'Bachelorette' Pulled At Last Minute, Costing ABC Tens of Millions—What Happened, What's Next
Plus: Remembering Chuck Norris, Iconic Action Film Star And Martial Artist Dead At 86
Before we get to the news, here’s a taste of what we’re up to this weekend in our weekly Cheers To The Freakin’ Weekend section:
Mosh: The NCAA Tournament 🏀and The Comeback ~HBO
Jill: Imperfect Women ~Apple TV
Lauren: Moonstruck (1987) ~Peacock
Sam: Disney-Pixar’s Hoppers
What We’re Reading:
Mosh: Out of the Sky: Heroism and Rebirth in Nazi Europe by Matti Friedman
Jill: “Why Is It So Hard to Make a Good Weather App?” ~The Atlantic
Sam: Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood by Mark Oppenheimer
Lauren: “The Incredible Story of the Cartel Olympics” ~The Atlantic
What We’re Eating:
Mosh: Skyr ~Icelandic Divisions
Jill: 15-Minute Honey Garlic Chicken ~Family Food On The Table
Lauren: Something from Eater’s DC food/drink picks for Cherry Blossom season
Sam: Thaimarket Brunch ~Lower East Side 🇹🇭
🚨 ONE IMPORTANT THING
ABC Pulls ‘Bachelorette’ Days Before Premiere After Domestic Violence Video Surfaces
Just three days before it was set to premiere, ABC pulled Season 22 of The Bachelorette after a video surfaced showing its lead, Taylor Frankie Paul, in a violent altercation with her ex-partner, Dakota Mortensen. Today, Mortensen was granted temporary custody of the pair’s 2-year-old son as investigators look into domestic violence allegations by Paul.
WHO SHE IS: Paul was a breakout star from Hulu’s The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, which premiered in 2024. The show is currently filming its fifth season, but production has been halted following the new reports. However, Paul has a very long, controversial public history here that ABC was aware of going into her selection as the next Bachelorette, leading to many questions about the network’s risky decision to cast her.
The call to pull the entire season came hours after the release of the video of the altercation. The cancellation is expected to cost the network tens of millions of dollars, and puts the future of the reality series in doubt.
INSIDE THE CONTROVERSY
The video footage, reportedly from 2023 and released by TMZ on Thursday, shows Paul throwing chairs at her then-boyfriend. Her child appears in the video and can be heard crying after being struck by a stool. Paul has three children: two with her ex-husband Tate Paul and one with Mortensen. Mortensen and Paul have leveled numerous abuse allegations against one another.
EXISTING LEGAL ISSUES: Paul entered a guilty plea to an aggravated assault charge tied to the 2023 incident. Other charges, including domestic violence in the presence of a child, were dismissed. She is currently under probation.
In a statement shared with NBC News, a representative for Paul’s said the video is the “latest installment of [Mortensen’s] never-ending, desperate, attention-seeking, destructive campaign to harm Taylor without any regard for the consequences for their child.”
After initially planning to move forward with the show despite the investigation, ABC said Thursday it would not move forward with the season, shifting focus to supporting Paul’s family.
NEW ACCUSATIONS: Earlier this month, news emerged that she and Mortensen are being investigated by police for new allegations of domestic violence that took place last month.
Police were called to Paul’s home as recently as Feb. 24 and 25, 2026, following reports of a domestic dispute. Utah police told PEOPLE Monday that “allegations have been made in both directions.”
According to TMZ, Mortensen filed for a protective order in Utah on Tuesday, where Paul’s ex-husband was also seeking a protective order against her.
THE NETWORK’S PLANABC made a clear bet on Paul, hoping to capitalize on the influencer’s “MomTok” fame while downplaying past controversies (her prior guilty plea was public) — as well as her admission that she and her ex-husband engaged in “soft swinging” with other Mormon couples. She was brought in to revive the Bachelorette franchise with viral energy and attract younger viewers after it had been losing momentum.
