![]() He is (excuse the language) milking this particular exploit in his post-show life - by offering 20-second relationship and sex advice to punters everywhere. ![]() “It was totally worth the $8,000 fine,” she quips. Twenty seconds is exactly how long it took for the insanely well-proportioned South African contestant Christina Carmela Panebianco, who appeared on season 2 of Too Hot to Handle, to bring Robert Van Tromp, the young man she had set her sights on, to a happy ending. You can participate naked from the neck down, as in British television's Naked Attraction, or with a peculiar animal mask prosthesis attached to your head as they do on Netflix's Sexy Beasts, with or without cocktails on a beach, with only your disembodied voice through a wall or with a virtual assistant “cock block” (excuse the terminology) called Lana, the AI robot host in Netflix's Too Hot to Handle, whose job it is to ban sexual touching so that contestants can get to know one another better from the inside out. Not least because everyone watching is living vicariously through these shows. We may be living through the most socially awkward period in recent history, what with the proscriptions regarding human contact and all the mask-wearing - but you wouldn't say humans were having a hard time connecting if you knew that the fastest-growing medium in reality shows is dating. At least, that's the contention of the multiple dating reality shows available to steam up our television screens. It's a truth universally acknowledged that a single man (or woman) in possession of a set of abs must be in want of a hook-up.
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