"It was a dumb idea, it was a dumb show," says Conger, who lives with her ailing mother, Susan Harrison, 62, a former actress, in a Thousand Oaks, Calif., townhouse. "It never should have reached the magnitude it did." Had it not, Conger wouldn't be what she is today: a media darling, with an agent and a manager, g who posed for the August issue of Playboy for an undisclosed sum after turning down a reported $3 million offer from Penthouse. Still, says longtime friend LeeAnn Siemens, Conger's new status "doesn't make her any different. Before, she was a giving person. Now she has more to give, so she gives more." Conger auctioned off the SUV she won on the show to raise money for an Illinois charity benefiting the disabled; she also paid for dental implants for her mother. Fired from her nursing job after the show aired, Conger has just launched her own Web site, www. darvashouse.com, a mix of fitness, nutrition and lifestyle tips. She has moved on personally as well, dating a 37-year-old sportswear sales rep whom she met before her TV wedding. Although she is relieved that "I don't have to worry about mortgage payments anymore," Conger says, "I miss my old life. I miss my stability and my sense of purpose and my peace of mind." In October she donated her $35,000 wedding ring to the Make-a-Wish Foundation, to be auctioned off in February. Next time, perhaps Conger will be more careful what she washes for.
Saved by the Bell Reunion
The hookups, the meltdowns, the memoires
The case reveals what was really going on what they think of each other now!















