He shared a photo of him and Kobal in matching blue suede suits, sporting their new silver engagement bands.
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“We’re so in love! Thank you so much!” Fenoli wrote on Instagram.
High-profile event and wedding planner Marcy Blum, who helped arrange the proposal, also tagged Fenoli in a series of photos. She shared an image of Fenoli on one knee in front of Kobal on a small stage surrounded by pink and purple flower arrangements.
“It wasn’t a dress, but @metekobal did say yes to @randyfenoli,” Blum wrote. “My longtime friend Randy, became engaged to his love last night, family and friends were there to celebrate.”
Fenoli told People magazine he proposed to Kobal at the Marmara Park Avenue hotel in New York City. Fenoli had told Kobal they were going to have dinner at the Museum of Modern Art but instead surprised him with the proposal.
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The pair have been together since January. According to People, they met at the Marmara — where Kobal was working as a restaurant and bar manager at the time — and have been together ever since.
The proposal was large and lavish, with 50 guests reportedly in attendance, all of whom were friends and family. Several of Kobal’s friends from Turkey, where he is originally from, tuned in via a Zoom call.
Blum told People the opulent proposal was exactly Fenoli’s style, as “anyone who knows Randy either personally or from television knows, ‘understated’ is not in his vocabulary.”
“I’m the king of bridal. I’ve been doing this bridal for 30 years, and I honestly just never thought it was going to happen for me,” Fenoli told People.
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Fenoli said they are planning to get married while on a Princess Cruise with stops in Greece, Italy and Istanbul, so that the soon-to-be newlyweds can celebrate with Kobal’s friends and family in Turkey.
Fine, I’ll admit it! I am exhausted from watching heavy plots about murder mysteries and docudramas detailing scandals. I’ve had enough of watching all the bad in the world. And after a long day of work I’m in no mood to follow a plot-heavy show.
What I really want is to kick back, relax, and watch mindless entertainment. Thanks to the resurgence of Y2K fashion this year, I’ve been yearning to go back to my roots…I’m talking about the kind of trashy reality television that only the early 2000s could manifest.
There’s nothing more satisfying and utterly delicious than watching a group of people act like heathens in front of a camera just for the sake of good TV. In the early 2000s, if there was a camera, anyone would do anything to become famous.
They’d say anything, do anything, and manufacture dramatized situations simply for the sake of viewership. And we ate it up. And let’s be frank: they just don’t make them like they used to.
Compared to what we grew up with, the current slate of reality TV is lame. These days, people try their hand at earning fame through Instagram and TikTok. But in the heyday of reality TV, you had to get off your ass and work. Read: be on TV.
There was a plethora of shows to choose from. It wasn’t just The Kardashians and a smattering of overproduced beachside dating shows. There was Say Yes To The Dress, The Hills, My Super Sweet 16, Four Weddings, and more!
And yes, I’m a fan ofLove Island and Love is Blind, but they’re not the same. I miss following a bunch of rabid 20-somethings around who didn’t care how the public perceived them. Most reality TV contestants nowadays use their shows as a stepping stone into the Influencer World — boring. I miss when there were zero stakes.
The cast of Jersey Shore got into multiple fistfights every season. The children on My Super Sweet 16 were openly entitled and outwardly rude. Everyone in every show would say the most outrageous statements that you wouldn’t dare whisper on national television.
These days, it’s all about image. The Kardashians use their Hulu show to give you a look into their lives. But much of this promotes their brands and addresses scandals we’ve known about for months. And Love Island members were all fighting for a Princess Polly endorsement from day one.
Bring me back to the “anything goes” mentality of the early 2000s. I miss watching out-of-touch heiresses like Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie try out mundane, “poor” tasks like going to a grocery store or working in a restaurant. Take me back to the simpler times of The Simple Life.
My recent aching for this niche genre of reality cinema started when I stumbled across seasons 4 and 6 of My Super Sweet 16 on Hulu and was hooked. Then I turned to old episodes of Jersey Shore. Who knows what mind-numbing show is next?
And while I get my Sweet Sixteen fix on Paramount Plus, I am openly encouraging TLC and MTV to go back to producing raw reality television. I want the cast to not have any hopes or dreams for their careers and put their all into these shows.
There’s never a bad time to recap my favorite moments from the most iconic reality TV shows. So here we go:
Jersey Shore
Can we all just take a moment to remember the time Sam got mad at Ronnie for making fun of her Fred Flintstone big toe pic.twitter.com/5i1OB5PllS — realitytvshow (@bgcslave) August 20, 2018
When Ron and Sam got into a fight because Ron made fun of Sam’s big toe. Iconic, ridiculous, and just amazing.
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