The Bachelorette hadn’t aired since 2024. The show had faced internal upheaval and leadership changes.
NOW: ABC is expected to lose tens of millions of dollars. Each episode costs about $2 million to produce, and there are about a dozen episodes on average each season.
The season was already fully produced and scheduled, meaning much of that spending cannot be recovered.
The network has scrambled to contain the social fallout: removing trailers, cast bios, and promotional material, although much of it remained on social media.
THE FINANCIAL HITSponsors are also reacting. Cinnabon ended its partnership, saying the situation no longer aligned with its brand values. Beyond that, the financial cost could be massive.
THE $$: ABC is expected to lose money on licensing fees owed to Warner Bros., which must be paid whether the show airs or not, along with lost advertising revenue, pre-sold brand deals, and marketing spend tied to a premiere that never happened.
LEGAL: There is also fear that Paul and other contestants could sue over lost income or reputational damage. Other parties may also explore legal avenues to recover production and advertising losses.
The franchise has faced lawsuits before — including past claims around casting and confidentiality — but the scale of this situation could open the door to a broader wave of litigation.
In the meantime, some contestants have gone to social media to address the news. TMZ reports that they have been told that they are still under contact and should not speak to the press.
⏳ THE SPEED READ
🚨NATION
Wait times top two hours at Atlanta airport at shutdown hit day 35 (MO NEWS)
Trump administration sues Harvard, alleging school didn’t protect Jewish students as settlement talks go nowhere (CNN)
Second top Republican retires in battleground Wisconsin, fueling Democratic hopes (AP)
RFK Jr. went too far with comments about gender care for minors, judge rules (POLITICO)
IRAN WAR
Israel closes holy sites as Iranian missiles target Jerusalem (MO NEWS)
U.S. deploying additional warships, marines to the Middle East (MO NEWS)
Trump administration making heavy preparations for potential use of ground troops in Iran (CBS)
Iran hits Kuwaiti oil refinery and explosions boom over Tehran from Israeli attack (MS NEWS)
Mojtaba Khamenei regime executes champion wrestler as Iran intensifies brutal crackdown during war (FOX)
🌎 AROUND THE WORLD
Teen daughter of North Korean leader Kim drives a tank while observing drill with her father (AP)
Hungary’s Orbán threatens further anti-Ukraine measures over Russian oil dispute (NBC)
Australia PM heckled at Sydney mosque Ramadan event (BBC)
Experts consider expanding meningitis vaccine eligibility after Kent outbreak (GUARDIAN)
📱BUSINESS, SCIENCE & TECH
FCC green-lights Nexstar’s $6.2B merger with rival TV station owner Tegna (NBC)
Co-founder of tech company charged with diverting $2.5 billion in Nvidia AI chips to China in violation of export laws (CNN)
NASA hauls its repaired moon rocket from the hangar back to the pad for an early April launch (AP)
Heatwave scorching US west ‘virtually impossible’ without climate crisis, say scientists (GUARDIAN)
CBS News layoffs shut down CBS News Radio, affecting Chicago’s WBBM (AXIOS)
🎬 SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT
K-Pop band BTS back with their first album in four years (HOLLYWOOD REPORTER)
Georgia Tech names ex-Troy coach Scott Cross as head coach (ESPN)
Publisher cancels Shy Girl horror novel after writer accused of using AI (PEOPLE)
John Lithgow says he considered quitting HBO’s ‘Harry Potter’ series Over J.K. Rowling backlash (VARIETY)
ICYMI FROM THE 📲
In case you missed it…Chuck Norris, the actor and martial artist known for the hit show “Walker, Texas Ranger” and films like The Delta Force and Missing in Action, died Thursday morning at age 86.
He is also remembered as a cultural icon of the early internet, thanks to the countless “Chuck Norris facts” memes that went viral in the 2000s — often exaggerating his strength and portraying him as invincible. And he was in on the jokes — watch ⬆️.
The Mo News community is keeping the humor alive to celebrate his life ⬇️.