
Trista Sutter, Vail’s Bachelorette, doesn’t think much of Jason Mesnick, the most recent star of ABC’s “The Bachelor.” He proposed to Melissa on Monday night &mdashl then dumped her for Molly, kicking her to the curb in front of millions. It’s the talk of the nation.
Trista starred in “The Bachelorette” and wound up marrying Vail firefighter Ryan Sutter in 2003. If anybody knows the ins and out of this show, it’s Trista.
“No one can be in his shoes,” said Trista on the phone Wednesday. “But bottom line, if you’re in love with two people, don’t propose to one of them.”
Amen, sister!
“Telling Melissa it was over on national television was not classy,” Trista says. “I just talked to Melissa today, and she did not know he was going to say it was 100 percent over and she didn’t know he was going to ask Molly for a second chance. When you come home from a show like that, you decompress and things change. She thought that instead of giving up, (Jason) would fight for it. It seems like he has a hard time making decisions.”
And dragging his kid Ty into the whole thing, well, get a clue, daddio.
“As a mother, that broke my heart,” says Trista. “To have involved this 4-year-old boy, oh, (Ty) must have been so confused.”
Free food, free concert.
Chef Daniel Young hosts “Cuisine for a Cause” 7-11 p.m. Saturday at Club Auto Colorado (11100 W. Eighth Ave., Lakewood). Of course, you are encouraged to give $ to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. If he raises a lot, he could be named the group’s Man of the Year at the March 28 gala.
Look for Young’s good food (he’s Carmelo Anthony’s personal chef) and the good music of Hazel Miller.
Runyonesque.
The best thing about the revival of “Guys and Dolls” on Broadway is all the attention given to Denver’s most famous newspaperman, Damon Runyon, and other Colorado notables. “Their Colorado-Manhattan connection in that period is so singular as to look almost significant,” says The New Yorker, hailing Colorado-bred writers such as Runyon and Gene Fowler and The New Yorker’s founder, Harold Ross.
City spirit.
Indigo Girls threw it down at Soiled Dove Underground at an invite-only concert Wednesday night hosted by KBCO; they bunked at Teatro. . . . Chris Murphy, Curtis Frank and their pallies dined @ Morton’s DTC Monday with Champ and Boss Bailey. Chris and Curtis won the eat-a-thon at the live auction at Morton’s Savor the Grape party last fall. . . . The Bacon Brothers, Kevin and Michael, play at the Hard Rock Cafe on March 29. . . . Kinsey Sicks is a drag queen a capella beauty-shop quartet that kills — tonight at Lannie’s Clocktower Cabaret. “They usually play bigger rooms,” says Lannie. “But we caught them on their way to Beaver Creek for a big corporate thing. And it’s so fun watching drag queens not lip-synching.” . . . TLC’s “My First Home” comes down in Pueblo, Denver and Elway’s CC 7 p.m. Saturday. . . . Sez who: “Today we learned that justice is not only blind; justice is fat.” The Anti-Gym’s Michael Karolchyk on “People’s Court” Thursday.
Bill Husted’s column appears Sunday, Tuesday and Friday. You can reach him at 303-954-1486 or bhusted@denverpost.com. Take a peek at Husted’s next column at .



