Entertainment NOW

December 31, 2022

Kokomo Tribune Entertainment NOW

Issue link: https://www.ifoldsflip.com/i/1489256

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 1 of 19

Entertainment Now | December 31, 2022 - January 6, 2023 By Sarah Passingham TV Media T he competitive worlds of Hollywood and profes- sional sports create some pretty tough cookies, but the challenges of rising to the top of their industry aren't enough for a few famous faces who are about to take on the ul- timate test of endurance. "Spe- cial Forces: World's Toughest Test" premieres Wednesday, Jan. 4, on Fox, with 16 celebrities willing to face real special forces challenges and prove they can survive. As Directing Staff (DS) agents, former Marine Rudy Reyes, ex- SAS and bodyguard to the stars Mark "Billy" Billingham, former SAS and Special Boat Service veteran Jason "Foxy" Fox, and former Navy SEAL/"The Terminal List" actor Remi Adeleke oversee the new celebrity recruits, guid - ing them through 10 days of in- tense training exercises similar to those used to enlist special forces agents. No stranger to these exercises themselves, the DS agents help the contestants prepare for simulated missions and pull them out if they don't make the cut. The VIPs pulling on their camo best are: Spice Girl and "Ameri- ca's Got Talent" judge Mel B; for- mer NFL player Danny Amendola; "The Bachelorette" lead Hannah Brown; chef and host of "The Great Food Truck Race," Tyler Florence; Kate Gosselin of "Jon & Kate Plus 8"; NBA all-star Dwight Howard; "This Is How We Do It" singer Montell Jordan; British Olympic skier Gus Ken- worthy; "7th Heaven" actress Beverley Mitchell; five-time Olympic medalist Nastia Liukin; "Real Housewives of Atlanta" star Kenya Moore; two-time Olympic gold medalist and soc- cer player Carli Lloyd; former MLB player Mike Piazza; MTV's favorite "Teen Mom" moderator, Dr. Drew Pinsky; businessman and shortest-ever-serving White House Director of Communica- tions Anthony Scaramucci; and, finally, "Zoey 101" actress Jamie Lynn Spears. Surrounded by a desolate des- ert landscape, "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test" contes- tants face physically and mental- ly grueling challenges with only one objective: survive. Alliances won't do players any good in this game, as there will be no elimi- nation votes cast: contestants can only exit the 10-day competi- tion by failure, injury, quitting or being ejected by the DS. There is no grand prize at the end of the special forces journey, except for the satisfaction of having com- pleted a uniquely punishing chal- lenge. In an interview with Entertain- ment Tonight, Billingham broke down how exactly he and the other DS agents shatter contes- tants' barriers, saying, "We don't break people — we strip them back to their raw self." Billing- ham further explained: "that means getting right inside their head, their emotions, how they think and how they tick." While he may not "break" them, he does insist "we scream at them, we shout at them, this is raw." Billingham really doesn't su- garcoat how unfamiliar the con- ditions of "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test" are to the celebrity contestants. He says in the same interview, "There's no soap on a rope, there's no coffee lattes on demand, there's no us- ing your cellphone. Everything is controlled by us." Just how con- trolling are Billingham and the rest of the DS agents running the training exercises? Billingham told Entertainment Tonight, "We even take away their names and give them a number." Not only are contestants leaving creature comforts behind, they're being shut down on a personal level, the social isolation making the physical challenges that much more difficult. The official trailer for the series opens with Spears dramatically falling headfirst from a helicopter into a body of water, while a voice dramatically narrates, "If you should die, that is nature's way of saying you failed." Teased in the trailer are some of the special forces challenges, including a high-wire walk, a submerged ve- hicle escape, hand-to-hand com- bat and maneuvering through a simulated war zone. Contestants visibly struggle while suspending their packs above their heads, running through dusty terrain and crawling through claustrophobic tunnels. Dropping celebrities into envi- ronments that are unfamiliar to them is an undeniably winning TV format, with hits from the early days of reality TV such as "The Surreal Life" and "I'm a Celebri- ty... Get Me Out of Here" across the pond leading the way. The genre is still a proven hit with re- cent shows such as "Beyond the Edge" and "Celebrity Big Broth- er." It's even birthed fun takes on the celebrity reality mix, such as "Claim to Fame," a "Big Brother"- esque series that put relatives of celebrities in a house and left them to form alliances and battle it out for a $100,000 grand prize. As for these special forces hopefuls, they have obviously considered what physical chal- lenges "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test" has in store for them, but what they may have left out of the equation are the psy- chological struggles they may face over the short yet brutal 10- day excursion. Contestants come up against their own fears of heights or drowning, of course, but the training program expects an immense amount of obedience and adherence to its hierarchy. Not the easiest feat for people who are presumably at the top of their own food chain day-to-day. Tidy your barracks and report for duty when "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test" premieres Wednesday, Jan. 4, on Fox. Jason Fox, Remi Adeleke, Rudy Reyes and Mark Billingham from "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test" Celebs ditch the glam for 'Special Forces' competition 2 | Cover story Grindstone Charlie's 1 x 4" Moore's Home Health 5 x 2"

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Entertainment NOW - December 31, 2022