 
                            
Love Is Blind, Netflix’s latest foray into televised social experiments, posits whether or not it is possible to fall in love with a person they have never seen before. It’s an intriguing thought exercise, a fun scenario to discuss at dinner, but not necessarily the best idea to execute. “We live in such a connected and distracted world,” host Nick Lachey says, standing rigidly next to his wife, Vanessa. “But everyone wants to be loved for who they are.”
It is not a radical act to state that human beings want to be loved for who they are and not just what they look like; however, ensconcing 30 willing participants in a facility somewhere in the Atlanta metropolitan region and seeing if this is actually true is, at least at the outset. The 30 participants, all of whom seem to be very, very interested in the notion of finding their forever person and willing to do so on television, lock themselves in pods and speak to their prospective future life partner through a wall. After 10 days of interacting with strangers, the couples in question have to decide whether or not they want to get engaged. If they do, they get to stay—and also see the person they’ve been communicating with through a wall. If not, their time is up, and that’s the end of that.
There is something sickly and sweet about wanting love so badly that you would willingly go on this show to prove it.
The first few episodes are genuinely interesting television, only because there is something so admirable about the participants and their vulnerability, feigned or otherwise. There is something sickly and sweet about wanting love so badly that you would willingly go on this show to prove it. But, there is also something more important to be said about caution. “At this point, I can see both of them being my husband, which is crazy,” a contestant muses early on in the beginning. Yes, it is. It doesn’t make a lick of sense. The transformative power of love is one thing, and I understand that human beings are hardwired for connection, but I also believe that if you say that you love someone who you’ve only spoken to through a thin wall, that might not be the whole truth.
Unlike other reality TV dating shows, the setup of Love Is Blind leaves little room for strategy. The fact that these people are speaking to each other through a wall at the outset and not in front of a well-trained production crew means that they are at least attempting some form of honesty. But the time constraint forces the couples to pair up quickly, just so that they can see each other. Watching near-strangers profess their love over the span of a tightly edited few days brings to mind the heady feeling of dating apps, where small talk is merely a precursor to the in-person meeting: trusting another human being with whom you’ve only engaged in flirty banter that they won’t dismember you in an alley, or even worse, just not show up.
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