Savannah Chrisley Says Living with Her Parents After Prison Is 'a Lot,' Even Though 'I Would Have Begged for This a Year Ago'

Savannah Chrisley Says Living with Her Parents After Prison Is 'a Lot,' Even Though 'I Would Have Begged for This a Year Ago'New Foto - Savannah Chrisley Says Living with Her Parents After Prison Is 'a Lot,' Even Though 'I Would Have Begged for This a Year Ago'

Vivian Zink/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Savannah Chrisley said it's been a "challenge" living with her parents after their presidential pardon Todd and Julie Chrisley received a pardon from President Donald Trump in May after starting their 19-year sentence in 2023 Now, Savannah said her dad has thrown out her hard seltzers, and they've had some disagreements over their joint living situation Savannah Chrisley's living situation has changed drastically since her parents were released from prison. The 27-year-old reality star opened up about the aftermath of her parentsToddandJulie Chrisley's presidential pardon in May during the Tuesday, Aug. 5 episode of herUnlocked with Savannah Chrisleypodcast. She noted that after her parents were pardoned byPresident Donald Trump, they all moved in together. My View with Lara Trump/Instagram "It's a challenge, especially to all of us being under one roof," she said before adding, "It's great. I love it. I would have begged for this a year ago, but it's a lot. It's a lot. Imagine living with your parents again after being out of the house for 11 or 12 years. That's a lot." One of the reasons Savannah has struggled with the arrangement is what she describes as a "difference in lifestyles." "I like to go have me a glass of wine or a cocktail. I mean, I am 28... almost 28 years old. Todd Chrisley does not agree with that," she said of her dad. "And so there's some rub there. He came in my house and threw out all my seltzers. Like, threw them out. Who does that? Who does that?" Savannah pointed out that the act was particularly pointless as she can "go and rebuy them." Savannah said the dynamic in her family has changed now that she's an adult. "It's just interesting because now I'm a full-fledged adult," she said. "I have not relied on anyone to pay my bills, support me, guide me. I've done it all on my own. So we've just had a little bit of rub." Despite the drama, Savannah said, "Also it's been the best time ever because we get to sit and talk at whatever time we want. We're joking on each other, laughing, making up for lost time. So for that, I am extremely grateful." DOMINIC GWINN/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Todd previously opened up about his and Julie's post-prison plans to move. "You know, I think we will always have a presence in Nashville, but I have a pull for Julie and I to go back to South Carolina — to Charleston — to that area. And we have plans for what we wanna do,"Todd said in an interviewfor an ABC News Studios special, which aired in June. He added at the time, "We have hopes of acquiring a hotel — a mansion — there, that we are gonna convert into a hotel, and we're gonna create a show around that." https://people-app.onelink.me/HNIa/kz7l4cuf As for Savannah, during the same interview she shared her plans to move out of her parents'$1.6 million mansionand into a condo. She said that Todd was critical of how she maintained their home while they were in prison. "He comes in and is critiquing everything in the house," she said, laughing. "I was literally fighting for y'all for two and a half years and raising kids, I think the floors are fine." Todd and Julie were sentenced to a total of 19 years in prison for tax fraud. They began serving their separate sentences in 2023. The family is now documenting the experience in the upcoming reality show,The Chrisleys: Back to Reality, which premieres as a two-night event Sept. 1 and Sept. 2 at 8 p.m. ET on Lifetime, with a finale dropping on Sept. 16. Read the original article onPeople

 

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