Television

The participants of 'The Big Date' got so involved that they needed an anchor to return to

Aida de Sàgarra has been one of the intimacy coordinators for 'La gran cita', the first reality show in the State with this figure

BarcelonaThe search for love can take many forms. It can be done in a traditional way, through apps, or also through a television program like La gran cita, the dating show from 3Cat. The new format from the public television has innovated by introducing artificial intelligence into the equation to find a partner, but not only that: it is the first reality show in the State to feature the participation of two intimacy coordinators, a figure increasingly common in cinema and series but not present at all in reality television spaces. Aida de Sàgarra, along with Tatiana Barrero, have contributed their experience as intimacy coordinators on La gran cita. "In this type of reality shows what is super necessary and essential is to protect the emotional intimacy of the participants," explains De Sàgarra.

The main difference between a fictional format and a reality television format is that in one everything is scripted and, therefore, intimacy coordinators work from the scenes that are planned, while in the other, the basis is spontaneous situations and reactions. The work of an intimacy coordinator on a show like La gran cita is different from that of, for example, the team of psychologists who are also part of the team. What is the objective of intimacy coordination in a reality show? "To achieve that the participants, when the last episode is broadcast, when the journey they have made is closed, say: 'Yes, this is me. What I see is coherent with my experience and with who I am, with my values, with my person, with my experiences,'" she points out. The program has become one of the great successes of 3Cat and, according to data from the corporation, has reached nearly a million reproductions in less than three weeks. On the day the two final episodes premiered, it had a peak of over 120,000 reproductions in a single day.

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The 'reality' bubble

In the first season of La gran cita we have seen participants crying inconsolably, loves not entirely reciprocated, and also debates about the type of relationship they wanted to build with a future partner. "A reality show generates a bubble where everything accelerates. Here we had people who were truly opening up to love, which is one of the most moving things for intimacy. It makes you doubt everything, it stirs everything up, it messes with your schemes, it dismantles your rigidities, things that are very intimate. The participants got so involved, they lived it so generously, that they obviously needed an anchor to return to," she reflects. That anchor was the coordinators.

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De Sàgarra remembers that during filming she was with "a thousand eyes," paying attention above all to non-verbal language, an essential aspect in a reality show because there is no script. "You have to be very aware of reactions, even when you're not filming," she details. The intimacy coordinator confesses that there were participants who were overwhelmed by emotions and experiences because the pace of the program made it difficult for them to assimilate them. "We started to notice that little dissociation that occurred with people who were very overcome by the situation. People who started to disconnect, people with anxiety. Very logical and very normal," recalls the coordinator, who assures that her name and her colleague's were among the most pronounced during the filming of the program. In this regard, one of the moments when they had the most work was in one of the most important stages of the program: when the organization reveals to the participants what compatibility they have according to artificial intelligence with the partner they have chosen.

Exercises and breathing

When participants turned to the two professionals, they helped them regain their composure through different techniques, from meditations to breathing exercises, bodywork, or therapeutic coaching. In no case did they offer opinions or intervene in the decisions they had made. Another aspect of the work the coordinators did was managing the participants' exposure. That is, if someone did not feel comfortable with something that had been recorded or had doubts about how it would be used, they acted as mediators with the program's direction. Eliminating the anxiety that this situation could produce "facilitated them being able to relax and be themselves".

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De Sàgarra admits that, just as there are actors who do not feel comfortable or who do not collaborate with intimacy coordinators, there have also been participants in La gran cita who did not turn to them much. "There were participants who did not approach us, even participants who arrived as a couple and in the final stages. Simply, what they did was accept that, from time to time, we would go and check how they were. It's okay, it's fine. We kept our eyes wide open," she says.

Regarding the possibility of incorporating intimacy coordinators as regular figures in reality shows, she is very much in favor, although she assures that there are formats, such as 24-hour cohabitation shows, in which their integration can be more difficult. She emphasizes, however, that it would be quite necessary to prevent situations of abuse, such as the one that took place in Gran Hermano in 2017.

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While the incorporation of these figures in reality shows is not yet common, in fiction they are increasingly recognized and the myth that their presence on set reduces spontaneity is being broken. De Sàgarra argues that, in fact, it is quite the opposite. "I would say it's impossible for people who are more secure, more coherent, and more connected to translate into less spontaneity," she says. Furthermore, she is clear about the aura that accompanies sex scenes: "Filming a sex scene has very little, if any, sensationalism. It is more of a very generous exercise on the part of the actors, who divest themselves emotionally and show themselves vulnerable to their partner and, then, to the entire audience. So, sensational? No, zero."