The Knockturnal was on the scene Monday night at the Paley Center as the cast of Lifetimeβs UnREAL gathered for a special screening of the second season premiere. After the screening, six members of the cast joined the executive producers for a panel moderated by Bachelor/ette alum Andi Dorfman.
UnREAL is what you might call a breakout hit. The dramedy premiered last summer chronicling the (totally fictionalized) behind-the-scenes antics of a Bachelor-esque show called βEverlasting.’ But after just a few episodes, the soapy program became a proverbial hit, both critically and in viewership.
UnREAL stars TV vets Shiri Appleby and Constance Zimmer as the two showrunners, Rachel and Quinn respectively. This season, the two are back and making history β the suitor is African American, the first in βEverlastingβsβ history. But itβs more than that β neither the Bachelor or the Bachelorette have ever seen a person of color in the title spot.
B.J. Britt, who plays the new suitor Darius Hill, told Knockturnal he wanted to get involved when he found out the show was making history.
“Once I found out that [my character] was going to be the first black suitor, I had to be part of this project because itβs never been done before,β he said.
Britt said itβs about time that diversity take center stage. “There should have been a black Bachelor years ago,β he said. “[UnREAL] is breaking down doors, kicking them wide open, and doing things that people are afraid to do on TV.β
But co-creator and executive producer Sarah Gertrude Shapiro took that fear and ran with it.
βThere’s no repressing conversation in the nation right now,β said Shapiro on the panel. “I thought it was an interesting thing to explore in terms of black masculinity, but also really scary to do as a white woman.”
Still, while Darius may be the center of βEverlasting,β itβs Rachel and Quinn at the center of UnREAL.
Executive Producer and Showrunner Carol Barbee tells The Knockturnal that Quinn and Rachel are βessentially the love story of the show.β
“I feel like itβs such a great relationship and you get to talk about mentorship and female empowerment,β she said, “but you also talk about jealousy, smallness, and manipulation. They arenβt perfect people.β
And none of that is more clear than in the writerβs room, where the writers take inspiration from another show.
βWe always say that the dialog should be like Jesse and Walt, not ‘Gossip Girl,β she said. “It should be two strong women doing what Jesse and Walt would do.”
The first season was a fight for Rachelβs soul, Barbee said. But season two doesnβt necessarily redeem her.
βIn the first season, we wondered if she was going to the light side or go to the dark side and the juryβs still out,β she said. βThis season, Rachel goes darker, but the battle isnβt over and sheβs trying to make the best of her circumstances.β
βI didnβt think we could go this dark,β said Zimmer on the panel. βIt gets pretty dirty.β
While the first episode starts out with Rachel and Quinn as thick as thieves (the two got matching tattoos), itβs clear that wonβt last forever.
βThis season, whatβs been hard for us is Rachel and Quinn are at odds with each other,β Zimmer said on the panel. βWeβre always plotting when weβre apart.β
So what does Quinn has in store for Rachel? Apparently, the return of Adam, βEverlastingβsβ last suitor and Rachelβs love interest, according to Barbee.
Adam will return as βa manipulation on Quinnβs part,β she told The Knockturnal.
βThe way it ended with him and Rachel, thereβs still so much more to be played out,β Barbee said.
UnREAL premieres on Lifestyle on June 6th at 10pm.
UnREAL Showrunner Carol Barbee, stars Craig Bierko, Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman, Constance Zimmer, Shiri Appleby, B.J. Britt, Josh Kelly, and co-creator Sarah Gertrude Shapiro take the stage for a special PaleyLive NY event, moderated by former Bachelorette Andi Dorfman, at The Paley Center for Media, on May 23, 2016 in New York, NY. Β© The Paley Center for Media