Current:Home > NewsTwo's company, three's allowed in the dating show 'Couple to Throuple' -Ascend Finance Compass
Two's company, three's allowed in the dating show 'Couple to Throuple'
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:15:31
The only reasons people watch dating shows, really, are sex and mess.
Dating shows have been around for ages, swelling* when there's a big success like The Bachelor or Joe Millionaire or Love Is Blind. But they take all kinds of different shapes — it's a test to see if you'll cheat, or there's a chance the person is ugly, or you have to get married, or whatever. They certainly have wildly varying levels of sex. The Bachelor takes a kind of "and then the door closes and the music plays and you definitely do not even hear anybody making any noises," while some other shows will give you considerably more than that.
They all have mess, too. Not just mess, but messy messy mess. As I was telling a friend this week, Peacock's Couple to Throuple is really just more mess (and it's on the high end for the amount of sex you'll see), and in that sense it's very conventional. But at least it's a different kind of mess than most other shows offer, particularly on mainstream outlets.
The setup is this: Four couples arrive at a resort. A bunch of single people also show up. Each couple is interested in potentially exploring a throuple, which (for the uninitiated) is an awkward portman-ménage-à-teau for an ongoing relationship among three people. Three of the couples include a man and a woman: Brittne and Sean, Dylan and Lauren, and Wilder and Corey. The other is two men, Rehman and Ashmal. All of the couples have some experience with experimentation with other people, but not in this kind of throuple arrangement. The show brings in some single people, all of whom also have some relevant experience, and each couple gets to pick one to try out as a possible third for their relationship. (If you think this sounds kind of strange and possibly a little unfair to the single person, that does come up.)
I want to make clear that there is nothing inherently salacious about polyamory. There are plenty of people who make it work. So when I say the show is joyfully trashy, that's because of the show, not the relationship structure. After all, you can make joyfully trashy shows about couples, too. There's also nothing particularly new about the throuple life if you happen to know people who do it or have tried it, which an increasing number of us do. But at least it's new mess. Different mess. Mess that makes you go, "Oh, yikes, that's tricky."
The first thing that experienced polyamorous people will tell you, I have learned, is that it requires a lot of work and communication. There are people who go into it — or who just think about it — imagining, "Whee, this must be a no-strings-attached sex festival!" But my first thought after watching two episodes was, "This seems like a relationship structure perfect for people who like to attend a lot of meetings."
Even on dating shows, I have rarely seen this much talking about the relationship. Does the third like both of the people in the couple equally? Do both people in the couple like the third equally? Do these people connect physically but those people emotionally? What are the reasonable expectations of the potential third?
Familiar dynamics take on new specifics, as when the couples do an exercise with their potential thirds where one partner engages in sexier and sexier contact with the third, and the other sees how long they're comfortable before they say the safe word to put a stop to it. In one couple, an argument breaks out in which the partner who was watching later gets mad and basically says, "The question isn't why I didn't use the safe word if I was getting upset, the question is why you didn't use the safe word when you should have known I was getting upset." You gotta think that level of expected mind-reading is going to make a throuple arrangement very, very difficult — as it would a couple arrangement.
There are also some intriguing power shifts where at first, the thirds seem to be trying to put their best feet forward to be "chosen" by the couples, and then trying to impress them, but then before you know it, some of the thirds are sort of looking around saying, "Uh, it was nice knowing you guys." Sometimes you're the windshield, sometimes you're the bug; sometimes you're the pursuer, and sometimes you're the pursued.
It's a mess. I will watch it all.
*I apologize for using the word "swelling" in a discussion of dating shows.
This piece also appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (28155)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- A move to limit fowl in Iowa’s capital eggs residents on to protest with a chicken parade
- Midwest sees surge in calls to poison control centers amid bumper crop of wild mushrooms
- USA skateboarders Nyjah Huston, Jagger Eaton medal at Paris Olympics
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Jennifer Lopez’s 16-Year-Old Twins Max and Emme Are All Grown Up in Rare Photos
- With DUI-related ejection from Army, deputy who killed Massey should have raised flags, experts say
- What's in the box Olympic medal winners get? What else medalists get for winning
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Not All Companies Disclose Emissions From Their Investments, and That’s a Problem for Investors
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Former tennis great Michael Chang the focus of new ESPN documentary
- Olympic gymnastics recap: US men win bronze in team final, first medal in 16 years
- Team USA Water Polo Star Maggie Steffens' Sister-in-Law Dies After Traveling to Paris Olympics
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Does Patrick Mahomes feel underpaid after QB megadeals? 'Not necessarily' – and here's why
- Does Patrick Mahomes feel underpaid after QB megadeals? 'Not necessarily' – and here's why
- Fresh quakes damage West Texas area with long history of tremors caused by oil and gas industry
Recommendation
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Olympian Nikki Hiltz is model for transgender, nonbinary youth when they need it most
When the science crumbles, Texas law says a conviction could, too. That rarely happens.
All the best Comic-Con highlights, from Robert Downey Jr.'s Marvel return to 'The Boys'
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
For 'Deadpool & Wolverine' supervillain Emma Corrin, being bad is all in the fingers
Rita Ora spends night in hospital, cancels live performance: 'I must rest'
American swimmer Nic Fink wins silver in men's 100 breaststroke at Paris Olympics