Ready To Love: Season 2, Episode 2 “Let The Sparks Fly” – Recap, Review (with Spoilers)
We’ve come to a point where you can foresee more people who should be going home than should stay – for varying reasons.
We’ve come to a point where you can foresee more people who should be going home than should stay – for varying reasons.
Ready To Love officially returns, and while we got new people searching for love, you may recognize people and problems similar to what we saw in season 1.
Ready To Love may have presented us with a lot of women we don’t often see on TV, but it’s elimination process ruined the dating aspect of the show.
Like any reunion special, we get a few touching moments, but a large part of the special was dedicated to Aaron just being Aaron.
The first season of Ready To Love comes to an end and, as the title of the episode notes, it has come down to committing to one person or quitting the show.
We end up down to three men and women this episode and only one woman leaves without frustration.
As things begin to come down to the wire, the women grow tired and weary of the men dating around – they want a decision made.
As the numbers dwindle, and Melinda doesn’t become the sole woman to eliminate herself, there is a need to question if anyone may find love?
With a double elimination around the corner, the question isn’t so much who should stay but who should have been left – on their own accord.
As Aaron realizes he has a problem and Alexx reveals another side to himself which makes it harder to say if these women aren’t wasting their time.
Aaron reaches peak f***ery as Michael and Alexx continue to play the game because… well, it is what the show calls for.
12 women to 3 men leads to the men being enabled to be all the things these women were hoping to get away from.
We learn who got eliminated from the last episode, and learn who are the three men who will remain. You may not be surprised by the picks.
The following is a cast guide for the OWN program “Ready To Love” and its spin-offs.
Ready To Love, thanks to its elimination process, will only differ from other dating shows thanks to it having people from 30 to 50.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.