Latest news with #HGTV


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Time of India
Inside Kyle and Kristin Juszczyk's renovated LA home: Her favorite 'cute little' feature revealed
Kristin Juszczyk, wife of San Francisco 49ers fullback Kyle Juszczyk, is steadily carving a space for herself beyond football sidelines. Known for her headline-making NFL game-day fashion, she's now drawing attention for her growing interest in interior design. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now While their California home features plenty of stylish upgrades, it's a 'cute little' seating nook in the living room that she loves most, a cozy corner that now keeps Kyle off the floor after games and adds a warm, personal touch to their space. With Galey Alix's touch, Kristin Juszczyk turned a disaster into a cozy win for husband Kyle Juszczyk After a sudden kitchen flood at their California home, the couple decided to embark on a full renovation journey. Partnering with former HGTV designer Galey Alix, they transformed their 4,300 sq. ft. residence into a warm, calming space styled with a 'Pacific cozy' theme a blend of modern minimalism and comforting textures. Kristin was genuinely impressed by Galey Alix's work, praising her in a recent interview. 'It was the best experience I could have ever imagined, and I don't know how I could ever do anything different now. Galey really added so much seating in our living room that we didn't have before. After games, Kyle was notorious for laying on the floor watching film on his iPad, but now he doesn't have to do that anymore," Kristin said (via PEOPLE). This thoughtful addition perfectly blends comfort and practicality, elevating their daily living experience. From cozy corners to a cute office fridge, Kristin Juszczyk proves it's the little things that matter While the home boasts stunning upgrades throughout, it's a humble living room seating nook that stands out as Kristin's personal favourite. She calls it her 'cute little' detail not just for its design, but for its purpose. Adding to her list of simple joys, Kristin also recently shared another fun update, 'Got myself a cute little refrigerator for my LA office.' Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Whether it's a new fridge or a thoughtfully designed space at home, it's clear she finds happiness in the little things that make everyday life easier and more enjoyable. Also read: From custom fashion to curated interiors, Kristin continues to evolve as a creative force. Her home reflects that same philosophy a place where comfort meets charm, and function blends seamlessly with style. What began as a renovation project has now become a heartfelt expression of personality, practicality, and modern elegance.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Drew Scott's New Photo Montage of Daughter Piper Is a Whole Mood
Drew Scott is doing his best. He's flipping houses with his twin brother Jonathan Scott on HGTV, raising two beautiful kids with wife Linda Phan, and posting the most relatable parenting content on social media. (The latter we are so appreciative of, BTW!) His most recent post features a photo montage of his 1-year-old daughter Piper, and each snap is a whole mood. 'Kid hairstyles (according to a dad),' the Property Brothers star wrote on Instagram this week. In the first photo, he holds his son Parker, 3, and his daughter Piper, whose brown hair is sticking straight up. Then, the carousel of photos includes all the hairstyles he's done for his toddler, and he gets an A for effort! More from SheKnows David Beckham's Teen Daughter Harper Gives Him an Expert Makeover in a Sweet New Video The first one is called 'the whale spout,' which is a half-up ponytail. Piper holds her water bottle as she lies on her stomach showing off the 'do, with her hair splaying out at all angles out of the ponytail on top. In the next photo, Piper rocks a green-and-white-striped jumper with the whale spout again, this time with an added accessory — in this case, a clip-on flower — to make the look more formal. In another snap, Piper wears dinosaur pajamas as she looks at board books on her shelf. Her curly hair is wild and barely tamed with a tiny ponytail sticking out one side. 'The side ponytail,' Scott called this one, with a unicorn emoji because it does kinda look like that. Pigtails are next, a classic hairstyle that is so cute on Piper. He also shows pictures of 'the fresh wash,' the woke up like this,' and the 'I give up,' which features Parker and Piper wear sunhats as they hug each other. Hey, doing a toddler's long hair day after day is not easy (especially because they do not know how to sit still!), so this photo montage is so relatable. 'Share with a parent who needs some inspo 🤣 #kidhairstyles,' Scott quipped in the caption. Parents could totally empathize with Scott in the comments. 'They are adorable! And every parent has gone through the bad hair day with their kids,' one person wrote. Someone else wrote, 'The 'I Give Up' took me out! 🤣' Same! Piper turned 1 earlier this month, and Scott shared pictures of her with another style. She is wearing a bandana that ties around her hair and looks like a pink tiara. Yes, it's adorable! 'This is 1🎂,' he captioned the post, featuring Piper holding her parent's hands outside. 'It has FLOWN by! Happy bday Pipes❤️👶' She's a little cutie in every hairstyle, and we love seeing how her dad is embracing the girl dad life by trying his hand at different looks. She is one lucky girl!Best of SheKnows 20 of Serena Williams' Most Adorable Motherhood Moments 30+ Baby Names With Ivy League Vibes — No Degree Required Michelle Obama's Best Mom Quotes — Because We Could All Use a Dose of Her Wisdom
