Reuben: Life in the Dales, review: finally, a Gen Z-er who doesn’t want to be on Love Island

Reuben Owen (left) with his friends Sarah and Tommy
Reuben Owen (left) with his friends Sarah and Tommy - Channel 5

Believe everything you read, and today’s school leavers are incapable of holding down a job, preoccupied with their mental health, and lacking basic life skills. As a cheerful corrective to this you can watch Reuben: Life in the Dales (Channel 5), in which 20-year-old Reuben Owen runs his own groundwork and plant hire business, helped by two friends.

How has this young man landed his own fly-on-the-wall series? Well, it’s because his mother is Amanda Owen, aka The Yorkshire Shepherdess, and cameras documented the family’s way of life in the Dales for years on Our Yorkshire Farm. Now that Amanda and her husband Clive have separated, that show is no more, and Channel 5 has diversified with this spin-off.

Reuben seems like a nice lad with his head screwed on. He learned to operate machinery at a young age, so handles everything with quiet confidence. His colleagues are Tommy and Sarah – the latter is Reuben’s girlfriend, according to his Instagram account, because even farmers have Instagram accounts – and none of them are afraid of hard work. They drive diggers and bulldozers and tracked dumpers in all weathers.

For fun, they drive vintage tractors. It’s wholesome entertainment and the countryside is lovely to look at. Not very much happens, though. The trio dig the pond. They communicate via walkie talkies about how best to dig the pond. At one point they clean debris out of a pipe. For a change of scenery, they go to a digger demonstration in Peterborough and Reuben takes part in a competition that involves shooting basketballs through hoops using a digger. None of this is exciting.

Sometimes the conversations between the friends have a stilted feel, as if the director has instructed them to sit down and talk about particular subjects. When they’re allowed to chat freely, it’s much better, as when they try to work out how many days it will take them to shift 6,000 tons of silt. “If I was good at maths, I’d have a job in an office,” muses Reuben. “If I was good at maths, I wouldn’t be here,” says Tommy. “If I was good at anything other than driving a digger, I wouldn’t be here,” Reuben says, deadpan.

Our Yorkshire Farm was a hit because it combined insights into rural life with the happy chaos of the Owens raising their nine children. This new series only delivers on the first element. But at least it’s putting young people on TV who don’t aspire to be Love Island contestants.

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