‘Extreme Makeover' picks Lawton family
By Ron Jackson
Staff Writer
LAWTON — Producers with ABC's "Extreme Makeover: Home Edition" and hundreds of friends and neighbors descended Thursday morning on the home of Peggy and Gene Westbrook with the surprise announcement that the family had been selected for an episode of the popular show.
Emotions ran high at the moment of surprise.
"I love this family so much,” said Linda Jefferson, a friend and local real estate owner. "This is like my second family ... and they've been through so much. When I saw Peggy, she just grabbed me and said, ‘I love you so much.'
"They really deserve this, and I think this will mean a lot to a lot of people.”
The "Extreme Makeover” show picks deserving families and builds them new homes.
"Each episode of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition is self-contained,” according to the show's Web site, "and features a race against time on a project that would ordinarily take at least four months to achieve, involving a team of designers, contractors and several hundred workers who have just seven days to totally rebuild an entire house — every single room, plus the exterior and landscaping.”
Demolition of the Westbrook's west Lawton home will begin at noon Saturday, according to Barry Ezerski, a spokesman for local developer Ron Nance. The Lawton homebuilder has donated his resources to building the Westbrook's dream home.
By Wednesday, construction workers hope to turn the keys over to ABC.
The new home will then be revealed to the Westbrooks on Thursday night.
The show is scheduled to be televised April 8, Ezerski said.
The appearance of the ABC crew is the culmination of months of lobbying by thousands of supporters who were drawn to the Westbrook's story.
Gene Westbrook, formerly a sergeant in the U.S. Army, was wounded by an enemy mortar April 28, 2004, in a mess hall at an American base in Baghdad, Iraq. He had volunteered for the deployment in order to train Iraqi forces and escaped with a severed vertebra and nerve damage in his right hand.
The Westbrooks suffered another tragedy two years later when the family van careened off an oncoming car and flipped over a culvert into a ditch. Gene suffered a stroke, and his 9-year-old son James was paralyzed below the hip.
News of the family's hardships spread through Lawton, and last month, Jefferson spearheaded a campaign that gathered more than 26,000 names on a one-week petition drive.
"This is so awesome,” said Bilinda Stilley, a friend who waved an American flag for the cameras. "I can't believe we did it, but we did. I guess they had to listen.”
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