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Why the Bachelorette Franchise Keeps Casting Stars With Baggage

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Disclaimer: Perspectives here reflect AI-POV and AI-assisted analysis, not any specific human author. Read full disclaimer — issues: report@theaipov.news

The Bachelorette did not pick Taylor Frankie Paul despite her baggage. It picked her because of it. For more than two decades the franchise sold a fairy tale built on leads who had already been vetted by viewers and whose heartbreak was scripted inside Bachelor Nation. With Season 22, ABC and its producers have dropped the pretence: they want a lead whose story is already written in headlines, whose drama drives ratings before the first rose is handed out, and whose casting is the story. The calculus is simple. Building a narrative from scratch is hard; buying one that is already trending is cheap.

The Franchise Is Betting That Pre-Built Drama Beats Tradition

Taylor Frankie Paul, 31, was announced as the Bachelorette for Season 22 in September 2025. She is the first lead in the show’s history chosen from outside the Bachelor contestant pool. Every previous Bachelorette had been pulled from a prior season of The Bachelor, creating a closed ecosystem of familiar faces and predictable arcs. As Us Weekly reported, Paul rose to fame on Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, where her 2022 divorce from Tate Paul amid a viral “soft-swinging” scandal and her turbulent relationship with ex-boyfriend Dakota Mortensen have been central to the show. In February 2023 she was arrested in Utah on domestic violence charges after an altercation with Mortensen; a barstool struck her five-year-old daughter during the incident. She pleaded guilty to aggravated assault and was placed on probation. She is the first Bachelorette lead with a criminal conviction.

Critics, including former Bachelor contestant Lexi Young, have argued that the casting undermines the show’s premise of giving everyday people a chance at love. Joy Behar publicly quipped about Paul having “three kids and two baby daddies.” Us Weekly noted that Paul has addressed the backlash directly, telling the magazine she did not join the show for clout but to break her cycle with Mortensen and “do something for myself.” The narrative was already in place before filming began. Producers did not have to invent a backstory; they had to decide how much of it to lean into.

Producers Curated the Cast Around Her Profile

According to reporting by Cosmopolitan, producers replaced roughly half of Paul’s initial male cast with contestants “more tailored to her,” removing men who were more “cookie cutter” or had expressed reluctance about dating someone with children. The move suggests that the network is not only comfortable with Paul’s public narrative but is actively shaping the season around it. Us Weekly quoted Paul saying the season had “no rules” and was “unpredictable” compared with the usual structure. The message to viewers is clear: this is not your mother’s Bachelorette. The lead comes with a ready-made story of toxicity, redemption, and second chances, and the cast is built to fit that story.

Ratings and Cross-Platform Synergy Justify the Gamble

ABC and parent company Disney have a direct incentive to cross-promote talent across platforms. The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is a Hulu property; The Bachelorette airs on ABC and streams on Hulu. Casting a Hulu star as the Bachelorette drives awareness for both shows. The Bachelorette remains a key ratings driver for ABC: the Season 21 finale in September 2024 drew 2.875 million viewers and a 0.46 rating in the 18-49 demographic, and the franchise has powered the network to demo wins on multiple nights. If Paul’s notoriety brings in new viewers or lures back lapsed fans, the gamble pays off. If it backfires, the controversy itself is content. Us Weekly has covered the casting, her explanation for joining, and the timeline of her relationship with Mortensen in depth, reinforcing the idea that the lead’s backstory is part of the product.

What This Actually Means

The Bachelorette is no longer pretending that its leads are chosen for their purity or their readiness for a fairy-tale ending. They are chosen for their ability to generate headlines, drive social engagement, and fill the first few episodes with pre-existing drama. Taylor Frankie Paul is the clearest proof yet: the franchise would rather cast a lead with a felony record and a messy public history than a bland contestant who needs to be “built” from scratch. That is not an accident. It is a business decision. Viewers who tune in for the trainwreck or for the redemption arc are both served by the same choice.

Who Is Taylor Frankie Paul?

Taylor Frankie Paul is a 31-year-old single mother of three from Utah and a star of Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. She has more than 7 million followers across social media and is part of the “MomTok” community of Utah-based content creators. She was married to Tate Paul; they divorced in 2022 amid a widely reported “soft-swinging” scandal involving other couples in her circle. She has three children: daughter Indy, 8, and son Ocean, 5, with Tate Paul, and son Ever, 2, with Dakota Mortensen. Her relationship with Mortensen has been documented on Mormon Wives and includes the 2023 arrest. She was announced as the Bachelorette for Season 22 in September 2025; the season premieres March 22, 2026, on ABC.

Sources

Us Weekly, Reality TV World, People, Cheat Sheet, The Hollywood Reporter

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