Local couple followed by House Hunters
Heidi Desch / Whitefish Pilot | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 3 months AGO
Have you ever heard of the TV show
“House Hunters?”
The question was posed simply enough to
Reed and Kelli Trontel last fall while looking for a home in
Whitefish.
Had they heard of it? Yes, they had. It
was Reed’s favorite.
“It was my default show,” Reed said. “I
always watch it.”
“He’s so into it,” Kelli added.
The couple moved here from Nashville
last year to open the Red Caboose Frozen Yogurt + Coffee on Central
Avenue. They were living with Reed’s parents while working to
remodel the Red Caboose when they began looking for a home.
Their real estate agent Rhonda Kohl of
Trails West Real Estate suggested they might be candidates for the
show. She had received an email from the show’s producers looking
for a couple with a great story.
They were selected and appear on the
show Aug. 1. John and Linda Kauffman were also featured on the
program recently.
The Trontels had little concern about
selecting a home while on TV. They both previously worked in the
country music business in Nashville.
“With our backgrounds in the music
industry, being around cameras didn’t bother us,” Kelli said.
“Being hooked up to a mic for hours was the most awkward part.
There’s always a guy with headphones on hearing everything.”
A camera crew followed them during
November 2010 while they looked at houses and then again in
February once they had moved into their new home.
Reed said as the filming progressed
they began to feel more comfortable even though some interview
segments stretched to more than an hour.
“Being on a reality TV show and having
cameras follow you all the time, that would be harder,” he
said.
The couple was busy during the filming
as they converted the Red Caboose from diner to a yogurt and coffee
shop.
“It was a fun experience,” Kelli said.
“We were living with my in-laws and remodeling the business and
then we decided ‘oh, yeah we’ll do a TV show.’”
However, as they learned even more
about the show it became apparent that it could help them promote
the Red Caboose and Whitefish. The shop promotes itself heavily
through social media, but the show was a new opportunity.
“I didn’t realize how popular it was,”
Reed said. “It’s been on HGTV for 10 years and it’s the No. 1 show.
They play reruns for four years.”
The couple has watched a DVD of the
show and says it portrays Whitefish in a positive light. Several
shots are of Central Avenue and the business district.
“It’s good for tourism and Whitefish,”
Reed said. “It shows downtown. A lot of it was filmed inside
Montana Coffee Traders because the Red Caboose wasn’t ready.”
It was Reed’s connection to the
Flathead Valley — he grew up in Kalispell before moving to
Nashville — and their dream to open their own store that led them
to Whitefish.
“When we first started looking at the
Red Caboose it was still attached to Casey’s,” Kelli said.
When the businesses separated, the
Trontels knew they could achieve that dream. Their decision to open
a self-service yogurt and coffee shop came from their own life.
“Kelli liked frozen yogurt,” Reed said.
“When she would get frozen yogurt I would go across the street to
get coffee.”
The goal was to create a place that fit
creatively with Whitefish and invited people to hangout into the
evenings. Their vision was for a place that is “modern, rustic,
industrial, cozy and has whimsy.”
“We created a space that we truly
desired and liked hanging out in,” Kelli said. “This was our
opportunity to fill a need in the community to create a place to
hang out in outside of a bar.”
The camera crew returned during Winter
Carnival to get more shots of Whitefish, their new home and the
completed Red Caboose.
Of the entire process, the couple says
that was the most stressful.
“We were doing two big projects at the
same time,” Kelli said. “We definitely did more (on the house) than
if the camera wasn’t coming.”
“We were frantically cleaning and
hanging pictures,” Reed added.
The camera crew visited the Red Caboose
the first time the yogurt machines were turned on. Reed said that’s
when he felt some pressure.
“They’re here to film us having yogurt
and the machines weren’t working,” he said. “They kept shutting
off.”
During the show, the Trontels look to
balance their different tastes in one home. They choose between an
out-of-town home, a modern downtown condo and a Montana-style home
during the 23-minute episode.
To find out which home they pick, watch
“House Hunters” at 5 a.m. or 6 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 1.