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Andy Cohen has never had his life taped. But heâs made a career out of producing reality TV â most notably, Bravoâs âReal Housewivesâ franchise â and has witnessed some of its most talked-about moments unfold as host of the networkâs various reunion specials.
Now Cohen is taking a look back at the entire genre in âFor Real: The Story of Reality TV.â Premiering Thursday night, the seven-part E! docuseries traces the history and cultural impact of reality TV, reminiscing with some of its biggest stars through the years.
âWe cover a lot of shows,â Cohen says. âI mean, who remembers âKid Nationâ?â
Video-calling recently from his home office in New York City â where he spent much of this last pandemic year doing a self-shot version of his late-night talk show, âWatch What Happens Liveâ â Cohen chatted with The Times about his introduction to reality TV, the possibility of reuniting the original cast members of âReal Housewives of Orange Countyâ and his brush with COVID-19. The conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.
Youâve been in this space for a long time. Have you ever been approached about having your life taped?
No. But I got a letter about âDancing With the Starsâ years ago. Um, thatâs it. I would be the wrong person. I know how the sausage is made.
Was it a mind trip looking back on some of these shows in âFor Realâ? I wish some of them were available to stream.
I have to think with all these streamers that theyâre going to start putting them up â like âThe Osbournes,â I would think that Paramount would put it back up.
Iâll tell you what was a trip was walking into KhloĂŠ Kardashianâs backyard as they were shooting an episode of âThe Kardashians.â And, you know, Iâm a producer of the âHousewives,â but the lighting and the production design for âThe Kardashiansâ ... it looks like weâre casually sitting on swings in KhloĂŠâs backyard â it was a trip. I loved talking to them about what theyâre looking for in rough cuts.
When did your love of reality TV begin?
With âReal World: New York.â Absolutely. I think thatâs when modern reality television was born. I was stunned. I thought it was fascinating. I was a huge soap opera fan and I was like, wow, this is like a real-life soap opera. These people are my age. Theyâre living in the city that I live in. Whatâs going to happen?
It hit me in the face what a great format it was. At that time, I was a desk assistant at CBS News. And then when âSurvivorâ came on, my mind was totally blown. I was working at the morning show at the time. So we had a deal where, at the CBS morning show, we were getting the castoffs every week. I remember thinking: Oh, my God, it just regenerates itself. I thought it was brilliant.
Before reuniting with her âReal Worldâ cast mates, Julie Gentry had to grapple with the very public life of a ânaiveâ 19-year-old from Birmingham, Ala.,: herself.
Itâs been 15 years since âThe Real Housewives of Orange Countyâ debuted. Would you ever float the idea of doing something like âThe Real World Homecoming: New Yorkâ â getting the OG cast back together?
Maybe. The thing about it is, especially with that group, you know, Jo [De La Rosa] moved to New York, Kimberly [Bryant] moved to Chicago, Jeana [Keough] and Vicki [Gunvalson] still see each other. Lauri [Waring] ... I donât know. I donât know how climactic it would be. If you look at the New York Housewives, they all generally still see each other, which is incredible. Maybe them.
Could you see the âHousewivesâ going that long? Thirty years?
I could, yeah. Weâve been very careful to keep these planes in the air. You know, you take someone out and you put someone in, and it adds a whole new life to it, and you bring someone back. On the other hand, weâre living in a time where celebrating people who may not understand political correctness may have a shelf life.
I wanted to ask about that. Looking at Twitter, and also talking to friends and family who are fans of Bravo shows, itâs been interesting to see how politics and the views of talent have come to a head, most resoundingly last year.
I did notice it. A lot of people say, âWell, we donât want politics in our showsâ or âWe donât want to cover social issues.â But last year was a year unlike any other. We are in a global pandemic, you had a reckoning of race relations and you had a highly divisive presidential election. So it would have been really hard for reality to not seep into reality shows, especially these docuseries that were not, you know, a competition reality show where youâre making dresses, or something that would be easier for that not to happen.
You saw people who had been celebrated for their outspokenness now being taken to task for their outspokenness. And I donât know, itâs a delicate balance. My thing that I keep coming back to is these are not elected officials. Theyâre Real Housewives, not Barack Obama. What standard are you holding them to?
But for instance, Kelly Dodd â the things that she was putting out there, whether about the coronavirus or her lack of empathy toward the Black Lives Matter movement â really upset a lot of people. Some viewers boycotted the season.
I thought that was such an important exchange we had at the reunion when I said, âI get DMs from people saying, you should be fired for promoting not wearing masksâ and she said, âI get DMs from people who think youâre un-American because you donât like Trump.â I was glad she said it, because I bet she does get a lot of DMs from people who feel that way. And that is the exact representation of the country we live in. Iâve got 50% of the people saying sheâs behaving terribly, and sheâs got 50% of the people saying, âYour boss is an ass.â So I thought that was really important and really just very reflective of where weâre at.
