age

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Age

Dating apps be damned, this live game show is connecting real people

There's a fair bit to love about The Dating Game – the pearly-white smile of host Jim Lange, the groovy beat of Spanish Flea, the 'flower power' decals. It was also television's first ever dating game show, debuting in 1965. From there, however, it arguably goes astray. If the 'lucky girl' isn't asking the three anonymous bachelors what they would do if she ' squeezed them real hard ', she's wondering what their mothers would say if they discovered their son's body was deemed 'the eighth wonder of the world'. Sexual and superficial, these were the trademarks of retro dating shows like The Dating Game, Blind Date and Australia's Perfect Match. But perhaps even more concerning was the frequent objectification of contestants, particularly the women, as well as the serious lack of diversity and participant screening. After all, The Dating Game is where serial killer Rodney Alcala famously featured in 1978. To resurrect a show like this would require some serious reworking. But that hasn't deterred Conor Gallacher who, together with Melbourne-based friends Alex Reid and Xander Allan, created Human Love Quest, today's answer to The Dating Game. 'The old shows seemed to just involve a lot of cheesy answers, like they 'enjoy long walks on the beach'. Who actually says that?' Gallacher says. 'The things our contestants say are based in either the mundane or the important, but it's always based in some level of reality we can relate to … So, someone could ask what their last relationship taught them about themselves and then follow it up with the order they put on their socks and shoes.' Human Love Quest 's aesthetic and premise are nearly identical to the old-school shows – three hopefuls vie for the attention of one solo contestant who sits behind a partition. It even features Perfect Match 's Dexter the Robot. However, that's generally where the comparison ends. It began as a monthly live show at the Brunswick Ballroom, and has now evolved into a three-show extravaganza at ACMI. Gallacher says it's confessional in a non-exploitative way, and unlike the '60s iterations, it represents modern-day diversity, thus allowing any adult (regardless of gender, background and sexual orientation) to apply.

How to bring peace to Ukraine? Let Prince Andrew roam Mar-a-Lago like a peacock
How to bring peace to Ukraine? Let Prince Andrew roam Mar-a-Lago like a peacock

Telegraph

time24-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

How to bring peace to Ukraine? Let Prince Andrew roam Mar-a-Lago like a peacock

'Russia doesn't hold all the cards,' said Keir Starmer – for Europe still has a couple of jokers to play. One is Emmanuel Macron, in Washington to try to persuade Trump that Putin is, on balance, the bad guy. He brought along his wife, Brigitte, though if he thinks she'll help change Donald's mind, he's mistaken. The president doesn't go for older women. The other wild card – or very boring card – is Starmer, who imagines himself as a latter-day Churchill and courageously, historically joined a summit in Kyiv via Zoom. He was introduced to the audience as 'Keira Starmera', and stared awkwardly at the camera for 10 seconds, like Orson Welles waiting for a cue. 'Colleagues,' he eventually said – his way with language is extraordinary – Britain stands with Ukraine and will be raising the pressure on Russia! This means new sanctions on mink hats and, in lieu of an Army, we'll be tooling up Princess Anne and dropping her in by parachute. An aid package of 10,000 Paddington Bears – second-hand, we're not made of money – is also on its way. Many a failed PM has tried to rejuvenate their leadership with an adventurous foreign policy, and Starmer apparently believes America going Awol gives Europe a chance to rearm – led by Britannia. It's a worthy cause. But can we afford it? The question didn't come up during a low-turnout Commons statement that Reform declined even to attend (I turned on GB News to find out why but there were 'technical difficulties': a test card of Sam Fox in a thong to the tune of Spanish Flea). Des Swayne, God bless him, asked David Lammy if he would now refute his refutation of his earlier remarks refuting Trump as a 'tyrant'. 'This is a serious matter,' replied Lammy, speaking in a soft voice to prove it. The graver the situation, the closer it comes to a whisper. The consensus among MPs is that first Putin will come for Ukraine, and then for us – fulfilling Russia's historic ambition of occupying Surrey. Developments were reported to the House as they happened. The US had sided with Putin in a United Nations vote, which was disgusting… An alert told me Boris Johnson had called for defence spending to rise to 3 per cent, which was an important intervention by a political heavyweight (no doubt he was in a rubber ring in a paddling pool when he made it). Meanwhile, in the land of the free and very fat, the press conference, at which Macron would pretend to take Trump seriously and Trump would pretend to listen, was delayed. They were hammering out the finer details of where Ukraine actually is and, if they don't like the Russians, why don't they just move? The Macrons and Trumps reportedly get on well. Melania and Emmanuel, I hear, share a taste in hats. Europe's greatest weapons when it comes to America are surely our charm and our history, and we ought to deploy them better. Trump only talks to Britain because he loves the royals, so why not buy his support on Ukraine by selling him one? Prince Andrew is available. Let him roam free in the grounds of Mar-a-Lago for photographs, like a peacock on the lawn.

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