The original story appeared in Daily Mail. Click here to view
Three’s Company alum Suzanne Somers and her second husband Alan Hamel are in the ‘earliest stage’ of developing their very own reality TV show.
‘The idea of doing an unscripted show and flying by the seat of my pants is an attractive concept,’ the 75-year-old retired actress told People on Wednesday.
‘And exactly what we have been doing for the past few years online, so we will see…We have been doing our Facebook Live and IGTV shows Monday, Wednesday and Friday for the past few years.’
Suzanne told Page Six on Monday that her 85-year-old silver fox has been ‘meeting with lawyers’ about the potential series, and she ‘digs’ the idea of working from their new Palm Springs home.
Fans can expect more than one TMI moment on the show as Somers has been candid about their ‘twice-a-day sex sessions’ fueled by tequila and Alan’s hormone replacement therapy.
The Daytime Emmy-nominated host and Hamel – who celebrate 44 years of wedded bliss on November 11 – originally met in 1969 while working on the game show Anniversary Game.
It’s unclear who else would be featured on the series, but Suzanne has a 55-year-old son Bruce Somers Jr. and Alan has a daughter Leslie and son Stephen from prior marriages.
Somers (born Mahoney) will likely try to involve her 26-year-old granddaughter Camelia, who’s attending USC and dating Chord Overstreet.
And ‘the Johnny Carson of Canada’ also has a 26-year-old granddaughter called Daisy Hamel-Buffa, who’s frontwoman of the LA band, Daisy.
The California couple were last seen onscreen selling their $8.5M Palm Springs home on the September 30 and October 7 episodes of Bravo’s Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles.
On Wednesday night at 5pm PST, Suzanne will reminisce about her seven years starring in ABC/CBS sitcom Step by Step for their IGTV + Facebook LIVE show.
‘We always do the show with tequila…nobody feels guilty,’ Somers – who’s sold over 10M Thighmasters – told Page Six.
‘I sit in front of a camera when we start the show. [It’s] authentic and real, and you listen. The truth is mesmerizing – if you don’t phony it up.’