In the grand finale of “Bachelorette” (RTL, 8:15 p.m., all episodes also on RTL) Jenny has a lot at stake. Which of the two finalists captured your heart? And above all: who does she see by her side when it comes to a future together with her son “Keksi”?

Elephants are known to have very good memories. And Jenny (27) and Fynn (26) will probably remember their last date as part of this “Bachelorette” season for a long time. Jenny will later even describe it as “the most beautiful date of my life”. The setting: a tropical rainforest through which the trumpeting of elephants echoes. Jenny meets Fynn at an elephant sanctuary. Here, weak and sick pachyderms are painstakingly nurtured – a treatment that doesn’t need Jenny’s and Fynn’s affection. Both of them first rub mud on their elephant before scrubbing it off again. When the tropical rains set in, there’s no stopping them and they kiss like two abandoned in paradise.

At the moonlight date under the palm trees, Fynn’s family first has the floor. Everyone praises him in the highest tones. His grandmother also advises Jenny to go to Fynn, “because he’s the hottest.” Fynn begins the next sentence with “I have to tell you something…”, which, as is well known, often does not bode well. In this case, Fynn makes a kind of declaration of love: “I think, no, I know that I might have fallen in love with you.”

Jenny’s final dating day with Adrian (27) is less romantic and animalistic: no elephants, no butterflies in her stomach. Before meeting the in love thin-skinned from Würselen, the “Bachelorette” is downright “shit” because her feelings for Fynn are already too strong. Adrian, on the other hand, wants to throw everything into the balance according to the motto: You don’t have a chance, so take it. During her boat trip, Jenny weighs every word and concludes afterwards: “It would have been a nice day, but I couldn’t enjoy it.” Even the campfire in the evening can no longer ignite Jenny’s passion for Adrian. Instead, her emotional insecurity is literally palpable for Adrian. It doesn’t help much that Adrian’s mother confirms in the film that she would make Jenny extremely welcome.

Despite her clear emotional state, Jenny’s last rose award was anything but easy. How does she tell Adrian? He believes undeterred in his victory: “Whether hand in hand or on hands – I’ll carry them out, I’ll take them with me today, I promise I need them and we need each other.” Almost in tears, Jenny tells him that she can’t give him the last rose “because the feelings weren’t enough.” A big emotional gesture follows. Instead of reacting offended or bursting into tears, Adrian wishes her, “Keksi” and Fynn all the best: “I hope that Fynn will last until the end of my life.” Has she often wrongly labeled him as emotionally immature? Was “The Bachelorette” wrong about Adrian?

Fynn, initially the shy man with a mania for cleaning, has steadily groped his way to Jenny’s heart. Above all, “how openly you can talk about your feelings” impressed her. This was followed by the yoga date as a physical icebreaker, the first furtive kiss in the boys’ villa, the intimacy on the dream date and finally lots of colorful butterflies between all the elephants. Jenny admits that at one point she was afraid that Fynn might not be too young for a family life with her and “Keksi”, whether he had really let off steam. Nevertheless, she gives him the last rose, “because I fell in love with you.” The exciting question: Do Jenny, “Keksi” and Fynn really have what it takes to become a small family?