There have been some pretty shocking developments in the âHousewivesâ universe through the years â Taylor Armstrong [âBeverly Hillsâ] dealing with her husbandâs suicide, Joe and Teresa Giudice [âNew Jerseyâ] going to prison. The recent split between Tom and Erika Girardi [âBeverly Hillsâ], as well as the allegations and revelations about him were shocking. Were you surprised by all of it?
Very. Very. We were already in production on âBeverly Hillsâ not only when Erika announced she was leaving him but when all of these accusations about Tomâs business came into light. So you will very much see that reflected this season on the show.
Did you expect her to continue on with the show?
It was already out there. Was I surprised she kept going? No. Ultimately, no. I thought she would stay. I think people will be surprised by her because the whole story is developing in front of you as itâs happening.
You ask questions for a living â sometimes outrageous or uncomfortable ones. What did you think of Oprahâs interview with Meghan and Harry?
Oh, I thought it was brilliant. I was emailing with Gayle King about it the other day and I was saying, âWhy are people so surprised at how brilliant Oprah is? Why is that even a story?â
I am a huge Oprah fan and probably saw every episode, or maybe 80% or 90%, of every Oprah show for 25 years. Literally, I recorded it during college or while I was at work, and I came home and watched it on the VCR. I absolutely loved it.
I think whatâs been interesting [afterward] is for a lot of this stuff to be put in context. Like every great interview, your opinion changes over time. I was all up in arms about the security issue, for example. And then I found out, well, no great-grandchildren of the monarch get security. And when the monarch dies, Archie would have gotten [the title] automatically. So that made me think, âWell, thatâs interesting.â But I loved it. I thought it was great. Many people are always tweeting me saying, âWe want every minute of every reunion show.â And I was like, âI want every minute of that.â
Is there a question you would have asked?
I was very curious to know: Where is Meghanâs relationship with Kate today? And William today. And I wanted to know more about Harryâs relationship with Kate and William.
A question that has seemed to have taken over âReal Housewives of Atlantaâ is: Who slept with the exotic dancer Bolo? Do you know? I donât want or need to know but I am curious to know if you do. And what do you make of the commotion?
I donât. I have a theory about it. And I actually had dinner with Porsha Williams recently. And I wanted to ask her but I purposefully didnât to protect her because I was like, âAnything you say to me can and will be used against you at the reunion.â So I just purposefully left it. But Iâve talked to production about it, and I will get into it at the reunion.
The truth of the matter is, I donât really care. I think itâs actually an invasion of privacy. They were at a bachelorette party and they felt like the cameras were off. I hope they all slept with Bolo if they wanted to. I hope everyone got what they wanted out of that night because everyone deserves to get exactly what they wanted out of that night. And if it was a piece of Bolo, great, and if it was a piece of cake, great.
Are you surprised by what Bravo has been able to do in this pandemic, in terms of keeping the shelves stocked with programming?
Well, thatâs another thing about [âReal Housewives of Orange Countyâ]. We were just kind of getting rolling into the season and things were really happening â that show was shut down so many times. People really rag on that season. But itâs amazing we got a season at all given everything that was going on. And then youâve got âNew Jersey,â where it doesnât look like thereâs a pandemic. They went to Lake George [N.Y.], then they go to the Jersey Shore. We got them in other places, which was really good. But we had to shut down for two weeks after Cynthiaâs wedding in Atlanta to make sure everyone was OK. ... We couldnât shoot [the wedding]. They used footage from Cynthiaâs wedding videographer because the production company couldnât do it.
So yeah, there were so many stops and starts that are not represented when you see the show. It was really, really challenging.
With more than 40 series in production at one time, no network has had to adapt to the coronavirus outbreak quite like reality TV powerhouse Bravo.
Take me back to your experience of those early days after COVID-19 was declared a pandemic.
I remember everything like it was yesterday. The day we announced we were doing âWatch What Happens Liveâ from home was the day I got my COVID results. I had been feeling funny. And I had my nanny here and [my son] Ben here. I had just gone to great lengths to get us tested â my nanny and I. I did not think that I had COVID. I donât even remember the morning. I just remember everything that happened once I said I had COVID.
Were you trying to retrace your steps?
The thing is, if I look at that week before, I rode five subways, I was at Sirius Radio, I was taking pictures with audience members. I was onstage at 54 Below. I flew to L.A. for 24 hours to be on celebrity [âWho Wants to Be a Millionaireâ]. Iâm surprised I didnât get it five times over.
Did you have any long-term COVID effects? Any memory issues?
It took it out of me for a few months, I would say. I was having some [memory stuff] too. About eight months ago, there were a couple of reunions that I was doing, and I was like, âWow, these words are not coming to me in the way that they used to.â
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
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