Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos are executive producers on a six-part Hulu docuseries, Squatters: Get The F*** Out of My House, which begins streaming in the U.S. on June 4 on Hulu and Hulu on Disney for bundle subscribers.
The series follows homeowners from Queens, Malibu and Newark as they try to reclaim properties occupied by people who do not own the homes and are not paying rent. The six-part run includes episode titles such as The Parasite of Malibu, The Dating App Squatter, The Skeleton and the Squatter, Don’t Piss Off Patti Peeples and The Squatter and the S.W.A.T. Team. Milojo and ABC News Studios produced the project, with Michael Halpern listed as producer, John Henshaw joining Ripa and Consuelos as an executive producer, and David Sloan serving as senior executive producer for ABC News Studios; Victoria Thompson is also an executive producer for ABC News Studios.
Producers frame the series as a look at disputes that combine legal, personal and sometimes violent confrontation. A spokesperson for the show noted the couple have moved beyond their on-air roles to act as the driving creative force behind the project, helping to bring those stressful stories to a broader audience.
Ripa’s involvement comes after a long on-screen run. She celebrated 25 years at the helm of Live back in February, having taken over for Kathie Lee Gifford as Regis Philbin’s cohost in 2001. Her cohosts have included Michael Strahan from 2012 to 2016 and Ryan Seacrest from 2017 to 2023; Consuelos officially joined Live in 2023 after Seacrest’s departure.
Behind the publicity is an uneasy domestic moment: Ripa has said she was initially hesitant about the idea of a husband and wife hosting a morning show together, and she has described convincing Consuelos to accept a permanent role as difficult — saying he at first refused when the offer came. She has also argued that viewers respond to Consuelos because he brings an unvarnished, take-no-prisoners attitude on air and that the two have never been afraid to speak plainly to each other after more than three decades together.
Those dynamics matter because they feed the series’ pitch: recognizable television personalities who understand how to shape a story are now shaping other people’s real-life fights over homes. The show’s cases—drawn from three very different corners of the country—promise to convert property-law arguments and neighborhood disputes into serialized television, putting legal process and personal consequence on full display for a mainstream streaming audience.
For viewers who want the practical details: Squatters: Get The F*** Out of My House launches June 4 on Hulu and will be available to Hulu on Disney bundle subscribers in the United States. The episodes center on homeowners trying to reclaim occupied properties; the subjects include confrontations that range from courtroom filings to on-the-ground standoffs.
One unresolved detail in the press materials is how the six episodes allocate the series’ cases across cities and incidents—the producers list episodes and five clear episode titles, but do not specify which titles correspond to which of the documented locations or whether some episodes collect multiple cases. That gap matters for viewers hoping to follow a single city’s arc or judge whether the series gives even weight to each dispute.
The simplest next step for anyone curious is to stream the first episode on June 4. The series will test whether Ripa and Consuelos’ move from morning-show chairs into executive roles can turn contested evictions and squatter disputes into a sustained conversation on national television—beginning with questions the press notes leave open about how the six parts are divided among the stories.






