Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Preview:The Bad Girls Club Season 10, Episode 1 Southern Hospitality Free Online

A new set of Bad Girls arrive in the ATL to shake things up. All the while, Janae can't keep up with her new roommates. Free Download Video The Bad Girls Club 15th Jan 2013 Episode On Oxygen Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch The Bad Girls Club Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV. A group of rebellious women are put in a house together in an experiment intended to moderate their behavior. These women have issues with anger, trust and control, and claim they want to change. Will living together help them move forward and turn their lives around -- or will chaos rule?Instead, it may very well be Oxygen’s “Bad Girls Club,” which is being shot in Buckhead through October 5, according to the Georgia Film, Music & Digital Entertainment Office. The office heard Atlanta possesses a huge viewing audience for this show. (Oxygen itself hasn’t made any official announcement yet but a spokeswoman acknowledged that this is indeed true.The show has been taped in past years in Los Angeles, New Orleans, Las Vegas and in the current season airing now, Cabo San Lucas in Mexico. Ratings this past Monday were solid for Oxygen: 1.5 million viewers (though that isn’t nearly as many as E!’s “Keeping Up With the Kardashians” or VH1’s “Love & Hip Hop Atlanta.”

Like any reality show, The Bad Girls Club has some soap opera-ish storylines, as well as some soul-searching among cast members as they begin to think about their own behavior as well as their relationships with their roommates. But the show's real focus is on the ladies' excessive arguing and physical fighting. While the housemates may believe that their aggressive, often-outlandish behavior empowers them, the show presents them as a group of catty, irrational girls who are more interested in creating a spectacle of themselves. It's an extremely negative, stereotypical portrayal of strong women and offers a very misguided interpretation of what assertive, self-confident women are really all about.Families can talk about why reality TV feeds on conflict. What messages is the show sending about how women behave and relate to each other? Do you think a show about men in a similar situation would get the same treatment? What's the difference between being assertive and self-confident versus being overly aggressive and inappropriate? Which category do the women in the show fall into? Families can also discuss the importance of fostering positive relationships among women as a source of support and empowerment. “The Bad Girls Club” is a great argument for bringing back programming with actors. The stilted, fabricated drama begins as seven self-described bad girls arrive at a standard reality-show group house in Los Angeles. That means that there is a pool with a hillside view and so few bedrooms that the participants must share, a situation intended to maximize conflict.

Seven women from all over the country come together to a destination called “The Bad Girls Club,” where they are put in a mansion, provided with free alcohol and endless nights of partying. At first, everything might seem fun and calm, but they don’t call these females “Bad Girls” for nothing.

Every episode the network emphasizes the fights that go on. It may even seem like they are praising their produced world of drunken slander and endless backstabbing.

For those who watch the “Bad Girls Club” faithfully, every season the “message” of the show has noticeably changed. With one season lasting three months out of the year, each year different girls set foot in a new mansion. The first three out of the six seasons were about helping women with anger problems and also issues that relate to getting along with females. They would take these girls through a journey of learning how to cope with their inner self and get over having to lash out to have their emotions shown.

As empowering as that sounds, while the shows went on and the fights grew more frequent, more people started tuning in to see the fights and the confrontations rather than watching these women get better. After watching the sixth season, it is apparent that confrontation definitely outweighs the progress of these girls.

Commonsensemedia.org states in their review of “Bad Girls Club” that “Catfight chaos send negative message about women”. Even though the message of the show is not entirely uplifting, the disagreement of having these females represent ALL is justified.

Obviously not every woman is a crazed maniac, and if you pay attention to the show, fake hair and big boobs are becoming the criteria over women with anger issues to get on the show. Look at the main elements of the show: women between the ages of 21 and 28, free alcoholic beverages any day of the week, free room and board, free transportation and limo night transportation, and no one has to have a job. I’m sure there is nothing to do but yell, scream and have a good time with those you share a house with.

At the end of the day this show is not reality TV, it’s just a long vacation gone wrong each season which happens to be televised. Some of these girls may embarrass themselves and their families, but when the hour is up and the credits are shown we either turn the television to something else or go about our every day. These women DO NOT represent the female species on this earth.
Viewers who have not read the promotional materials will be hard put to determine the participants’ stated collective goal: to give up their “evil ways.” They work toward this goal in the first episode by going riding with a motorcycle gang, drinking to excess in public (Ripsi proudly declares herself “the blackout queen”), swearing like characters in a Quentin Tarantino movie, showing off their cleavages and bare midriffs and being generally combative.

The only young woman who seems to have an authentic bad-girl problem is Leslie, a stripper who would like to move on to a more reputable line of work but says she is making too much money to quit.

The behind-the-scenes thinking seems to have been that viewers love hating bad-girl types (e.g., the frighteningly pushy and self-involved Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth on “The Apprentice”), so why not give them a houseful? The trouble, at least in this case, is that the unpleasant villains cancel one another out and actually make badness uninteresting.

Or maybe these young women are just not bad enough.

“I am a control freak; I’m very manipulative,” says Kerry, trying to prove her worthiness of the show’s title. If that’s all it takes, I could cast this show in one morning without leaving my building.

Near the end of tonight’s episode, Ripsi tries to pick a fight with Kerry. After she knocks over a large poolside umbrella, her fellow participants throw her into the pool.

In 60 minutes “The Bad Girls Club” degenerates to the on-location equivalent of “The Jerry Springer Show” at its rowdiest.