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TELEVISION

Swedish-Americans set for small screen return

With a second season of Swedish reality television show "Allt för Sverige" set to start on Sunday, The Local catches up with two of the Swedish-American contestants who return to Sweden to explore their families' past.

Swedish-Americans set for small screen return

“Maybe we’re Swedes with strong American influences, or we’re Americans with strong Swedish influences,” explained Anna Brita Mohr, one of this year’s contestants, tells The Local.

Season two of the hit TV show “Allt för Sverige” (‘Everything for Sweden’) was filmed over the summer and host Anders Lundin returns to Sveriges Television (SVT) to guide ten new curious contestants through a competition to give them a peek into their families’ past.

For participants Vernon Neil Ferguson, 42, and 32-year-old Mohr, being selected was an emotional roller coaster.

”I cried. It was a lifelong dream to come here. I was very close to my mormor [maternal grandmother], who died 18 years ago and this was a way to reconnect with her,” Ferguson explains.

RELATED PHOTO GALLERY: ‘Allt för Sverige’ second season contestants

Ferguson’s grandmother came to the United States with her Dutch husband, but as she never spoke about Sweden, her grandson knew little about his heritage.

With the first episode taking off in an area near where several contestants have family roots, the picturesque High Coast (Höga Kusten) of northeastern Sweden, the group delved into their past from the very first day.

All contestants were given photos of their ancestors, with a key and very little extra information – an overwhelming experience for many of the contestants.

”In English, you would call it ‘rubbernecking’. We were constantly turning our heads at everything. All the sights, the smells, and the road signs that were in Swedish,” Ferguson says.

”Those first days were just full of adrenaline,” Mohr adds.

Finding out more about their ancestry triggered similar emotions, and both contestants agree that the new family findings rounded out their knowledge of themselves.

”There is a relief when you find out certain things, but that is accompanied with more questions,” Ferguson explains.

”Putting stories to the faces and resolving the question of why my family left Sweden was something that had to be answered, but it was not a happy experience. It was more just facts,” he admits.

Mohr, who is half-Swedish and has always been labelled as ”the tall Swedish girl”, adds that coming to Sweden felt like coming home.

”I felt like there were a lot of things that were very familiar,” she says.

Despite experiencing some culture shock, Ferguson agrees, saying that ”during that first week, everyone began to feel at home.”

Ferguson recalls that their group bonded well and ended up feeling like a family in Sweden, in their own peculiar way.

“We were all very different people, but we bonded because of this one shared experience,” Mohr adds.

“Feeling at home with a group of strangers was probably the most meaningful experience, combined with finding out about my country and my family.”

“We had such a good group, we’ve definitely become lifelong friends,” adds Ferguson.

Having returned to the United States, all contestants have taken bits of Sweden home with them. Particularly, Ferguson and Mohr agree, the word lagom.

“It’s an ideal, I definitely gained an appreciation for that,” Mohr explains.

“Before coming to Sweden, I would have described that word as Goldilocks and the three bears; you know everything is just right,” Ferguson tells The Local.

“But it’s not that – it’s a whole way of life.”

Season two of “Allt för Sverige” starts on Sunday, October 28th at 8pm on SVT channel 1

Sanne Schim van der Loeff

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TELEVISION

Norwegian reality show introduces sexual consent rule for contestants

The latest series of Paradise Hotel in Norway has introduced an on-screen consent requirement for contestants planning on having sexual contact following allegations of abuse on the Swedish version of the show.

Norwegian reality show introduces sexual consent rule for contestants
The show has introduced on-screen consent requirements. Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

Contestants in the latest series of Paradise Hotel, which aired on Monday night, will require contestants to demonstrate on-screen with a thumbs up to the camera that they consent to any sexual activity.

“We were told from day one that if we were to have sex, we had to consent with a thumbs up to the camera from both parties,” Stian Trulsen, a contestant on the hit reality series, told newspaper VG

Earlier this year, it was alleged that a male contestant abused two female participants on the Swedish edition of the show. Swedish prosecuting authorities are investigating the alleged abuse. 

Christian Meinseth, program manager for production company Nent which makes the show, said the new rules weren’t directly introduced because of what happened on the Swedish programme. 

“No, but we have, of course, worked with the series and looked at our practices around the format, so we ensure that Paradise Hotel is both a good watch and fun to be a participant in,” Meinseth told VG. 

“We are very concerned about the participants’ safety, and we have not had any challenges around the new rules,” Meinseth added. 

The program manager added that the production company wanted the show to reflect a more modern approach to sex. 

“At the same time, we are also careful to monitor language use and how the participants describe each other. Everyone should show respect for each other, and there will be more focus on the game itself. Viewers can look forward to an exciting and entertaining season,” he said. 

The 15th season of the show, which has been on Norwegian tv screens since 2009, will also include a “paradise talents” week where there is a focus on inner values as part of several on-screen and off-screen measures to try and promote more healthy sexual relationships.

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