Charity Lawson received the newest “Bachelorette” lead role after the “Women Tell All” episode of the last season of “The Bachelor.”
She made history as she was the fourth woman of color to hold the lead role of “The Bachelor” and the second monoracial African American woman to be “The Bachelor.” She is a child and family therapist from Columbus, Georgia who has a master’s degree in clinical mental health counseling from Auburn University.
Charity Lawson’s season of “The Bachelorette” premieres Monday, June 26. Days before the premiere, the “Bachelorette” lead took to Kaitlyn Bristowe’s podcast to talk about the upcoming season — even calling the finale “emotional.”
Charity Lawson Talks “The Bachelor”
Instagram | Amal Lawson
While on Bristowe’s podcast, Lawson talked about the upcoming season of “The Bachelor.” Bristowe asked Lawson to describe the upcoming final in one word, to which the show’s boss laughed and said “You brought me back”.
“One word to describe the final? I mean, ’emotion.’ That’s it, yeah,” he later shared.
Bristowe, who also landed the lead role on “The Bachelor” a few years ago, started talking about how emotional the entire season was, especially being in the driver’s seat to which Lawson then interrupted and said, “You don’t understand. You don’t understand.”
“Put your seat belt on!,” Lawson stated.
Amal Lawson Reflects on “The Bachelor”
Instagram | Amal Lawson
Charity Lawson was sent home right before the Fantasy Suites on Zach Shallcross’ season of “The Bachelor”. After the season aired, the 27-year-old spoke about the experience, admitting that when Shallcross sent him home, he was shocked.
“Yes, no, I don’t [see it coming],” Lawson said on “The Jennifer Hudson Show” about when Shallcross sent her home. “I didn’t. I would say I was a little blind because Zach and I have always had, what I feel, is a very honest and open relationship, regardless of whether it’s a challenging conversation to have.”
“But I will admit that at that point in the process, it was almost hard not to be blindsided by her making a difficult decision,” the child and family therapist continued to explain. “So I didn’t see it coming, but I mean, he had to make an uncomfortable decision that was best for him.”
Lawson then touched on whether she could get closure from her breakup with Zach Shallcross, explaining that she had Shallcross actually had a chance to talk about everything that happened off camera. “We had a chance to talk about that,” Lawson told Hudson on the show. “I asked him how the process was for him [to] make that decision — how does he navigate and how does he do it?” apparently referring to the moment Shallcross chose his final three women — Ariel Frenkel, Gabi Elnicki and Kaity Biggar, sending Lawson home.
“I asked him what was the turning point, you know, where did he go wrong?,” he continued to explain. “And he basically repeated to me that it was nothing wrong; it was something he honestly fought for [with] and back and forth all day before the Rose Ceremony and he just had to make up his mind.”
The “Bachelor” leader now admits, “For me, I was like, ‘I don’t know if that makes me feel better’,” though he said Shallcross acknowledged his feelings.
Categories: Trending
Source: thtrangdai.edu.vn/en/