From Deseret News archives:

'Chasing Farrah' is one very weird experience

Published: Monday, March 21, 2005 3:31 p.m. MST
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This despite the fact that Fawcett, both in the interview and on the show, expresses strong distaste for reality shows in general. And never admits that maybe — just maybe — agreeing to do the show has something to do with the 58-year-old actress' desire to revive her flagging career.

"In fact, actually, I'm not a big fan of reality shows, but I haven't seen all of them," she said. "I saw the ones, like, where they have to eat bugs and do something like that. But I haven't seen the 'Newlyweds' or 'The Apprentice.' I don't even know what the formula is. And, in fact, I think there probably isn't a formula, because we're not following it."

While she repeatedly insists that "Chasing Farrah" has nothing in common with "The Anna Nicole Show," the format is essentially the same. Fawcett is joined by her various friends, employees and hangers-on as she goes about her life.

To be fair, however, there's no comparing Fawcett to Anna Nicole Smith, who's really whacked out.

"They said, 'Well, we'll just follow you around with a camera.' And I went, 'Oh, that's real interesting,' " Fawcett said. "But since people seem to be interested, like I said before, maybe they're watching for me to slip and fall. And that's normal. But it might as well be with a certain integrity and truth."

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At least she's aware that coming across as normal would be pretty dull TV. So maybe she is just acting the whole time?

But if that's true, "Chasing Farrah" isn't much of a reality show, is it?

What Fawcett is apparently hoping is that she'll seem relatively normal in comparison to her entourage.

"What's great is that all the people who agreed to do it with me — who thought, 'No problem' — tend to actually go a little crazy and behave unprofessionally and badly and argue and mess up. . . . This was easier for me. I had other people to bounce off of. I'm more familiar with (being on camera), but I think I mess up the least. So there!"

"Chasing Farrah" is worth watching for at least one reason — it gives viewers a clue how celebrities can be so out of touch with reality. We get a glimpse of fans and flunkies fawning all over Fawcett, telling her how great she is all the time.

Heck, TV Land president Larry Jones refers to her as the "Holy Grail" of reality shows.

"I don't think anything in a celebrity or an actor's life prepares you for what comes along with fame and how people say things to you that you really don't know how to respond to," Fawcett said. "It used to be, 'Oh, you're so beautiful' or 'Oh, I liked your hair the other way.' Now it's 'Oh, you still look good.' I don't know what it's going to be later — 'Oh, my (gosh), you look horrible'? I mean, who knows?

"But I guess the sad thing for me is that it will always be there even if I chose, I think, never to work again. That I would never be able to, let's say, go home and see my parents or go to the market without 15 people commenting."

Which once again demands we ask . . . so why put yourself in a reality show?

Ah, well, it's her life. We're just "Chasing Farrah."


Debuts Wednesday

The six-part reality series "Chasing Farrah" premieres Wednesday at 8 p.m. on the TV Land cable channel. A second half-hour episode follows at 8:30 p.m.


E-mail: pierce@desnews.com

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TV Land

Farrah Fawcett is followed by television cameras.

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