And yet, the franchise has produced nine weddings and many more happily dating or engaged couples.The official weddings are well known and often televised: Trista and Ryan Sutter, Jason and Molly Mesnick, Sean and Catherine Lowe, and so on.Talking about her relationship status, she is currently dating her boyfriend since 2012 Justin Pasutto, a pro snowboarder.

are dating game shows, but to the surprise of many, they often result in real love — albeit sometimes indirectly.
The 12-year-old franchise is built around a basic premise: One Bachelor or Bachelorette chooses from 25 contestants, with the promise of a proposal in the finale.
The first black "Bachelorette" has been revealed after weeks of rumors.
Rachel Lindsay was introduced as the next star of "The Bachelorette" on "Jimmy Kimmel Live" Sunday.
Harris, 36, met Chicago entrepreneur Ed Swiderski on "The Bachelorette" and got engaged in 2009.
Harris briefly lived in Chicago before the couple split in 2010. But “non-official weddings” are even more common among the contestants. Even better, who married the lookalike brother of a .These unions are comprised of couples from different seasons that met on spinoffs or at franchise events. She went on to be the first Bachelorette, and she fell for sensitive firefighter Ryan Sutter.The announcement came relatively early in the season, as she's still among six contestants left on Nick Viall's "The Bachelor." Bustle predicts she'll get a hometown date, setting fans up nicely to connect with her on "The Bachelorette," but obviously the news is a major spoiler -- she'll end up getting dumped by Viall at a rose ceremony sooner or later. News reports the casting reveal may have come as blogger Reality Steve broke the news early.ABC previously announced Viall as "The Bachelor" last year before he broke up with a contestant on "Bachelor in Paradise." Lindsay is a 31-year-old attorney from Dallas, Texas, and an early favorite on this season of "The Bachelor." She told ABC her role model is Michelle Obama and her biggest fear is "that I've missed out on my chance at finding love." "Bachelor" creator Mike Fleiss promised an "historic" announcement for the next season of the reality TV dating series.Sometimes we romanticize about the idea of a relationship being perfect, but there is really no such thing.