Back to the Frontier Will Remind You of Something
Briefly

Back to the Frontier features American families attempting to live like 1880s frontiersmen. Participants are stripped of modern comforts yet arrive to pre-stocked cabins, undermining the premise. They face minimal challenges, like using outhouses and wood-burning stoves, but lack any real preparedness or authenticity. These circumstances make their experience seem effortless and lacking in genuine danger or risk. Families are provided with canned goods, cash, and instructional materials, rendering the portrayed hardships more fictional than factual. Overall, the series resembles a curated adaptation rather than a true survival experiment.
Magnolia Network's reality series Back to the Frontier attempts a social experiment where families live like 1880s frontiersmen, but the execution significantly lacks authenticity.
Participants are insulated from true hardship, with pre-stocked cabins and instruction manuals, making the challenge appear far too easy and unrealistic.
Read at Vulture
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