The pure joy of HGTV?s ?My Lottery Dream Home?
This is the house-hunting show we need right now The last time I hate-watched House Hunters, I found myself seething as a woman rejected one perfectly good home after another because it lacked her most-prized feature: a window that would show off her Christmas tree to the neighbors. ?No one wants to see your Christmas tree,? I yelled at the television, even as I wondered what it might feel like to consider such a feature a necessity. Like many other House Hunters haters, I live in New York, in an apartment building with stairwells so steep and narrow I?m not sure a Christmas tree could even make it to my third-floor apartment (let alone fit through the door upon arrival).
I love reading about real estate, so for a long time I wondered if I?d ever be able to watch a home-shopping show and not resent everyone on it, and also myself for judging them and for feeling incredibly jealous. As if by magic, My Lottery Dream Home, the fifth season of which premieres September 21, came into my life. Episodes of My Lottery Dream Home hew to the same ?so you want to buy a house? structure as other shows in the genre, but here, the buyers haven?t come into their money through inheritance or their salaries. Instead, they?ve won a lottery, whether it?s a scratch-off ticket or a Powerball jackpot. Host David Bromstad shows each of these newly minted millionaires three houses, and they must make a decision at the end of the episode.
Bromstad is full of charm and enthusiasm, and the lo...
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