The television history of the realities It is a black well full of authentic horrors and, if you throw the rope, titles come out to each one more angry. ‘Bridalplasty’ It is one of the most sordid experiments that have been seen on TV already From their own premise: several women competing for “perfect surgery” for the expected wedding day.
Road to the altar (surgical)
This dates back to 2010, when the American chain e! It occurred to him to release ‘Bridalplasty’, a format that brought together 12 women in a house to face the wedding of their dreams. So far, well, nothing new under the sun, but this celebration included a Indispensable requirement: Aesthetic surgery.
Each participant had a wishlist of aesthetic operations and the winner of the challenges of each week (related to the preparation of their weddings) achieved one of the surgical interventions of her list. Shanna Moakler served as a ceremonies of this circus, along with Dr. Terry Dubrow, who was responsible for leaking a hand to the scalpel.
The surgeon gave a review of the contestants, looking for all their “defects” that lent themselves to being an operation (in case they did not come with sufficient house complexes, the program was in charge of “locking them” in the direction they were interested), for Give rhinoplasty, liposuctions, botox, implants, dental veneers and other interventions to those who submitted in the show.


Despite its mamarrach and allegedly casual character, the truth is that the program was a showcase of quite horrible ideas, starting with what That “wish list” started from the demands of the husbands of the contestantsmore interested in how the physicist of his future wives would be after going through the operating room than in them as people.
Undoubtedly, the idea of rewarding contestants with aesthetic operations sounds absolutely insane, but In early 2010 it did not wake up as controversial as it could happen now. There were some criticisms but were quite isolated, by specialized means and even by the American Society of Plastic Armegoons: “We are prohibited from giving interventions (surgical) as a prize of a contest. It fully undermines the medical-patient relationship.”


However, the little impact that it had in that sense was not due to the fact that there were no critical elements, but rather than He did not see Christ: the audience was diminishing throughout the 10 episodes who formed their first season, until they ended stunic figures in their final episode.

It is not surprising that the reality was not renewed And, after concluding at the beginning of 2011, we did not have another round of ladies seeking happiness in surgery to satisfy frankly surreal beauty. A grotesque example to deny that of “any past time was better.”
In Espinof | He was named “the worst TV program of all time” and was linked to a frightening crime, but Jerry Springer’s show lasted 27 years
In Espinof | The 27 best series in Netflix’s history