
HGTV show's 'horrendous' home makeovers go viral
The popular series saw interior designers attempt to redecorate a room in just a few hours on a paltry $500 budget. The series has now resurfaced on TikTok thanks to comedian Rob Anderson, with many users shocked by some of the flamboyant and garish design choices.
In another episode, a wooden kitchen is haphazardly whitewashed over to create a 'farmhouse' look. One of the most egregious designs saw the decorator decoupage a wall unit with 'sacred Indian prayers' that had been dipped in tea and torn to give it 'an aged look.' Anderson called the series 'the most horrendous decorating you'll ever see' and said some of the redecorating deserved a 'prison sentence.'
Social media users now can't stop talking about the show either, with one writing, '$500 budget to do $5,000 worth of damage to any room they step into.' Another commented, 'You know what? Maybe millennial gray was a trauma response.' A third wrote, 'I would press charges if someone did this to my house.'
Steffend, who hosted the series until it went off the air in 2007, has now spoken out following its resurgence on TikTok in an interview with Entertainment Now. 'I mean, it's from the late 90s, early 2000s, and the designer's job was to be as wildly creative as they could be,' she explained of the show's questionable design work. 'There were hits and there were misses. And it didn't matter to HGTV. If it didn't look quite like we all thought it was going to, it didn't matter — I still needed to be encouraging. It was still gonna air.'
She also said that the beauty of the show was allowing people to be creative and to enjoy their weird and wacky design work without judgement. 'We've gotta stop pointing and laughing at what people think is pretty, what people love at that moment in their life,' she said. She added, 'We did the best we could at the time.' Since Decorating Cents went viral, HGTV fans are now calling for its revival on Reddit. We are all clamoring for it. It's so hilariously bad that it deserves a revival. Gone too soon,' wrote one viewer. 'Oh lord no lol. I've been watching Rob Anderson's recaps on social media and those women were criminal,' another commented.
A third wrote, 'Joan Steffend's voice is so calming. I completely understand how she hypnotized homeowners not to riot after her interior decorators destroyed their homes.' A fourth commented, 'Those shows were hilarious for the viewers, but devastating for the poor souls who sacrificed their homes on the altar.' Since Decorating Cents wrapped in 2007, former host Steffend has turned her attention to projects outside of design. Now 70-years-old, Steffend is focused on being a grandmother to her four grandchildren. She's also a published author with two inspirational self-help books under her belt. Decorating Cents is currently available to stream on Discovery+.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Joe Rogan stunned by who really ended America's 'woke period': 'It's insane'
Joe Rogan was left in awe after the CEO of a billionaire-dollar tech company revealed who he thinks has ended America's 'woke' culture. Amjad Masad, the co-founder of Replit, a cloud-based coding platform, confidently declared that Elon Musk erased an alleged oppressive ideology that took over society, particularly within the tech industry. During the latest episode of the Joe Rogan Experience on July 2, Masad claimed that many companies recently went through a 'woke period where you couldn't talk about certain things,' like the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians. 'Has that gone away?' Rogan asked, leading Masad to smile and reply, 'Yeah, yeah, totally gone away.' When Rogan followed up by asking what changed the culture so quickly, Masad simply said 'Elon.' The Replit CEO then added that Musk's purchase of Twitter (now called X) completely removed the stigma of voicing opposing viewpoints in public and online. 'Buying Twitter is the single most impactful thing for free speech. Especially on these issues of being able to talk freely about a lot of subjects that are more sensitive,' Masad explained. Masad, a Jordanian-American whose family is from Palestine, noted that he had faced fierce criticism from colleagues for talking publicly about the situation in Gaza. Despite calling himself a 'moderate Palestinian,' Masad said he has been called anti-Semitic for supporting a two-state solution, which includes protections for Israelis, in the region. While speaking about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, Rogan claimed that society was devolving into groups of people being convinced by their leaders that another group of people were their enemies. 'It's f****** insane. And the fact that it's still going on in 2025, with all we know about corruption and the theft of resources and power and influence, it's crazy that this is still happening,' Rogan said during the podcast. Masad then said he hoped the internet was starting to reach its potential as a platform for opening minds and removing the 'veil of propaganda and ignorance.' 