Former Bachelorette star Tayshia Adams is generating conversation well beyond her new television project after floating a casting suggestion that few people saw coming. During a recent press appearance, Adams named Real Housewives of Beverly Hills cast member Dorit Kemsley as her dream pick for the next lead of The Bachelorette, describing the reality star as someone who would bring a genuinely different energy to the long-running ABC franchise.
Adams is currently promoting Bachelor Mansion Takeover, a renovation competition series on HGTV that brings together familiar faces from Bachelor Nation. She serves as one of the judges on the show alongside Tyler Cameron. It was during a conversation about the new series that she was asked about her fantasy casting for The Bachelorette, and her answer quickly became the more talked-about part of the interview.
Why Dorit Kemsley makes sense right now
Kemsley is currently navigating a highly public divorce from her longtime husband, making her personal circumstances the kind of emotionally resonant backdrop that reality television tends to gravitate toward. Adams described her as someone in a bold and confident chapter of her life, the type of personality that generates compelling television regardless of the setting.
The suggestion is not as far-fetched as it might initially sound. The walls between the Bravo universe and the Bachelor franchise have been coming down in noticeable ways. A cast member who previously appeared on The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives recently made the jump to Bachelor Nation, signaling that the franchise is increasingly open to pulling from adjacent corners of the reality television landscape. Adams acknowledged that shift directly, noting that the casting possibilities feel broader now than they ever have before.
A crossover that has been discussed before
The idea of bringing a Real Housewives personality into the Bachelor world is not entirely new territory. Andy Cohen, the longtime executive force behind the Bravo empire, has previously expressed interest in seeing one of his own stars pursue love through a Bachelor franchise format. That particular crossover has not materialized, but the conversation has never fully gone away.
What has already happened is movement in the other direction. Following a notable ratings decline, The Bachelor brought in producers with ties to the Real Housewives universe last year, a decision that reflected just how much crossover appeal exists between the two audiences. The demographics overlap considerably, and both franchises thrive on interpersonal drama, emotional honesty and the theatrical pursuit of connection.
What a Kemsley season could look like
Adams painted a vivid picture of what a Kemsley-led season might feel like, and the image she conjured was anything but conventional. The suggestion centered on a woman fully inhabiting her own personality rather than conforming to the more traditional Bachelorette mold, which has historically favored a softer and more restrained presentation.
The Bachelorette returns to ABC on Sunday, March 22, with the following day’s episode available to stream on Hulu and Disney+. Whether or not the Bravoverse ever officially crosses over, Adams has at least given fans and producers something genuinely interesting to consider. In a franchise that has been looking for ways to refresh its formula, a suggestion from someone who has actually held the rose carries more weight than most.

