Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire? and aftermath
In the show, which aired as a single two-hour broadcast on February 15, 2000, 50 women competed to be the bride of an unknown millionaire they did not see during the show, except in silhouette. At the end of the show, "millionaire" Rick Rockwell chose Conger to be his wife and married her on the spot. In addition to being wed to Rockwell, Conger won a 3-carat (600 mg) diamond ring and more than $100,000 in prizes. After the honeymoon, it was announced that Conger was seeking an annulment, saying Rockwell had misrepresented himself.[6] The annulment was finalized on April 5, 2000. Conger was the focus of media attention for not only winning the "contest" but also for getting an annulment so quickly after the marriage. After the show aired, Conger made numerous public comments about how she was offended by Rockwell forcibly kissing her on stage, that they never consummated their marriage, and how the entire episode went against her morals.[7]
In August 2000, she posed nude for Playboy magazine.[3] In February 2001, Conger and Rockwell appeared on The Larry King Show and sparred over comments each of them had made about the other, but Conger also said that she should not have appeared on the program at all and was harsh in her statements about Rockwell.
Later, in 2003, she married physician assistant Jim Arellano,[9] with whom she had one son, Cassius. They divorced in 2009, and she and her son live in Northern California where she works as a nurse anesthetist.[10]
^ abNapoleon, Dr. Anthony (2003). Awakening Beauty: An Illustrated Look at Mankind's Love and Hatred of Beauty. Virtualbookworm.com. p. 60. ISBN1589393783.
^Hallenbeck-Huber, Marjorie (2010). Celebrities' Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Lavish Lifestyles, Tabloid Tidbits, and Other Superstar Oddities. Potomac Books Inc. ISBN978-1597975100.
^Oppliger, Patrice (2008). Girls gone skank: the sexualization of girls in American culture. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Company Inc., Publishers. p. 156. ISBN9780786435227.
^Sagert, Kelly Boyer; Overman, Steven J. (2006). Icons of Women's Sport. Greenwood. p. 320. ISBN0313385483.