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Fury Family Faces Change And Controversy In New Netflix Season

The latest season of At Home With The Furys follows Tyson Fury’s family through a dramatic move, a teenage engagement, and the absence of key relatives as they adjust to life beyond the boxing ring.

The Fury family has once again taken center stage in the world of reality television, as the latest season of At Home With The Furys premiered on Netflix on April 12, 2026. The new batch of episodes offers an intimate glimpse into the lives of boxing legend Tyson Fury, his wife Paris, their seven children, and a sprawling cast of relatives and friends. But this season, it’s not just Tyson’s boxing career that’s making headlines—it’s the family’s dramatic move, a teenage engagement, and the notable absences that have fans talking.

The season picks up in Morecambe, the coastal Lancashire town the Furys have called home for more than 15 years. Viewers are treated to sweeping aerial shots of the Promenade, bustling family breakfasts, and candid conversations in local haunts like the Morecambe Hotel and Clock Tower Cafe. Yet beneath the picturesque surface, Tyson’s struggle to adapt to life outside the ring is palpable. After his latest retirement, the former world heavyweight champion finds himself yearning for privacy and a fresh start.

In Episode 8, aptly titled “The Gypsy King,” Tyson stuns Paris during a family holiday in the south of France by dropping a bombshell: he wants to leave Morecambe Bay. “My mind’s made up, let’s leave Morecambe Bay,” Tyson declares, catching his wife off guard. Paris, visibly surprised, replies, “It’s strange to me because he loves Morecambe so much.” According to Beyond Radio, Tyson’s decision is rooted in a desire for normalcy. “I’ve been in Morecambe for 17 years, and there’s no personal life, everything’s public, where I live, where the kids go to school, there’s no privacy, it doesn’t exist,” he confides to Paris. “I just want a fresh start, a new life. I just want a peaceful life, not famous, not doing anything, just a normal life.”

Paris, ever the pragmatist, voices her concerns about uprooting their large family. “I’m apprehensive at moving nine individual people with nine individual lives to a new location,” she says. Her worries extend to Tyson’s mental health as well, given his well-documented battles in the past. The show captures Tyson’s indecision as he briefly considers staying put, only to ultimately commit to the move. By the end of the season, the family is shown packing up and making an emotional departure from the Bay area, bound for the Isle of Man. “I’ve been in Morecambe for 17 years and now is the time to do it,” Tyson reflects. “It’s made a big impact on my life. It’s where my kids were born and raised. I’ve got great memories of Morecambe. But now it’s time to let it go.”

Against this backdrop of change, another storyline grabs the spotlight: the engagement of Tyson and Paris’s eldest daughter, Venezuela Fury. At just 16, Venezuela is proposed to by her boyfriend, Noah Price, in a heartwarming scene filmed at Morecambe Football Club. The moment, featured in Episode 10, quickly became one of the season’s most talked-about events—and not without controversy.

The engagement sparked a wave of public backlash, with critics questioning the wisdom of marrying so young. Venezuela and her mother Paris addressed the criticism head-on in an interview with The Metro. Paris, who herself got engaged at 17, defended her daughter’s decision: “Venezuela was 16 when she got engaged, I was 17 when I got engaged. Me and Tyson have been together for 20 years, and we couldn’t be any happier. Our life is great, so all I can do is hope it’s the same for her. As for people’s opinions, there’s always going to be an opinion. I don’t understand it. I don’t get it.”

Venezuela echoed her mother’s sentiments, brushing aside the negativity: “They’re trying to put negativity around it, but there really isn’t any there. I don’t see the problem.” Paris added, “We don’t see the problem. If she’s happy, he’s happy, we’re happy, I don’t understand it at all. I don’t get the quotes and the things they say to me, all I can think is these people mustn’t have had very happy relationships.”

Tyson Fury himself shared his perspective in an interview with The Sun, revealing that Noah Price had approached him for permission to marry Venezuela. “He did ask for my permission, he came in and sat down and I explained that marriage is not an easy thing and they are only young kids. I asked if this is what they really want. He said it was and I gave him my blessing, fair play. He wasn’t shaking but I could tell he was nervous, fair play to him. He’s a heavyweight boxer and they say that a daughter always goes for someone like her dad and she definitely has.”

Family, of course, is at the heart of the series, but not every member makes an appearance. Notably absent is Tyson’s mother, Amber. While Tyson’s father John Fury features prominently, Amber’s absence has left some viewers curious. According to reporting from the Irish Mirror and Tyson’s own autobiography, Amber is a deeply private person who has never attended any of Tyson’s fights and prefers to remain out of the public eye. Tyson once remarked, “I looked on Google the other day and there’s not one picture of my mother on the internet. That’s crazy isn’t it? She has never been to one of my boxing fights, amateur or professional and never been in the public eye at all. She’s a private person. That’s her priority, not mine.”

Tyson elaborated on his mother’s indifference to his fame: “I don’t think it means anything to my mum. She doesn’t care if I’m world champion or not, as long as I’m healthy and happy. That is the only thing that means anything to her. You could give my mother that table full of £50 notes and diamonds and it wouldn’t change who she is, ever.” In his autobiography, Behind The Mask, Tyson recalled taking his mother shopping after his fight with Deontay Wilder, only for her to be baffled by the attention he received. “I had to explain to her that I was the heavyweight champion of the world and a lot of people had watched me and supported me. That was actually very special.”

Another familiar face missing from this season is Molly-Mae Hague, partner of Tyson’s younger brother Tommy Fury. According to Cosmopolitan, Molly-Mae’s absence is due to scheduling conflicts with her own Prime Video series, Molly-Mae: Behind It All. Still, she remains a topic of conversation, especially as Tommy reveals during the show that the couple is expecting their second child. The series follows Tommy as he prepares for a high-profile boxing match against former strongman Eddie Hall, scheduled for June 13, 2026.

Despite these absences, the show remains a family affair, with candid discussions about marriage, parenthood, and the challenges of fame. In a lighthearted exchange, Paris jokes with Tommy about his long engagement, quipping, “We just got married for the third time, we’ve put you to shame,” to which Tommy laughs, “I can’t even get the first marriage!” Tyson, ever the joker, adds, “One day, Tom. If you work very hard and dedicate your life, you’ll be able to get married three times like us.”

The season’s release has coincided with a busy period for Tyson Fury, who returned to the ring on April 11, 2026, defeating Arslanbek Makhmudov by unanimous points decision at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. The family then attended the red carpet premiere of their Netflix show before heading to their new home on the Isle of Man. With a third season of At Home With The Furys already in the works, it seems the world’s fascination with the Fury clan is far from over.

From major life changes to the everyday ups and downs of family life, the new season of At Home With The Furys offers a compelling portrait of a family navigating fame, tradition, and the search for happiness—one episode at a time.

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