'It was starting to happen in like 2010, 2011. And then you saw YouTube start to close down. You saw Facebook start to close down, Twitter. And suddenly, we had like this period of darkness,' the tech entrepreneur said. Although Rogan said that this censorship initially had good intentions of trying to weed out hate speech, it quickly went too far when tech companies began silencing 'malinformation.' Malinformation is a term used to describe truthful information that is still censored because social media companies and governments claim these facts are harmful to the overall public good. 'That's crazy. You're turning adults into infants, and you're turning the state into God. This is the secular religion. This is the religion of people that are atheists,' Rogan warned. 'The west was never about that. The west was about individual liberty,' Masad replied. The two men then shifted back to Musk's takeover of X, with Rogan arguing that the changes the CEO instituted 'opened up discussion.' While Rogan said that the changes meant to promote more freedom , such as reduced content moderation and restoring suspended accounts, allowed more hate speech to sneak back into X, he argued that more people are now able to tell the difference between news and propaganda. 'You have a lot of people that are recognizing actual true facts that are very inconvenient to the narrative that's displayed on mainstream media,' Rogan said. After Musk purchased Twitter in 2022, he noted that his goal was to 'maximize free speech.' Musk has also repeatedly called out what he referred to as the 'woke mind virus' that was threatening society. During an appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience in November, Musk blamed woke culture for attempting to censor humor and satire, with polarizing topics like social justice essentially becoming off-limits to criticism. 'The woke ideology makes humor illegal. There are so many humor no-fly zones. You can't make fun of anything,' Musk told Rogan in 2024. 'At its heart, wokeness is divisive, exclusionary, and hateful. It basically gives mean people a shield to be mean and cruel, armored in false virtue,' Musk added during a 2021 interview with satire website the Babylon Bee. In the wake of Musk's acquisition of X, other major tech and social media platforms have caved to mounting pressure to roll back censorship online. In March, lawmakers in Washington subpoenaed officials at Google, demanding they turn over company records tied to the censorship of Americans during the Biden presidency. Republicans have long accused the Biden Administration of pressuring major companies into censoring free speech during and after the coronavirus pandemic, which Rogan and Masan also criticized during the July 2 podcast. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg also publicly confessed that both Meta and Facebook censored conservative opinions on an 'industrial scale' during this time. Zuckerberg said the Biden Administration 'repeatedly pressured' the company to remove posts government officials claimed were 'COVID misinformation,' even if the posts were just humor or satire. To Masan's point that the 'woke period' has ended, Facebook has since shut down its third-party fact-checking program, replacing it with Community Notes, a crowdsourced content moderation feature that allows users to add context, corrections, or clarifications to posts online, just like X does.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
New Trump portrait goes on display after ‘the worst' version taken down
A portrait with Donald Trump 's approval has replaced a previous one in the Colorado Capital after the president described the original painting as "truly the worst." The new work, created by 'Christian worship artist' Vanessa Horabuena, replaced Sarah Boardman's that had hung since 2019. Objecting to the original, Mr Trump said Ms Boardman "must have lost her talent as she got older', prompting lawmakers to announce they would remove the portrait from a wall of past presidents. Horabuena's piece has been donated by the White House.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Michael Madsen's dark past full of trauma and the agonizing heartbreak that tortured him until his death
