Ready To Love: Last Resort – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Despite changing some aspects of the show, Ready To Love still struggles to end up with three couples and cast people who can handle what the show calls for.
Despite changing some aspects of the show, Ready To Love still struggles to end up with three couples and cast people who can handle what the show calls for.
While Ready To Love is undoubtedly entertaining, clearly, somebody needs to realize that the process doesn’t work and might need to be modified or scrapped.
Part 1 of the Ready To Love reunion special is as messy as expected between people being pregnant, exposed, and vindicated.
The third season of Ready To Love ends and as Nephew Tommy warned against, it seems more people stuck around to make it to the end than to find love.
4 cast members leave the show for varied reasons. Can you guess who and why?
The fellas are challenged with getting to know their second choice better to make sure they’re ready to commit to their number one, and afterwards, someone is sent home.
It is too little too late for two cast members as we exit the speed dating phase, and now the only people staying are those with at least two love interests.
As the show dwindles down to 6 men and 7 women, jealousy starts to arise as “The Process” creates insecurity.
As the friends of the ladies come to visit, most of the men say the right thing. However, others crash, burn, and one gets eliminated.
Two women are eliminated, and considering the gossip circulating about who said or did what, who will end up sent home?
The drama we see every season begins as the ladies start playing “dibs” on certain men who remind them that dating is “a process.”
While a few couples start to form, some of the men show their true selves, and one woman reminds you why “The Journey” and “The Process” doesn’t always work.
The show officially starts, and just as much as the cast hopes for love, you are allowed to hope we don’t have anyone playing games this season.
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.
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