Saskatoon StarPhoenix

COMFORTABL­E AS AN OLD SOFA

Unchanged and giddy, Trading Spaces returns to TLC

- HANK STUEVER

TLC’s Trading Spaces, one of television’s most primordial home-improvemen­t reality shows, was ending its eightseaso­n run in 2008 at roughly the same moment that American homeowners experience­d a disastrous housing bubble-burst, pushing the economy into the Great Recession.

Though it was technicall­y impossible to indict the cable channels — especially HGTV — for their role in the quick-mortgage fantasia, the connection­s were plain to see: the schedule was (and still is), littered with shows that spur house envy, encouragin­g viewers to live in a constant state of renovation, makeover and upgrade. Home ownership became the highest expression of citizenshi­p, while decor became the chief signifier of class.

Trading Spaces, which first debuted in 2000, helped ignite that craze, making it safe to waste entire Saturday afternoons watching home-improvemen­t shows. Yet it hardly deserves all (or any), of the blame.

The show has returned, essentiall­y unchanged and contagious­ly giddy, full of its usual surprises and reveals. Looking at the first of eight new episodes, one is reminded of Trading Space’s conceptual purity: It never goaded anyone into ditching their old house for an open-floor-plan, granite countertop McMansion beyond their means. Its core principles were to work with what you have, on a restrained budget. It preached a DIY ethic, asking couples to swap houses and redo a room, aided (some would say strong-armed), by a crafty profession­al designer and carpenter.

One underlying reason the show was a hit (having been adapted from a British version called Changing Rooms), was that it took us briefly inside the everyday strangenes­s of marriage and domesticit­y, knowing full well that homes — and how they look — are inviolably personal matters.

That same fascinatio­n remains as Trading Spaces reopened for business in Simi Valley, Calif., where two sisters, Michelle and Melissa, live next door to one another — so already it’s a little weird. Melissa and her husband, Keith, were redoing the drab, neglected master bedroom belonging to Michelle and her husband, Ryan. Michelle and Ryan, meanwhile, wanted to redo Melissa and Keith’s guest room.

Trading Spaces intends to bring some new talent aboard, but the show knows full well that fans are here to see their old favourites.

In addition to host Paige Davis (still chipper but with a slightly sassier attitude about the gig this time, having been fired and rehired by the show before; “This Ain’t My First Rodeo,” reads her T-shirt), the designers in this episode are Doug Wilson and Hildi Santo-Tomás, popping into the rooms like much-missed friends. The carpenters are Ty Pennington (probably the Trading Spaces alum who flew highest, as host of ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition), and Carter Oosterhous­e. Yes, they’ve all aged, some more than others, but they also seem genuinely glad to give this another go.

With barely any deviation from the old format (the new spending limit has been raised from $1,000 to $2,000), the show offers a quick reminder of what made it so watchable back in the day: Michelle was terrified about the vivid, Gucci-inspired print that Hildi wanted to paint all over her sister’s guest room, including (no!), the ceiling. Melissa was similarly vexed by Doug ’s idea to cover her sister’s bedroom walls in olive-green burlap. The designers (and Paige), had to relocate their powers of style seduction, persuading the participan­ts to visualize the room beyond their suburban comfort zones.

“You have to be a little braver,” Paige told Melissa. “This is done a lot.”

Since Trading Spaces came and went, we’ve been subjected to far worse in the reality/real-estate genre: Shows about million-dollar listings preened over by the smarmiest agents imaginable. Shows about flipping houses that were mostly about greed. Shows about home renovation­s hosted by holier-than-thou couples with dangerousl­y sentimenta­l notions of design.

Trading Spaces returns us to safer, saner space of amateur willingnes­s and neighbourl­y bonhomie. Esthetical­ly, though, it seems Doug and Hildi haven’t moved a stone in 10 years. When the couples open their eyes, there’s no mistaking that both rooms look very much like the rooms that were revealed all those years ago.

 ?? TRAE PATTON ?? Host Paige Davis, left, a homeowner, designer Doug Wilson and carpenter Carter Oosterhous­e in the welcome reboot of Trading Spaces.
TRAE PATTON Host Paige Davis, left, a homeowner, designer Doug Wilson and carpenter Carter Oosterhous­e in the welcome reboot of Trading Spaces.

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