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Reality Show Contestants Are Speaking Out About The Real Effects Being On TV Had On Their Mental Health
Reality Show Contestants Are Speaking Out About The Real Effects Being On TV Had On Their Mental Health,Reality TV can look like fun, but isolation and high pressure situations can make the experience unforgettable for the wrong reasons.

Reality Show Contestants Are Speaking Out About The Real Effects Being On TV Had On Their Mental Health

Recently, some contestants from Netflix’s Love Is Blind have started speaking out on how participating in the series impacted their mental health, and not for the better.

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“I kind of had no go-to at all, and I wasn’t really that happy,” she said. “I never thought I’d be able to get out of this dark place I went to. It was really hard. It was a very weird experience, and I never thought I’d be able to get better.”

Mark R. Milan / GC ImagesAfter seeking help, she was prescribed an anti-depressant, sharing, “When I sat down and talked to them, we together pulled out the target points that triggered everything off, and unfortunately, that was from going on Love Island.”   

2. When Tully Smyth appeared on TV Blackbox in 2022 to talk about getting the villain edit in her 2013 season of Big Brother.

Sam Tabone / WireImage

While she celebrated improvements to the show’s process, she noted that her first time on the show was “horrendous,” adding, “I had no support. … I had to reach out to the producers and tell them I was going to find my own psychologist, and they were going to be paying the bill. ‘You caused me all this drama. You can pay for it… you did this.'”

Casey Steele / WireImage

3. The Bachelor‘s Clayton Echard told the Arizona Republic he “desperately” needed therapy a year after his stint on the show.

Craig Sjodin / ABC via Getty Images

“I (had) a therapist from the show. And I got one pretty quickly from the time that I asked for it. I think (producers) realized, like, how badly I needed it,” he said. “There are resources (offered by the show), and I won’t say there’s a lack. The only thing I’ll say is that I just think that it’s sad that it’s almost like you need it.”

John Fleenor / ABC via Getty Images

“I needed it desperately,” he continued. “And I’m like, I don’t like the fact that we’re getting inpiduals to a point where they desperately need it.”

4. Chelsea Vaughn had a similar experience as The Bachelorette in late 2020, with her season airing in 2021.

Paul Archuleta / Getty Images

“I had never felt like I’d experienced symptoms of depression before the show,” Vaughn told Arizona Republic. “I was not diagnosed ever — still to this day — but obviously, I’m aware now I have anxiety, and I probably had a little bit beforehand. But it was like, if I had a little before the show, maybe it was 5% — and after the show, it was 95%. Like, it was a very large, drastic change.”

Bryan Bedder / Getty Images for Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation

5. Singer David Archuleta has talked about how his time on American Idol impacted his relationship with his dad and his mental health, telling Yahoo! Entertainment that competing “has its own kind of PTSD that comes with it.”

Christopher Polk / Penske Media via Getty Images

Noting he started working with a therapist that specializes in reality TV contestants, Archuleta continued, “You’re basically a character on a TV show, and parts of it are worked so that it fits the TV show — but they’re using your personal life. So, you become this character, but it’s with your own name, parts of who you actually are, but other parts that are portrayed in a way that you’re not actually. Then everyone feels like they know you, and they know what you are, and they know how to treat you, and have certain expectations. … This was years ago, right? But there’s still certain things about us that we still had certain little tics that we’re paranoid about certain things. … Eight, nine, 10, 11 years later, we’re still kind of stuck in some of those patterns of thinking.”

Paul Morigi / WireImage

6. America’s Next Top Model Cycle 12 contestant Aminat Ayinde slammed her time on the show as “traumatizing” after she alleged she was forced to use a hair relaxer she knew she was allergic to because it was “what Tyra wants.”

Donna Ward / Getty Images

Ayinde told Insider, “This is when I understood: Tyra doesn’t give a f–k. The whole thing really left the most disgusting taste in my mouth. And honestly, I lost all respect.”

Matthew Eisman / WireImage

7. Australian Survivor contestant Matt Tarrant opened up on Reddit about his mental health experience in 2016.

Comment byu/MattTarrantAu from discussionThe Experience of Survivor Players Suffering from Mental Illness. (What is it like for them?) insurvivor

8. Season 8 RuPaul’s Drag Race contestant Thorgy Thor talked about how increased visibility after competing on the show can add to the mental pressures that come with a career in drag.

Amanda Edwards / Getty Images for Discovery, Inc.

“I personally have dealt with major depression and anxiety my entire life. But I’m very vocal about it,” they told HuffPost. “I’ve come to a point in my life where when things become a little too much, it’s time to take a step back.”

Imeh Akpanudosen / Getty Images

“Look at what we do for a living! Every day, all day — we never sleep, we perform, people expect us in the subway to ‘turn on the fun’ when we don’t feel like it or we’re just shopping at the grocery store,” Thor added. “You have to be on all of the time! Especially within a gay spectrum as an entertainer, you go fucking crazy. But you have to know when it’s enough.”

9. America’s Got Talent winner Grace VanderWaal said she’s “definitely faced the mental repercussions” of life in the spotlight after her win.

Amy Sussman / WireImage

“I’m human, and obviously things hurt sometimes,” she told E! News of negative social media comments. “I feel like I’ve been doing this for so long that you get desensitized to hate online. I went through a ton of hate online when I was really young. I’m happy it happened, though, because it prepared me for this life.”

Jesse Grant / Getty Images for Disney

10. Anastasia Miller, who competed on Real World: Portland and later The Challenge opened up about the mental health impact during a 2021 episode of Mike Lewis’s podcast.


MTV

“It’s not necessarily the source of the problem, but I don’t think it helps people who are sick,” she later concluded.

Do you think there needs to be changes to how reality TV treats its stars? Let’s talk in the comments.

The National Alliance on Mental Illness helpline is 1-888-950-6264 (NAMI) and provides information and referral services; GoodTherapy.org is an association of mental health professionals from more than 25 countries who support efforts to reduce harm in therapy.