I Ain't Saying She's a Gold Digger…

News EditorGeneral

bachelorsSingletons, here is your perfect opportunity to meet a wife – on TV! Just be sure to have her sign a pre-nup!

The producers of American Idol are traveling around the country to find a different kind of television star. Farmers Only! Based on a hit overseas TV show, ‘The Farmer Wants a Wife’ matches a spirited farmer who doesn’t have much time to meet women. And with a handful of available ladies from all walks of life who dream of living a traditional, small town lifestyle, the producers will be traveling all around the United States in the coming weeks to find young, attractive male farmers who fit the bill.

“We are looking for farmers in their mid 20’s and 30’s who are single and looking to meet the right girl,” says Michele DiNardo of Fremantle Media North America. “We’re looking for hard-working, fun-loving, family-oriented, and who love the traditional, small-town way of life.”

For more information or to receive an application to be on the show, call 818-755-1253.

3 Comments on “I Ain't Saying She's a Gold Digger…”

  1. The producers for this show were conducting open casting calls for this show last December at the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting in Columbus… I had assumed the show had died since I never heard anymore about it, then I read this story earlier in the week. The comments I heard from Ohio guys who were interviewed by the producers weren’t terribly positive; it seemed to confirm my notion that the mainstream media tends to marginalize rural folk as backwards, ignorant, or at the very least, a quaintly amusing novelty. Something to the tune of “aww, look at the farmer, isn’t he cute?”

  2. The producers for this show were conducting open casting calls for this show last December at the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting in Columbus… I had assumed the show had died since I never heard anymore about it, then I read this story earlier in the week. The comments I heard from Ohio guys who were interviewed by the producers weren’t terribly positive; it seemed to confirm my notion that the mainstream media tends to marginalize rural folk as backwards, ignorant, or at the very least, a quaintly amusing novelty. Something to the tune of “aww, look at the farmer, isn’t he cute?”

  3. The producers for this show were conducting open casting calls for this show last December at the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation annual meeting in Columbus… I had assumed the show had died since I never heard anymore about it, then I read this story earlier in the week. The comments I heard from Ohio guys who were interviewed by the producers weren’t terribly positive; it seemed to confirm my notion that the mainstream media tends to marginalize rural folk as backwards, ignorant, or at the very least, a quaintly amusing novelty. Something to the tune of “aww, look at the farmer, isn’t he cute?”

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