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
UTAH'S HAMLET HOMES REVEALS THE 4 HOMES FROM HGTV'S ROCK THE BLOCK, SEASON SIX. BLOCK PARTY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO SEE HOMES AND BENEFIT HOMEAID
THE 4 ROCK THE BLOCK HOMES ARE FOR SALE SALT LAKE CITY, May 29, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The finale of Rock The Block season six aired Monday, but tomorrow, you can finally see the homes. Rock The Block is HGTV's highest rated show. All episodes of season six were completely filmed in Grantsville, Utah and the homes were built by Utah builder Hamlet Homes. For contractual and privacy reasons, the 4 Rock The Block homes have been at a secret location, surrounded by a locked gate. After months of being inaccessible, public access will finally be possible tomorrow and Saturday. Hamlet is hosting a "Block Party" where the public can walk through the homes made famous by the show. Utah's Hamlet Homes was selected by HGTV as the official builder of all homes in season six. Rock The Block attracted more than 13.6 million viewers to season five and season six is already trending to surpass those numbers. All seven episodes of season six are set in Hamlet Homes Worthington Ranch community: their newest development in Grantsville, Utah. Worthington Ranch is located at 1167 W Blue Fox Drive in Grantsville, Utah 84029. The public can tour the homes from 10a-8p May 30th and 31st, 2025. There will be live music, giveaways, a silent auction and food trucks serving $5 plates (normally $12-$17). Five radio stations will be present including FM100 (KSFI), 103.5 The Arrow (KRSP), News Radio (KSL), Now 97.9 (KBZN) and 93.3 The Bull (KUBL). A silent auction will take place with more than 50 items. Items will include notable memorabilia from the show seen during season six. Items like signed sledgehammers from each of the design teams, Johnathan and Jordan Knights 'Goat House' and more. Proceeds from all auction items will be donated to Homeaid. Homeaid is a Utah based organization with the mission to eliminate homelessness in Utah. They do this by leveraging partnerships with local homebuilders and their resources. Homeaid in turn builds or improves structures to get homeless off the streets in Utah and into comfortable housing. "Homeaid is an organization that is super close to our hearts," said Tami Ostmark the Owner, VP of Marketing & Design at Hamlet Homes. "We work very closely with them on many community projects." Homeaid is a Utah based organization made up of competing home builders that find common ground in helping Utah's homeless population. "We come together as builders to help build homes for the homeless," continued Ostmark. "We will even fix bathrooms at existing shelters. Whatever needs to be done to provide basic levels of comfort to those in need." Donations for auction items at the Block Party weekend will help create more community projects with Homeaid. Each donation is typically multiplied by 8-10X in street value, because the builders are particularly good at extending the value with their premier vendors. The estimated 50 auction items will include: designer signed sledgehammers from each house, the tiny home in the backyard of Alison and Michel's house, Johnathan & Jordan Knights green house & goat house, the artwork that Michel painted in her house, gift baskets donated from companies and other items that were seen during season six on the Rock the Block. There will also be 5 exclusive designs of limited edition T-shirts, each for $20. 100% of the $20 donation goes directly to Homeaid. Hamlet will pay for the hard cost to produce the T-shirts as a continued charitable contribution to Homeaid. T-shirts are limited to 250 total (50 of each of the 5 designs) with a 'first come' disclaimer. There is no donation necessary to see the homes and enjoy the Block Party. However, if anyone donates $25, they will receive a great meal and know that they donated $20 of that to a charitable organization; that will turn their $20 donation into an estimated $200 in street value to help the homeless. All while touring the 4 amazing homes created by Hamlet Homes and designed by the celebrity designers. "We are really excited to raise as much for Homeaid as possible and for people to finally see these amazing homes!" said Ostmark. "It was such a fun and challenging project. The appraised value between all 4 homes was so close! So, the final win could have gone any way. The whole project has been an incredible experience that has brought our team together. We feel more than ever now that we can take on any challenge." Former competitors and judges that returned to the block on the veteran teams this season were star designer Alison Victoria (Sin City Rehab) with past Rock the Block champion and high-end designer Michel Smith Boyd (Luxe for Less) as well as home restoration dynamo Jonathan Knight (Farmhouse Fixer) and his New Kids on the Block bandmate and brother Jordan Knight (Farmhouse Fixer: Camp Revamp). Competing on the series for the first time, the rookie teams featured married home reno pros Chelsea and Cole DeBoer (Down Home Fab and Flipping) and renovation and real estate experts Kamohai and Tristyn Kalama (Renovation Aloha). Hamlet Homes was given special permission from HGTV to record behind the scenes footage of all seven episodes in season six. "We had a photographer/videographer on site the whole show. We are excited to show a peek behind the curtain on our website and YouTube channel," said