Actor Michael Madsen was best known for his tough-guy roles in films like Reservoir Dogs and Kill Bill, but his final years were marked by personal turmoil, health struggles, and tragic loss. He died on Thursday at age 67. Madsen was discovered unresponsive in his Malibu, California, home by authorities on Thursday morning. He was pronounced dead at the scene from a suspected cardiac arrest, his manager, Ron Smith, said. The gravel-voiced, Chicago native forged a career in Hollywood playing complex, intense characters who should never be crossed: psychotic thieves, washed-up hitmen, and tortured souls. But off screen, he cut a gentler, more introspective figure - one who wrote poetry and doted on his children, friends say. Sources close to the late star told the Daily Mail that his childhood was marred by abuse at the hands of his father, Calvin Christian Madsen, a World War II Navy veteran who was reportedly left traumatized after he killed a thief with a shotgun during a gas station robbery as a boy. The elder Madsen was never charged, but in the years that followed, haunted by his past, he allegedly subjected his Michael to frequent violent beatings, which often knocked him unconscious and left him living in constant fear, the sources said. Madsen would experience his own fair share of heartache and trauma over the course of his life. His best friend and Reservoir Dogs co-star, Chris Penn, died from a heart attack in 2006. Madsen was a pallbearer at Penn's funeral and was left devastated by his passing. Another of his close friends, Christian Brando, son of the legendary Marlon Brando, was arrested for shooting dead his sister's boyfriend in 1990, and later passed away from pneumonia in 2008, aged 49. But it was the death of his 26-year-old son, Hudson, that would haunt what would prove to be his final chapter of life. Sources close to the late star told the Daily Mail that Maden's childhood was marred by abuse at the hands of his father, Calvin Christian Madsen (left), a World War II Navy veteran Hudson, a US Army sergeant, took his own life with a self-inflicted gunshot wound in January 2022. In the tragic aftermath, Madsen declared war on the US Army, demanding a full investigation into Hudson's death and accusing his son's superiors of 'shaming' him for seeking therapy and other treatment for mental health issues he'd been privately battling. 'I am in shock as my son, whom I just spoke with a few days ago, said he was happy - my last text from him was 'I love you dad,'' Madsen told the LA Times in 2022. 'I didn't see any signs of depression. It's so tragic and sad. I'm just trying to make sense of everything and understand what happened. 'He had typical life challenges that people have with finances, but he wanted a family. He was looking towards his future, so its [sic] mind mind-blowing. I just can't grasp what happened.' Hudson had spent time in Afghanistan and was stationed in Hawaii at the time of his death. Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino, with whom Madsen frequently collaborated, was his godfather. In the years after, Madsen's almost three-decade marriage to his wife, fellow actor DeAnna Madsen, 65, deteriorated under the weight of grief and blame. In late 2024, it was announced that Madsen was filing for divorce after 28 years, alleging that DeAnna was 'abusive', and that her drinking, emotional distance, and what he described as neglect and 'toxicity' drove their son to suicide. The filing, as first reported by PEOPLE, revealed that Madsen and DeAnna had split shortly after Hudson's suicide on account of 'irrevocable differences.' Madsen described their relationship as 'abusive, dependent, and toxic,' and also requested a domestic violence restraining order against DeAnna. The filing came weeks after Madsen was arrested on a charge of misdemeanor domestic battery. He was taken into custody in the early hours of August 17, 2024, following a 'family disturbance' report that involved DeAnna. She accused Madsen of pushing her and locking her out of their home. However, Madsen's attorney, Perry Wander, claimed that DeAnna 'broke into' Madsen's home and he 'confronted her and asked her to leave', noting 'it has been an ongoing problem.' 'Michael has shown immense compassion and restraint during this period towards his estranged wife,' said Wander. 'He's definitely not guilty of domestic violence.' In response, DeAnna claimed that Madsen had been 'struggling with his own personal issues.' 'Myself and our children have been supporting him to the best of our ability. We would request privacy at this time,' she said. Then, weeks later, Madsen would walk back his claims in a statement on social media, recanting the sensational allegations he made against DeAnna in the filing and denying he was seeking divorce. 'A few recent articles have suggested my disillusionment with my marriage and a dark connection between my wife and the loss of our son. I was…not the writer of this story and wish my wife no harm or embarrassment,' began Madsen. 'Losing a child is the hardest and most painful experience that can happen in this world. I deeply apologize for not correcting this earlier, but I love my wife and our other 4 children and have no desire for divorce or blame.' He continued: 'She had absolutely nothing to do with what happened to our son. It was a horrible loss and choice that was made for reasons that truly cannot ever be known, because the person is gone, I don't think my son is dead, I think he escaped from a life that didn't make sense anymore. 