Genevieve Gorder, an American designer and television personality, charmed audiences with her creativity and flair for interior design. Her distinctive style and keen eye for aesthetics have made her a sought-after figure in the world of home decor, inspiring countless viewers to transform their living spaces with elegance and sophistication.

"There's a big difference between decorators and designers and the training is very different."



"But instead of that stuff you get relationships with people and neighbors that you would never get in a city. People in small towns are a lot more open."



"The Deep South has a completely different history, both good and bad, that is fascinating for everybody. It makes people work together who usually don't, and that sounds like a cliche in so many ways, but it actually happened... and it happened because of a beautiful idea."



"We worked out a lot of bugs and figured out who was working and who wasn't and how this beast functions. It was a lot bigger than we actually thought, and now we have a well-run ship where it feels I can actually have time to imagine and not just stress out about everything."



"And the relationships that happen become so intense, deep, involved and complex and really hard to say goodbye to. The hardest part of the show is saying goodbye when it's all done. It really breaks you."



"You need to have a home to go back to, whether it's a hotel room or a barn. It's only home when he's there."



"That was always my frustration with so many of these shows, because design is not an ambush... it's a relationship. You have to know how people move and live and work to be able to design for them."



"I had the idea for the show like a year and a half, two years ago. And it was all about the things that I didn't like about TV. I was trying to create a positive solution for it. And it actually worked."

