Jesse Palmer reveals Mel Owens as the next ‘Golden Bachelor’
Former NFL player Mel Owens, a dad to two sons, was introduced as the Season 2 “Golden Bachelor” at a Hulu event in Los Angeles on April 22.
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The “Bachelor” mansion is getting the HGTV treatment.
The luxurious backdrop to more than 40 seasons of ABC’s “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette” is getting a facelift, courtesy of some of the lovestruck hopefuls who have stayed in its bedazzled halls. Warner Bros. Discovery, the parent company of “Bachelor” producer Warner Bros. Unscripted Television and home renovation network HGTV, announced a new series on May 14: “Renovating the Bachelor Mansion” (working title).
The new unscripted show will see former “Bachelor” and “Bachelorette” contestants, who (hopefully) have skills in interior design and home renovation, returning to compete in design challenges on the property in hopes of winning a cash prize. The new series is set for 2026 on HGTV and the newly redubbed HBO Max.
The famed “Bachelor” mansion is located in Aurora Hills, CA, and is a sprawling, Mediterranean-style villa that has previously been rented out on Airbnb for $6000 a night. It has been the setting for catfights, first kisses, group dates, breakups and countless rose ceremonies since the reality dating franchise began in 2002. It might look a little different in future seasons after the former bachelors and bachelorettes get their hands, and sledgehammers, on it.
The new series was announced at WBD’s 2025 upfront presentation in New York, an annual event in which networks and streaming services show off upcoming content to advertisers in the hopes of selling commercial time. Other new series were announced at the event, including toe-tapping Shark Week addition “Dancing With Sharks” (working title) for Discovery Channel, “Guy’s Flavortown Games” on Food Network featuring Guy Fieri and a new “90 Day Fiancé” spinoff on TLC, “90 Day: Hunt For Love.”
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