'The media can spread lies and conflict, and rarely will mention the truth or the way I've stated the things addressed in this Post.' Madsen retracted his restraining order petition against DeAnna in October but proceeded with the divorce. The couple shares two sons, Calvin, 28, and Luke, 19, while the actor is father to sons Christian, 34, and Max, 31, from a previous relationship with Jeannine Bisignano. Madsen had several prior arrests to his name and a well-documented struggle with alcohol abuse. He was previously arrested for trespassing one month after his son's death at a home in Malibu that he was renting. The property's owner reportedly detained Madsen in a citizen's arrest until police arrived, the LA County Sheriff's Office said. Details of the incident weren't released, but Madsen was given a $500 misdemeanor citation. Madsen also served a four-day jail stint and received five years' probation in 2019 after he crashed his Land Rover into a pole while driving drunk. Nobody was injured in the crash. It was his second DUI arrest in seven years. He was previously arrested in 2012 after driving while three times over the legal limit in LA, which landed him a 30-day court-ordered stay at a rehab facility. Earlier that year, he'd also been arrested on suspicion of child cruelty after allegedly getting into a drunken fight with his teenage son after her reportedly caught him smoking marijuana. The son was not named, and authorities ultimately declined to prosecute the case, citing insufficient evidence. Sources close to Madsen told the Daily Mail that he was sober at the time of his death, but was suffering from various health issues after years of addiction to alcohol, drugs, and painkillers. His attorney Perry Wander, who has represented the star for 20 years, said the icon had 'many struggles' in an interview with the Daily Mail. 'I just spoke to Michael two days ago,' said Wander. 'I knew he was not well.' 'Michael was suffering from the effects of alcoholism. He had multiple stints in and out of rehab. He struggled to maintain his sobriety. He was not happy about his life.' Wander claimed Madsen's health woes were exacerbated by his protracted legal battle with DeAnna, which saw the pair fighting over child support and other finances. 'I blame her for putting in the screws over his last years of life,' Wander said, alleging the legal battle, which saw his passport be 'maliciously revoked', impacted his ability to travel and work abroad. 'Michael lived a life of regrets - those regrets being his two marriages,' he added. Other sources said Madsen was apparently in a good frame of mind and voiced excitement about some of his upcoming projects before his shock passing. He was proud to still be a working actor, said one source. Madsen is best known for his roles in the Quentin Tarantino films Kill Bill, Reservoir Dogs, and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. He was originally lined up to play John Travolta's role in Tarantino's cult-classic Pulp Fiction, though he dropped out to star in Kevin Costner's Wyatt Earp instead - a decision he said he later came to profoundly regret. Madsen's other notable works include appearances in Donnie Brasco, Thelma & Louise, and Die Another Day. At the time of his death, he was working on a memoir, Tears For My Father: Outlaw Thoughts and Poems, which is due to be released next year. Madsen was also attached to numerous other unreleased projects, his managers, Susan Ferris and Ron Smith, and publicist Liz Rodriguez said in a statement. 'In the last two years, Michael Madsen has been doing some incredible work with independent film, including upcoming feature films 'Resurrection Road,' 'Concessions' and 'Cookbook for Southern Housewives,' and was really looking forward to this next chapter in his life,' read the statement. 'Michael Madsen was one of Hollywood's most iconic actors, who will be missed by many.' His sister, Virginia Madsen, also penned a lengthy tribute, paying homage to a man she described as 'half legend, half lullaby.' 'My brother Michael has left the stage. He was thunder and velvet. Mischief wrapped in tenderness. A poet disguised as an outlaw. A father, a son, a brother — etched in contradiction, tempered by love that left its mark. 'We're not mourning a public figure. We're not mourning a myth — but flesh and blood and ferocious heart. Who stormed through life loud, brilliant, and half on fire. Who leaves us echoes — gruff, brilliant, unrepeatable — half legend, half lullaby. 'I'll miss our inside jokes, the sudden laughter, the sound of him. I'll miss the boy he was before the legend; I miss my big brother. Thank you to everyone reaching out with love and memory. In time, we'll share how we plan to celebrate his life — but for now, we stay close, and let the silence say what words can't.'