Inside Carson Daly’s $6.5m home with a pool house and lavish kitchen where he and his wife sleep in different beds
CARSON Daly lives in a $6.5million home with a pool, luxury kitchen, and multiple bedrooms and dining areas.
But, within the $6.5million Long Island home, the TODAY host and his wife sleep in different rooms.
The couple's home has six bedrooms, five bathrooms, four half-bathrooms, multiple living rooms, dining areas, and playrooms, reported.
Since Daly has hosted "TODAY" from the comfort of his home due to the pandemic, fans could see different aspects of the "Colonial-style mansion."
Daly purchased the house, which includes an in-ground pool, a blue-stone patio, and a pool house, for $6.1million in 2013.
Daly has also explained how certain places in his home, like the pool house, were converted into an "at-home broadcast center" during remote working.
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“These are four areas of our temporary home that have been converted into a stay-at-home broadcast center,” Daly captioned an in May, Closer Weekly reported.
The house also has a kitchen with its own baking nook, state-of-the-art kitchen appliances, and a baby's only living room section which is used by Daly's youngest child, Goldie.
Closer Weekly reported that the living room section is reserved for Goldie to watch her morning cartoons, like Sesame Street.
The couple has admitted to having a sleep divorce. Daly told that this arrangement was “the best thing that happened to his marriage.”
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A “sleep divorce” means the couple sleeps in different beds in their $6.5million home, which sits on approximately two acres of land.
The arrangement started when Siri, Daly’s wife, was pregnant with their fourth child and the couple wasn’t getting their best sleep while sharing a bed.
"We woke up and shook hands like, 'I love you, but it's time to sleep divorce. It'll be the best thing for all of us," Daly told .
Insider reported that Daly had been diagnosed with sleep apnoea, which can cause loud snoring.
However, Daly and his wife aren’t the only couples that partake in this unorthodox sleeping arrangement.
Insider reported that in a 2017 survey from the National Sleep Foundation, one in four couples isn’t sleeping together anymore.
Some couples sleep in the same room but different beds, while others, like Daly, sleep in totally different rooms within their home.
The survey shows that all the couples who are “sleep-divorced” admit to better sleep and a better relationship.
Experts have shared advice for couples who may be considering a "sleep divorce" but are also worried about how it will affect the relationship.
Experts who spoke with have told couples to remember that sleeping apart doesn't mean that there is trouble in their relationship.
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"Spend time cuddling before bed, have regular conversations about how the arrangement is working for you, and be intentional with physical touch at other times throughout the day," Emily Jamea, a therapist, told Self.
Couples should also remember that sleeping separately should continue to cuddle before sleeping and intentionally be more physical with their partners.