Before that happens, the season needs something controversial to entice viewers. The villain sometimes seems self-aware. When I started seeing headlines like Maneater, Shameless Seduction, etc.. Pictured: Flajnik proposes to Robertson in the finale of season 16 of "The Bachelor.
She and her Bachelor Ben Flajnik broke up while the show was airing, a fact the tabloids gleefully discovered when Flajnik was photographed with Jennifer Love Hewitt. Flajnik has, in interviews, blamed the producers for their breakup. Seeing Robertson portrayed as the antihero, he claimed, soured his affection for her.
That said, Robertson knew she might ruffle feathers going into the experience. She also thinks the show needs a villain to thrive. It would be impossible. Logo text. Related Stories. Rambling Reporter How One of L. All Rights reserved. Like, this last one is basically a law. To the point where it's pretty clear ABC goes into the show with a villain in mind, and then proceeds to give them ye olde villain edit.
You know, making them look as bad as humanly possible though sometimes they just kinda suck on their own , keeping them around for way too long, the usual.
But do Bachelor and Bachelorette villains even know they're villains? Not always. Season 16 villain Courtney Robertson who, unlike other villains, actually won The Bachelor didn't see it coming When I started seeing headlines like Maneater, Shameless Seduction, etc But sometimes, Bachelor and Bachelorette villains do realize ahead of time they're going to get that edit and just lean the hell into it for fun.
And I think that makes for good television. Like everyone else on this list, he made it clear early on that he was not on the show to make friends. He made it all the way to the final episode and proposed to Jillian, but then rumors began to swirl that he had been cheating on her the whole time, and eventually, he admitted to them.
He claimed he was acting the whole time, which, sure, bro. She earned villain status throughout for her frequent tiffs with other contestants. He argued constantly with the other contestants and was accused of being too into himself and his modeling career and not into Becca enough. The dude clearly had commitment issues. Sorry, nope, not done talking about him. Juan Pablo was so bad that Andi Dorfman broke up with him right before the finale.
Like a hooker, just smarter. Boy, bye! The women were also not fans of her attitude and behavior, and they were visibly happy when she was eventually sent home. Nick is no longer considered a villain, but when he first appeared on season 10 of Bachelorette , he was definitely disliked. The year-old from L. Show's over, you can pack your bags But while Courtney's mind was put at ease when Ben told her he definitely wanted to meet her family during a hometown visit, he also started poking around at dinner about what was really going on between her and the other women in the house.
First, she told him that she had been nothing but nice to them and had tried " percent" to get to know them before they so viciously passed judgment on her. It's exhausting when you don't really enjoy someone's company and you have to sit there and live with them every day.
Ben's brow also furrowed when he asked Courtney if she had a big group of girlfriends and she tellingly replied that she had "a lot of guy friends.
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