Ostmark. The behind-the-scenes video was released Tuesday morning. "It's one big behind the scenes show around 15 minutes long. Really cool things that happened on the set that you did not see on the show. Birthday celebrations, a behind the scenes peak at the whole set, including the designers' trailers and how the show is filmed. It's really exciting content that we are so happy to finally be able to share." The behind-the-scenes show can be viewed at or When asked if there are any crazy behind the scenes stories that Hamlet is allowed to talk about, Ostmark laughed, smiled and kindly replied "no comment". The four homes seen on Rock The Block can be toured by the public at the Block Party May 30th & 31st. The four homes in the show are even available to be purchased! Interested buyers should contact Hamlet's sales office. ABOUT HAMLET HOMESHamlet Homes ( crafts quality customer-oriented townhomes and single-family homes located in attractively designed neighborhoods in Utah and Idaho. Since the company's founding in 1995, Hamlet has built over 5,000 homes in 80 communities. The company is a proud recipient of many awards on Sustainable Business & Design, Quality Builder Awards recognized both locally and nationally. Named by the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce as the 'Veteran Owned Small Business of the Year, in 2019. Hamlet has since been named several times to the Professional Builder's Housing Giants List and annual HOME AWARDS Best Customer Experience. Most recently in 2025, Hamlet was named Utah's 'Best of State' for Real Estate Development for the 8th time and Utah Businesses 'Best Companies to Work For' for the 5th consecutive year. Block Party Details:May 30th & 31st , 2025. 10a-8p each dayFood Trucks 11a-7pSilent Auction ends at 8p the 31st; winners will be contacted and do not need to be present to win. Location:Hamlet HomesWorthington Ranch1167 W Blue Fox DriveGrantsville, Utah Contact:Nate Di Palmanate@ Tami Ostmark tostmark@ View original content: SOURCE Hamlet Homes
Yahoo
3 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
KC house that was offered as HGTV prize sells for $725K. Here's what happened
The winner of the 2024 sweepstakes for 'HGTV Urban Oasis' will not go home to Waldo after all, despite a home there being offered as the grand prize. The reason is a secret second prize option hidden in the rules of the giveaway. Instead, a buyer closed on the Kansas City house for $725,000 on Tuesday, according to Sarah Legg, the real estate agent for the property. The house received seven offers after it was listed in late April, Legg said. In 2023, Legg said she showed the TV production staff four or five houses. HGTV chose this house because 'they wanted something that was close to amenities, kind of in the urban core. They wanted walkability.' The home design cable network bought the house to remodel and give to a lucky viewer. A Memphis-based HGTV designer planned upgrades to the inside and outside, and a camera crew surprised the lucky winner, who already lived in the Kansas City area. According to HGTV, this was the first local winner of their home giveaways, which since 2010 have taken place in cities including New York City, Chicago, Atlanta and Louisville. After the reveal, the winner had a decision: She could take the house, furnishings, fixtures and art, which were valued altogether at almost $670,000, plus a $50,000 cash bonus. Or she couldtake the cash option. This monetary option offered the winner a lump sum of $250,000 instead of the house, plus the $50,000 cash bonus. The Kansas City winner chose the latter, and the home went back on the market. Finances might be why a sweepstakes winner would choose the cash option, Legg said. 'There are tax implications when you win a prize of that nature,' Legg said. Winners must already have a lot of cash on hand to take the house in the sweepstakes, because they have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to the government by the time taxes are due. This is because the house counts as income on taxes. With the Kansas City HGTV house, a single person would have to pay approximately $263,000 in income taxes on the house alone, even before income taxes on the cash prize and their own employment income, according to SmartAsset's income tax calculator. In addition, the winner would have to find money for closing fees and property taxes, according to the sweepstakes rules. For the cash option, the winner wouldn't have to front the taxes and the approximately $100,000 in income taxes would be deducted from the lump sum of $300,000, according to SmartAsset. HGTV did not respond to requests for comment or answer how many of its sweepstakes winners chose the houses, but Legg said that it's '50/50 with the network on whether or not the winner actually keeps the home.' With shuttlecock wallpaper in the laundry room and a jazz-themed music room, the house puts Kansas City in the center of the design. Designer Carmeon Hamilton said in a September interview with The Star that the home was inspired by modern and Scandinavian design, along with the metro's character. The royal blue cabinets in the kitchen were meant to echo fireplace tile, but 'once we realized how many sports teams in Kansas City were blue, we knew it would go over very well with the citizens in town,' Hamilton said. The new owners will be less than a 10-minute walk from Kansas City Bier Company, Andy's and Fareway Meat Market. The Star's Lisa Gutierrez contributed to this report.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
'Rock the Block' Fans CAN'T BELIEVE This Team Won: 'This Show Was Rigged'
