Olympic fencer takes stab at finding love in ‘Joe Millionaire’ reboot

In 2016, saber fencer Monica Aksamit won a bronze medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympic games. Now, she’s making at lunge at love as a contestant on Fox’s “Joe Millionaire: For Richer or Poorer.”

The 31-year-old New Jersey native and Brooklyn resident was first approached last winter by producers who slid into her Instagram DMs offering to play cupid in front of a slew of cameras.

“It sounded really interesting. And I thought, ‘Well, love hasn’t really worked out for me,’” Aksamit — who ended an engagement in 2020 — told The Post. “And I don’t know anybody who finds love on dating apps. I feel like I am digging through trash to find the one diamond.”

Yet Aksamit, who calls herself a “romantic” looking to get married, was still hesitant.

Aksamit, a 6 foot Olympian and model was convinced by her mother to go on "Joe Millionaire"
Aksamit, a 6-foot tall Olympian and model, was convinced by her mother to appear on “Joe Millionaire.”
Courtesy of Fox

“I didn’t want people to judge me or say ‘She’s empty.’ I think dating shows have a bad reputation at this point. [Producers] said, ‘Listen, it’s going to be better than “The Bachelor.” We’re not all about the drama. We want to give you an opportunity to fall in love. Are you down?’”

But it was her mother who cast the final vote.

“I was going back and forth and she was like, ‘I don’t know why you are hesitating.’ My mom is Polish. She’s Eastern European and has very high standards. She was like, ‘Who cares if people are talking. This is an experience for you,’” said Aksamit, who is also a model and influencer.

For love or money

The show, which premieres Thursday at 8 p.m., features 18 women vying for the love of two bachelors: Kurt, a 32-year-old construction CEO from Charlotte, North Carolina, and Steven, a 27-year-old farming CEO from Gallatin, Michigan. The twist is that one of these two gentlemen is wildly wealthy while the other … Well, he’s cute, too. The love-seeking ladies don’t know which of them has the fat bank account.

Monica Aksamit competing for Team USA in the Rio Olympics
Aksamit played for Team USA at the Rio Olympics in 2016.
REUTERS
Aksamit won bronze at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Aksamit won bronze at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Getty Images

It’s a reboot of the wildly popular 2003 iteration that featured Evan Marriott, who was masquerading as a hunky millionaire while in reality he was a construction worker bringing in $19,000 a year.

Aksamit, who had never seen nor heard of the original show, said the money angle wasn’t part of the allure, though she’s previously spoken out about how financial struggles have figured into her overall story. In a 2019 profile in The Post, the fencer opened up about using GoFundMe to support her Olympic aspirations — a practice that has become more widespread for elite athletes in less marketable sports than, say, gymnastics or swimming.

At the time, she was living with her mother in New Jersey and working numerous jobs in between training sessions to make ends meet.

Her struggles struck a chord. Aksamit immediately surpassed her goal by more than $10,000. While she narrowly missed making Team USA for the Tokyo games after the last qualifying competition was nixed due to the pandemic, she signed with Ford Models, which also manages her digital endeavors. With 100,000 Instagram followers, the 6-foot athlete is now making a living working with companies like AT&T, Garmin, Body Armor, Bandier and Nobu Hotels.

When producers told the women about the financial twist, Aksamit said she wasn’t fazed by the prospect of falling for an average Joe.

“My mom always said, ‘I never want you to put yourself in a situation where you have to rely on a man for money or whatever.’ Do I want someone I have to rely on? No, I want to be able to make my own money.”

Aksamit signed with Ford Models. She is seen above in 2019 modeling clothes from Chelsea and Walker and Anne Fontaine.
Aksamit signed with Ford Models. She is seen above in 2019 modeling clothes from Chelsea and Walker and Anne Fontaine.
Tamara Beckwith/NY Post

The deal breakers

There is one requirement, though. Her dream man “must love dogs,” said Aksamit, who has two precious pups named Pongo and Oro.

The beauty can’t say if she found love with either bachelor, but she did hit it off with the other contestants, including Suzette James and fellow New Yorker Annie Jorgensen.

“I’ve made some really good friends,” said Aksamit, who will be flying back from Poland just in time for the premiere.

“We are planning a watch party at [Annie’s] apartment … if my COVID test is negative.”


MEET THE OTHER NY LADIES HOPING TO LAND A MILLIONAIRE
 

The beauty queen 

Annie Jorgensen smiles at the camera.
Beauty queen Annie Jorgensen is one of the New Yorkers on the new “Joe Millionaire.”

New Yorker Annie Jorgensen, 25, is a long-time beauty pageant champ. She competed for the Miss America title in 2019, was crowned Miss Georgia in 2018, won the Miss University of Georgia pageant in 2016 and was named Miss Wisconsin’s Outstanding Teen in 2011. A University of Georgia grad, she’s now a digital creative strategist at Small Girls PR, which has worked with brands like the popular dating app Hinge. She also founded I Got This Consulting, which provides coaching to build confidence among girls and women. 

The professional dancer 

Doris Josie Cano smiles at the camera.
Former NBA and NFL dancer Doris Josie Cano is another contestant on the new “Joe Millionaire.”

Doris Josie Cano is from Bethpage, New York. Cano, 32, is of Ecuadorian and Mexican descent and is a former NBC and NFL dancer. She was a New York Jets Flight Crew cheerleader from 2008 to 2009 and a dancer for the Philadelphia 76ers from 2010 to 2011. She now owns a dance company called Diamond Divas Entertainment, which provides dancers, promotional models, hostesses and greeters for various events. — Lauren Sarner

source: nypost.com