Interior designer Alison Victoria buys and restores old homes in Chicago. During the rehab, she saves one-of-a-kind architectural features while updating the design with her usable luxurious... Read allInterior designer Alison Victoria buys and restores old homes in Chicago. During the rehab, she saves one-of-a-kind architectural features while updating the design with her usable luxurious style.Interior designer Alison Victoria buys and restores old homes in Chicago. During the rehab, she saves one-of-a-kind architectural features while updating the design with her usable luxurious style.
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This women is a bad representation of women in business. It may not be her plan (perhaps she is being directed to play it this way). You don't see men on rehab shows yelling and flipping out. Most of these dramas would not realistically get to the point they did if one was overseeing the project responsibly. This all rings as fake to me.
When season 3 started it seemed like Alison had toned down her attitude and was becoming a little more likeable. I do like most of her designs which is why I watch. I didn't make it through episode nine. I'm not sure if this season is over but it is for me.
I watch HGTV flip shows religiously and this one is a train wreck that makes it worth watching. This team doesn't seem very well-informed, savvy, or competent. I feel concerned for their investors bc Allison seems a little unhinged and overly emotional with little respect for the economics of the job. She tries desperately to convince us that her over-designing will save the day when all it does is drain the bank for no reason. She also seems overly vain and superficial.
I want to like this show but I get depressed when I see how much she spends and all the issues then they don't get it sold. I stopped watching
I watched Season 1 of WCR with some interest because, unlike some of the other reviewers of this show who are lamenting that Alison isn't like Chip and Joanna, the Property Brothers or some of the other HGTV personalities, that is her greatest asset. She seems very real, warts and all, and not fake or trying to be a poor imitation of a comedian like most of the others on these shows. Some of her S.1 finished products I liked, some I did not. But what struck me most was that there were lots of "surprises" during the renos that seemed like they should have been caught early on, and that money did not seem to be a priority for either her or her partner. It all seemed quite laissez-faire. That came home when several episodes noted at the end that the finished product had not sold and was being pulled off the market.
Now we are into S.2 and things have taken a bizarre (for HGTV) turn. The proverbial has hit the fan as money has run out, there are investors asking tough questions as to where it went, the city has frozen issuing of permits, lawsuits are flying around, and her partner has apparently walked away from their deal. Amazingly, in the most recent episode I saw, he let his reputation be trashed on-camera at an acrimonious meeting before departing. According to news reports this is mostly real and not the typical made-up HGTV fake drama. I'm amazed the series is still in production and on the air. I wonder if HGTV is bankrolling them through all this, because we must be talking about multi-millions of dollars. Simply bizarre, but entertaining to watch for sure, even if it is a slow-motion train wreck.
ETA: It seems production has been suspended, at least temporarily, as following the last episode where work actually occurred, we got a pair of clip shows with Alison, Ari and the production staff talking about making the shows, and an episode where Alison hosted a clip show comparing Good Bones and Desert Flippers. The time slot was used for other things after that.
Now we are into S.2 and things have taken a bizarre (for HGTV) turn. The proverbial has hit the fan as money has run out, there are investors asking tough questions as to where it went, the city has frozen issuing of permits, lawsuits are flying around, and her partner has apparently walked away from their deal. Amazingly, in the most recent episode I saw, he let his reputation be trashed on-camera at an acrimonious meeting before departing. According to news reports this is mostly real and not the typical made-up HGTV fake drama. I'm amazed the series is still in production and on the air. I wonder if HGTV is bankrolling them through all this, because we must be talking about multi-millions of dollars. Simply bizarre, but entertaining to watch for sure, even if it is a slow-motion train wreck.
ETA: It seems production has been suspended, at least temporarily, as following the last episode where work actually occurred, we got a pair of clip shows with Alison, Ari and the production staff talking about making the shows, and an episode where Alison hosted a clip show comparing Good Bones and Desert Flippers. The time slot was used for other things after that.
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