Nineteen years ago, David and Elizabeth "Bethy" Weinlick stood at the altar in the Mall of America rotunda, and said "I do" after knowing each other for just five minutes.
It appeared to many to be a made-for-TV social experiment, but when the strangers vowed to love each other through sickness and health and for better or worse, they meant it.
Two decades and four children later, the couple is putting those promises to the test. In March, Dave was diagnosed with terminal colon cancer. His doctor told him he has a year to live.
"We're still coming to terms with the fact that the whole life we had planned together isn't going to happen," Elizabeth said. "That is impossible to get your head around."
To some, it was a marriage made in a mall, but to the Weinlicks, it was the start of their great love story.
"I've learned it wasn't a completely crazy and ridiculous, cockamamie idea," David said. "I got the relationship I was looking for with someone who's ready to roll with the ups and downs, for better or worse."
On Friday, Aug. 18, the couple will renew their vows where it all began — at the Mall of America.
World-famous wedding
David's idea to find a wife in an unconventional way began years earlier with a joke. Tired of being asked when he was going to get married, he'd reply jokingly, "June 13, 1998."
With the date nearing and no bride in sight, one of David's friends who'd just returned from a political convention suggested structuring the wedding like a convention.
With his friend's counsel, a pony-tailed, 28-year-old David embarked on a journey to find his soulmate through the arranged marriage process. They wrote press releases, filmed a commercial, and placed an ad in the Minnesota Daily.