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Behind the glamor - here's what you don't see on HGTVs My Lottery Dream Home

Joe and Rhonda Meath were among the first to feature on the HGTV 'Dream Home' program   Photo: YouTube

Where do lottery winners go when they want to buy a home?

This was the idea behind HGTV's "My Lottery Dream Home" when the program first started in 2015.

You might have thought that when you won the lottery, you'd get in touch with HGTV to have host David Bromstad help you find the home of your dreams.

Well, it wasn't always that way, according to The List.

In fact, to get the first season started, executive Mike Krupat said that they initially contacted almost 1,000 lottery winners.

Rick and Lorie Knudsen at the 2014 check presentation after winning $180 million in the Mega Millions lottery   Photo: Mega Millions

Of those, only 10 winners responded to appear on the first show from the production company's 7Beyond Productions.

However, once the show became more popular and the public learned more about its concept, finding lottery players became easier.

Krupat explained, "Lottery winners don't really need the exposure and they don't need the money to participate."

Rick and Lorie Knudsen greet show host David Bromstad on the first season’s episode in 2015   Photo: YouTube

The premiere episode of "My Lottery Dream Home" features Rick and Lorie Knudsen, who had won $180 million in the California Mega Millions lottery.

Despite their massive winnings, they had only budgeted $1.5 million to $2.5 million for their new house, Eagle Crest.

ADRIAN VAN ANZ AND JASON SPETH

Eagle Crest was expanded over the years and put up for sale in 2018 by owner Rick Knudsen   Photo: People

But former Disney illustrator Bromstad was sure this $5.8 million, 16,000 square-foot, five-bedroom, eight-bathroom house had everything the couple wanted and more.

David told the Los Angeles Times that the earnings of the show's winners typically range from around $1 to $4 million.

The Knudsens appeared in the first episode titled "A Big Home for a Big Prize," and eventually purchased their home.

They have been the show's biggest winners so far.

Bromstad talked about the show’s many winners, “The number one thing they want is to move near family, which is really cool and special.”

“I didn’t expect that. I thought people would just move to the nicest neighborhood,” he says.

"A lot of winners get financial advisers and think it through before they call me," he said in an interview with the New York Post.

READ MORE: What The Cameras Don't Show You On HGTV's My Lottery Dream Home


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