NEW YORK - Has Kate Gosselin been cheating on her husband, Jon? Has Jon
been cheating on Kate? And have they been pulling the wool over
their viewers' eyes?
What manner of reality have they and their eight conscripted
co-stars (that is, their children) been dispensing to the
multitudes who follow "Jon & Kate Plus 8"?
Questions have raged in recent weeks amid reports of marital
strife and off-screen mischief. Splashed across Web sites and
magazine covers are accounts of infidelity by both spouses -- Jon
with a 23-year-old schoolteacher and Kate with her bodyguard
(accusations both of them deny).
Can this marriage be saved? How about the series? "Saturday
Night Live" weighed in last week by joking about two replacement
shows: "Jon Plus 4" and "Kate Plus 4."
But as the Gosselin homestead seems increasingly at odds with
the happy, wholesome version of reality approved by TLC, one thing
is sure: Viewers are stoked to watch "Jon & Kate Plus 8" when
it returns on TLC for a new season Monday at 9 p.m. EDT.
Two months ago, more than 4.6 million viewers flocked to the
fourth-season finale. But now, for better or worse, "Jon &
Kate" has raised its must-see stakes. There's significantly more
suspense than was ever in the show's original concept: rearing a
house-full of twins and sextuplets.
The suspense is surely felt at TLC. It must strike a balance
between the racy new reality of its monster hit series, and holding
firm to what the network stands for: family friendly fare.
"Attention and big audience are desirable," said Robert
Passikoff, president of the market research firm Brand Keys, "but
not at the expense of the network's brand -- or the audience and
advertisers who like the show the way it is.
"I can't imagine this does anything to reinforce the core
values of TLC or the show itself."
TLC has withheld any comment on the "Jon & Kate" media
firestorm, apart from declaring support for the family and
"respecting their needs as they work through this challenging
time."
Meanwhile, the network has been scrambling to finish the
season kickoff, promising it will properly address the negative
publicity bombarding the Gosselins.
A challenging time, indeed.
"This is certainly not the way the network would have
preferred things to go," Larry Gerbrandt, a principal of Media
Valuation Partners, noted.
Since "Jon & Kate" premiered two years ago, TLC has been
the proud custodian not only of a show with broadcast-network-size
viewership, but also of a merchandising golden goose. (Latest
samples from the product line include Kate's third book, due this
fall, with nearly a million copies of her first two books in print,
according to their publisher, Zondervan. And another batch of
series DVDs will be hitting stores in July.)
Can TLC navigate the stormy, uncharted waters and keep the
franchise intact?
"They've got some tough choices to make," Gerbrandt said.
"They must handle it with great sensitivity."
Like maybe: Add marriage counseling to the narrative mix.
"They could bring in a Dr. Phil," suggested Gerbrandt.
Of course, it isn't just up to the network and producers. The
stars of the show will obviously have some say. After a decade of
marriage, do Jon (age 32) and Kate (34) mean to stay together -- or
at least recommit to a convincing simulation of togetherness for
the cameras?
"Kate and I obviously have been going through a lot of stuff,
and discussing what's best for our kids," Jon says in his
roundabout way during a "sneak peek" clip from Monday's episode,
posted online by TLC a few days ago.
"My kids are the reason I have always done everything," says
Kate.
If the Gosselins are discussing anything, it would seem to be
by e-mail. In the two-minute excerpt, each addresses the camera
seated solo on a sofa. And in scenes at their sextuplets' fifth
birthday party, each gives the other a wide berth.
A recent People magazine story quoted Kate Gosselin saying
she and Jon had struggled with their marriage for months.
"I don't know that we're in the same place anymore, that we
want the same thing," she said.
It's the sort of sentiment that clashes with the feel-good
tone of past shows that has Kate declaring in the title sequence,
"We're a family," as Jon chimes in, "We're in this together."
Granted, a certain stress level was always part of the show's
recipe. Kate came off as snippy, Jon as taciturn. Their
less-than-perfect relationship was just another way that made them
seem relatable to viewers.
"She's so emasculating, it's just a matter of how much is he
going to take? There's tension every episode between them," said
Jessica Remo.
Remo, a contributing writer for Philadelphia magazine, was a
big fan of the show, which she found "cute and adorable," when a
few months ago she began reporting an article on the Gosselin
phenomenon.
"Jon + Kate + 8 While sidestepping any mention of marriage
vows broken, the article charted a vivid distinction between being
a family and performing as a TV-friendly family-for-hire.
Now Remo wonders how her story, and the recent avalanche of
tabloid coverage, could have caught the Gosselins off-guard.
"You're selling your privacy and going on television," Remo
said. "You guys are celebrities, your show is a hit, and everybody
wants to know about you."
And that sums up the plight of "Jon & Kate" as it begins
its planned 40-episode new season. It must bridge the gap between
the Gosselins its viewers used to think they knew, and an
alternate, less sanitized family the media are racing to expose.
"Viewers aren't stupid. You've got to explain it away
somehow," said Remo, laying out the challenge facing TLC. "But I
think even if the network doesn't do it well, people will still
watch. It's human nature: They want to see what happens next."