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." The result is in! Alison Victoria and Michel Smith Boyd are the winners of Rock the Block season six. The veteran team's win makes Boyd the first-ever two-time champion of the HGTV series, and it's Victoria's first win after competing in three seasons. Naturally, fans are having extremely passionate reactions to this outcome. During the season finale, the teams worked on the remaining spaces of their homes: the front façade and yard (to get that curb appeal!) and a second-floor bedroom with a balcony. After wrapping up those projects, Property Brothers star Jonathan Scott hit the block to judge the entire homes. While previous guest stars blindly judged the spaces, Scott was briefed by the design teams on their work, then walked through every home with host Ty Pennington. The four homes were then appraised by three local appraisers off-screen, which determined the winner once and for all. The base value of the six-bedroom homes was $1.05 million, including the starting value of $750,000, home budget of $250,000, and backyard bonus of $50,000. Team Victoria-Boyd had the highest appraisal of $1.4 million. That's $35,000 more than the was not revealed. Before the winning team was revealed via drones in the night sky, Scott gave everyone feedback. For Victoria and Boyd, he praised their winning kitchen's bold, green color choice that was cohesive throughout. 'I don't want to cause any drama on the block, but I think your main suite might've been the best,' he said of the challenge, which Jonathan and Jordan Knight won. 'It was really, really well done.' Scott was also impressed by their decision to add a tiny home in the backyard. 'Today's family is really looking for flex spaces,' he said. 'They're looking for somewhere where they can work from home, have family stay. I thought that was a really clever idea, and you tucked it back so nicely that it framed the back of the yard.' After being named the winning team, Boyd expressed his appreciation. He said: 'This is such a proud moment. I'm really filled with gratitude because it was hard the first time around. This time around, I thought it was going to kill me because the competition was so amazing. So being able to call myself the first-ever, two-time Rock the Block champion… I'm a lucky guy.' Victoria got emotional, shedding a few tears. 'Third time's the charm, I guess,' she said. 'This one was the most difficult thing I've ever been through, and it is the highest honor to win Rock the Block.' Boyd added, 'Design is so vulnerable, and to hear good feedback, and from our peers who are so talented, and from you guys, from those appraisers, from everyone in Utah that's been so good to us, we're overwhelmed.' Many fans were overwhelmingly shocked by the 5,500-square-foot house that took home the gold. Across various Instagram posts, they didn't hold back: 'The DeBoers and Kalamas had the best homes, either one should have won. The Rookies did amazing!!' 'I definitely thought [the Kalamas' house] was the best house with the Deboers a close second! Sorry to say but the winning house was my least favorite.' 'I can't believe [the Kalamas] didn't win. I've always loved Alison's designs, but I don't know how they won with no grass in the backyard, that hideous green kitchen, and the unusable Pickleball court.' '[The Kalamas] should have won! Last night's winners proved that this show was rigged. There is no possible way that house was appraised that much over you guys. They just wanted Alison to win one.' 'So confused by the Alison & Michel win - love Michel but that was by far my least favorite house. Kalamas should of won!!' '[The Kalamas] should have won, especially using the solar like Lyndsay and Leslie did.' 'We really thought [Jonathan] and Jordan were going to be the winners. [Their] house was so beautiful!' "The newbies crushed it!! No way Alison's house was the best with most value. The newbies added things like a fence, extra bathrooms, solar panels, an extra kitchen, a wine room and movie room. How is none of that extra value. The Kamalas should have won hands down. Very disappointed in the final choice." 'No matter the winner, you all designed an amazing home. (The casita may have increased the value for the win, but there's still no way I'd want to look at that in my yard everyday.)' 'This was 100% my favorite season!!! Everyone did absolutely amazing. The competition was tough, compared to other seasons, everyone brought their A-game.' While many were not pleased, plenty of fans were happy to see the veteran team win. To Boyd via Instagram, one fan wrote, 'SO PROUD that you are THEE ONLY 2X WINNER!! 💪🏽🏅🏆I thought the Kalama's had you beat with those solar panels, but that container casita added so much value!!' Another added, 'I am so happy for you and @thealisonvictoria! Your home was beautiful and I knew that tiny house was going to make y'all WINNERS!' Some of their fellow HGTV pals chimed in, too. 'So damn proud of you and @thealisonvictoria ❤️ - you guys are unstoppable and an insanely talented duo,' Sarah Baeumler wrote. 'Love you both so much 🙌 and beyond grateful to call you my friends xxsb.' The most recent winner aside, fans also shared suggestions for future seasons of the series. 'I say next time, let the American people vote,' one person wrote. Another agreed that the viewers should be the judges. Perhaps HGTV will consider bringing a fan voting component into the mix, as this may have been the most controversial season yet. Follow on Instagram and TikTok. 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