Love Is Blind Reunion: Cast Reveals Their Worst Season 7 Moments to Watch Back! (Exclusive)
Consider your Valentine’s Day plans set.
Love Is Blind season eight premieres on Netflix Feb. 14.
This time around, the show is taking place in Minneapolis, Minnesota. And while 32 singles will be entering the pods, fans will have to stay tuned to see how many get engaged and make it to the altar.
Though the series doesn’t have the highest success rate—10 out of the 37 couples who’ve accepted proposals are still together—hosts Nick Lachey and Vanessa Lachey believe there are some key elements that determine whether a pair’s relationship will last. One being the strength of their communication.
"The couples who make it, or even the couples that don’t make it but find themselves," the actress explained in an interview shared by Brides Feb. 11, “is because they all communicated through it.”
Other essential traits? Respect and commitment through the good times and the bad.
“You can trust that your partner is going to be there to make you feel safe at the end of an argument,” Vanessa continued, “or with the respect, you know that you’re not going to jump to conclusions. You’re going to hear them out.”
And the contestants aren’t the only ones who get something out of the social experiment.
"It’s always been somewhat therapeutic for us to be a part of this," Nick added to the outlet, "and take a look at our own marriage and our own relationship as we go through each season."
This season marks five years since Love Is Blind first premiered, and it doesn’t look like the show will be slowing down anytime soon. According to Netflix, the series has been renewed through season 10.
But did you ever wonder how the series got started in the first place? Before season eight premieres, grab your gold glasses and your pod squad and keep reading for secrets about Love Is Blind.
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1. From the same production company that created Married At First Sight and other reality dating series, Love Is Blind is "a culmination of things we've learned on many different relationship shows," creator Chris Coelen told E! News. And was born from asking, "if you started with pure love that was focused on just who that person was, could that love stand the test of time and survive the outside world?""
2. The pods portion of the experiment lasts about 10 days, with 40-50 hopeful singles serving as the initial cast. But over the course of the process, some singles are let go.
"There was a certain point where we did a whittling down of people just to focus internally on the people who were really connecting, to allow them more time," Coelen explained. "We ended up having maybe 20-25 people in the pods at that point."
3. The first dates between all of the singles were set up speed-dating style rotation, with everyone spending eight to 10 minutes with each person of the opposite sex. From then on, there were no limitations put on who you could talk to, when you could talk to them and for how long, as long as a production intermediary set it up as they were unable to communicate with each other outside of the pods.
Netflix
4. Like Married At First Sight, LIB found their season one cast all in one city: Atlanta. "There were practical considerations as much as any creative considerations," Coelen said of the decision, highlighting Atlanta's "great production support system" and the huge studio space, which they needed for the pods. Season two was set in Dallas, while Chicago was the setting for the third season.
5. Hoping to see a few proposals, producers were not expecting more than five couples to get engaged in season one. So when two other couples (in addition to the six the show chose to follow) also ended the pod portion with an engagement, producers ultimately couldn't continue filming their journey.
"We felt like we wanted to tell diverse stories frankly," Coelen reasoned. "We weren't sure where the stories were going to go, everybody felt like they truly found the person they wanted to spend their life with and we had an abundance of story...we just didn't have time in the show to follow them, which is incredible to me."
Instagram/Rory Newbrough
6. One of those engaged couples was Rory Newbrough, who was often seen giving advice to the other men, and Danielle Drouin. They spent a week together in Miami as the other engaged couples went to Mexico to continue filming. But soon after they returned to Atlanta, they had a "very amicable" breakup when Danielle realized she still had feelings for another cast member, Matt Thomas. "She ended up wanting to pursue that," Rory explained to People. Danielle and Matt ultimately didn't last either.
7. The other unaired season one engagement was between Westley Baer, who was briefly shown discussing dating as a shorter man, and Lexie Skipper. Despite not continuing with the show, they dated for three months back in Atlanta. But Westley revealed to People that his career change caused their split. "I made a crazy decision to sell everything I owned, and I moved to Asia," he said.
Two season two couples—Caitlin McKee and Joey Miller and Kara Williams and Jason Beaumont—also got engaged, but didn't have their journeys filmed.
Netflix
8. There were rumors online that Mark Cuevas, the youngest male single in the inaugural season, secretly had a girlfriend when he was on the show, which he later denied.
"I did not have a girlfriend the whole time," he said on the Be There in Five podcast. "I was single before [going on the show]. Now, being a single man, you're single, you're doing your thing. I'd never had a girlfriend before. Where was the time to be in a relationship during the experience?"
9. According to Kenny Barnes and Kelly Chase, they never had any plans to actually get married at the end of filming season one. "We were adamant about we're not going to get married," Kenny told People. "And really, the engagement was just to extend the experiment. And we were both committed to that." And Kelly believed they were "going to continue dating, because that was communicated between us." That was until Kenny admitted on the wedding day he was not "emotionally available" to do so. "I felt very rejected," she admitted. "Like, 'That wasn't the plan. What the heck?'"
Netflix
10. Jessica Batten, LIB season one's most polarizing cast member, claimed in an interview that she tried to quit the show but wasn't allowed to.
"I mean, I had to stay," she told EW. "I definitely had a conversation about leaving and I wasn't able to do that. My dog got sick too, and almost died during the show, I had so much other stuff going on."
She continued, "It was really frustrating because I kind of knew [Mark and I] weren't going to get there. I definitely had some conversations and attempted to leave, but I wasn't able to."
11. So were the cast members obligated to make it to the altar? According to Coelen, they were not. "They certainly could choose to do whatever they wanted to do," he told E! News of the wedding day decision-making process. "Again, being there on the wedding day, I personally, knowing these people and their stories, I didn't know what was going to happen."
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12. The season one weddings were actually filmed in the fall of 2018, meaning the two couples—Cameron Hamilton and Lauren Speed, and Amber Pike and Matt Barnett—who actually decided to get married had to keep their relationships secret for 18 months before the show premiered. But both pairs are still together.
13. Despite some skepticism from viewers, the marriages are legit, with Lauren telling Refinery29, "This is a real legally binding marriage. This is not for TV. This is our life."
14. As for who paid for the weddings, a Netflix spokesperson revealed to Women's Health that production "supplies some of the basics, but because these are their real weddings, it's up to them as to how to spend their money." So the couples likely did have to cover some expense if they went over budget.
Netflix
15. Despite delivering one of the most shocking endings on season one, Damian Powers and Giannina Gibelli reconciled off-camera after he decided not to go through with the wedding at the altar. "Since the show, it's just been such an amazing journey with you," Giannina said during the reunion special. "To get to know you, to see how we integrate with each other's lives."
While E! News got all the details on their off-cam reunion straight from the couple, they've since split again and Giannina is now dating Bachelor Nation alum Blake Horstmann.
16. Love Is Blind could go on and on, with Coelen telling E! News, "I'm thinking season 15."
17. Did Carlton Morton look familiar? Well, it's because he's been on an ATL-set reality show before, popping up on The Real Housewives of Atlanta when he was working as Cynthia Bailey's assistant back in 2014. Bravo fans will remember he got into a heated argument with Kenya Moore, who had just joined the series.
Ser Baffo/Netflix
18. According to Sal Perez from season two, the singles are given "talking points" and "questions" before heading into their dates, but they don't have to use them.
"There were kind of topics for the day," Kyle Abrams added in an interview with E! News. "It was good if there was a lull in conversation, you just refer to the little notebook and you can drum up conversation."
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