Exclusive: Mel Owens Reveals His Approach To 'Golden Bachelor' Fantasy Suites
Briefly

Exclusive: Mel Owens Reveals His Approach To 'Golden Bachelor' Fantasy Suites
""I'm 62. I don't have another five to seven years to waste,""
""I kind of want my guy to feel like he got struck by lightning and can't live without me.""
""This is how I basically operate in my entire life, all the time: I'm going to let it happen naturally," Mel tells Bustle. "I think I have a good gut feeling, intuition, and I'm not one to force things, because I like to have it evolve naturally. And that was my approach.""
""I'm not going to overstep my hand. I'm not going to tell somebody something that's not true, or mislead them," he says. "I don't want that to come back at me. So there wasn't really a strategy, other than just to be myself and let things happen naturally.""
Scenes show Peg Munson and Cindy Cullers expressing concerns about Mel Owens' level of commitment, with Peg citing limited time and Cindy seeking a partner who feels irresistibly certain. A candlelit, solitary dinner beneath fireworks implies that one overnight date takes an unexpected, disappointing turn. Mel relies on intuition and prefers not to force intimacy or use a calculated strategy when narrowing his final choices. He avoids overpromising or misleading contestants and aims to be himself while letting relationships progress organically. The fantasy suite week becomes a pivotal, emotionally charged period for decision-making.
Read at Bustle
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