Tag Archives: over-the-space

16 Crazy Things You Didn’t Know About The Bachelor

Ever wonder how things work behind the scenes on The Bachelor and The Bachelorette… or maybe how much of it is actually staged? Well, we've got a few answers that will most certainly surprise even longtime, card-carrying members of Bachelor Nation. Here are 16 crazy things that you never knew about The Bachelor, The Bachelorette and their cast of characters … 1. The Contestants Do Their Own Cooking and Laundry You might imagine that staying in the Bachelor Mansion is a luxury, but the contestants not only lack total privacy, they’re also responsible for their own cooking, laundry, etc. This is not a lavish lifestyle they’re living. 2. The Ladies Buy Their Own Dresses Those beautiful dresses aren’t provided to the ladies by ABC. The women have to bring their own, with the exception of the dresses the final two contestants wear in the finale. It goes both ways, too. On The Bachelorette, the guys are expected to come prepared with suits for each rose ceremony. 3. Contestants are Screened for STDs Yep, each contestant on The Bachelor and The Bachelorette is apparently screened for STDs, which, on some level, probably makes sense. Oh, and they all have to get a psychological health screening too… 4. The Food is Not For Eating Ever notice how those one-on-one dinners leave out the part where each person takes a bite of food? That’s because they don’t. Instead, each person eats at a hotel before the dinner. 5. A Real Family Lives in the Bachelor Mansion When The Bachelor isn’t being filmed at the mansion, a family of four lives there. They pack up their stuff and leave twice a year for 42 days, while a new set of hopefuls come in to take over the space. 6. One Month Each season might seem like it spans over a lengthy period of time, especially since someone is proposing marriage at the end of the whole thing, but actually, it only takes about a month to film. View Slideshow

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16 Crazy Things You Didn’t Know About The Bachelor

Budget Space Motel or Just Hot Air?

Out in the Nevada desert, in a complex encircled by barbed wire and guards, a millionaire motelier who believes in UFOs and prayer—but not the Big Bang—is building the world’s first private space station. And it’s inflatable. The vision is President Barack Obama’s: Let private entrepreneurs take over the space race from bloated NASA. But someone needs to build the rockets and space hotels to make it work. Robert T. Bigelow, of Bigelow Aerospace and the Budget motel chain, believes he can build the space stations, and others will be able to fly paying customers, including NASA astronauts, into orbit—all for less money than NASA and other government space agencies currently pay to transport and host spacemen and spacewomen. Truthdig is not entirely convinced this is such a good idea. In a year of oil spills, runaway Toyotas and toxic happy meals, we’re not so sure about turning over exploration of the final frontier—and transportation of our astronauts—to private profiteers.