EXTREME MAKEOVER HOME EDITION

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    Reality TV show 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition' captured the hearts of the nation when it transformed the home of a cancer stricken girl and her struggling family into a $1m mansion.
    But as the ABC show aired its final episode last night, it emerged that the 2005 extreme makeover of the rented ranch in Arizona which came with a full-size carousal, had proved to be too extreme for the Okvath family.
    Crippled by debts and rocketing utility bills which came with their 'dream home' Bryan and Nichol Okvath, who have seven children, were forced to sell their one-time $1million mansion at a loss at $540,000.
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    Ruined: Crippled by debts and rocketing utility bills which came with their 'dream home' Bryan and Nichol Okvath, pictured here celebrating on the show with their children, were forced to sell their mansion
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    The show producers transformed the Okvath's home after Kassandra, pictured here on the show aged eight, when she undergoing treatment for cancer, wrote to them asking for her hospital cancer ward to be decorated
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    Overjoyed: The Okvath family pictured here on the show were over the moon with their new home when it was unveiled in 2005
    The episode began in 2004, when the couple's daughter Kassandra, then aged eight, was undergoing treatment for cancer and wrote to the show, asking for her hospital cancer ward to be brightened up.
    So touched by the girl's plea, in addition to renovating the cancer ward, the producers decided to tear down the 1,800-square-foot house the family were renting in Gilbert and replace it with a six-bedroom mansion with a movie theater and a backyard carousel.

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    The property's owner agreed to sign over full ownership of the house to the Okvaths, reports the Arizona Republic.
    The episode aired in March 2005, with the overwhelmed Okvath family breaking down in tears of joy, as nearly 4,000 people gathered outside the home to watch the grand unveiling.
    It seemed like the perfect fairytale ending.
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    Transformed: The ABC show pulled down the family's rented ranch in Arizona and replaced it with two-storey $1m mansion
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    Extreme makeover: The six-bedroom mansion cane complete with a movie theater and a full-sized electronic backyard carousel
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    Reality TV show 'Extreme Makeover: Home Edition', cast pictured here, captured the hearts of the nation when it transformed the home of the cancer stricken girl
    But the extreme home came with extreme bills; utility costs reached $1,200 for electricity and $400 for water; property taxes increased from $1,625 pre-makeover to $5,600, reports the Republic.
    Bryan, who was unemployed, occasionally worked as a truck driver and fire fighter, and Nichol was a stay at home mum, according to the report.
    Struggling to cope, the Republic reports that the cash-strapped couple used the house as collateral for a $405,000 loan in 2006, but were not able to keep up with payments and the home was almost foreclosed.
    They tried to sell the house several times -- for $1.9 million in 2007, then for $1.4 million - but got no takers.
    article-2086727-0F75EA2D00000578-826_634x409
    Costly: The extreme makeover came with extreme bills and the family struggled to keep up with utility costs which reached $1,200 for electricity and $400 for water
    article-2086727-0F75FD2900000578-184_634x409
    Out-of-their-depth: The Okvath family's property taxes increased from $1,625 pre-makeover to $5,600 and the couple soon
    article-2086727-0F75FD2500000578-796_634x409
    Debt: Struggling to cope, the cash-strapped couple used the house as collateral for a $405,000 loan in 2006, but were not able to keep up with payments and almost lost the home
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    Cancelled: The last show of the Extreme Makeover: Home Edition was aired on Friday night
    They narrowly avoided losing the home at a public auction in 2008, then put the house up for sale again.
    By 2009, the asking price had dropped to $800,000. Eventually in spring 2010, they sold it for $540,000.
    'It's been frustrating,' Mrs Okvath had told the Republic in 2009.
    'When the cameras go off, it's just a different. Everybody thinks everything's happily ever after.'
    'A lot of people think we're rich, but we have nothing,' She added. 'We live paycheck to paycheck. We have no cushion anymore.'
    It has since been reported that Kassandra had made a good recovery, however her parents have separated.
    Efforts to reach the family have been unsuccessful.


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-20...l#ixzz1jTVEsR6e
     
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1 replies since 14/1/2012, 23:44   262 views
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