Love, Loss, and a Longboard

When a prospective student rolled up to his informational interview on a longboard – and popped it into his hand with a practiced kick – Jennifer Joseph, an assistant professor in the Rutgers School of Health Professions physician assistant program, was horrified.

“I thought, ‘I have to meet with this punk for the next half hour and try to give him advice?’” said Joseph, laughing.

But that meeting turned into an hour. By the end, she was sold.

“We became fast friends,” she said. “He had a place in my heart from that time forward.”

That “punk” was Joey Leveille—known for skating down the aisle during the most recent season of Netflix’s reality dating show Love Is Blind.  While things didn’t end with a wedding, Leveille, a 2015 graduate of SHP’s physician assistant program, won over viewers with his sincerity, his quirkiness, and his fu  n-loving personality.

A Reality Romance (Sort of)

Leveille, who lives in Minnesota, said he turned down producers twice before finally agreeing to appear on the show, which was filmed in 2023 and 2024, and premiered in February 2025.

“I was dating someone the first few times they called, but that didn’t work out – and then the third time was the charm,” said Leveille, who works as a physician assistant and administrative manager at a same-day clinic outside Duluth.

The premise of Love Is Blind is simple: Fall in love with someone – and get engaged – before you ever see them. In Season 8, Leveille was one of a group of hopefuls looking to meet their match through a wall. The then-35-year-old quickly connected with Monica, a 27-year-old digital marketer.

They bonded over a mutual dislike of country lyrics, a shared love of swing dancing, and that The Sound of Music is their favorite movie.

After proposing to Monica during “pod week,” Leveille met her face-to-face, bounding into the room in his signature energetic style.

“It was the wildest thing ever,” he said. “You know this person – but you don’t know this person. You’re connecting emotionally first, then meeting physically. It was like a mind explosion.”

Compared with others on the show, their relationship was surprisingly drama-free – until Monica’s sister refused to give her blessing, and she began to have doubts.

Joey Leveille in episode 801 of Love Is Blind. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025

On what was to be their wedding day, Leveille rolled up to the altar on his longboard dressed in a baby-blue suit, but Monica ultimately said no. Leveille took it with grace. In an interview, he said they actually had agreed the night before that neither was ready, and the refusal did not come as a surprise.

Back to Real Life (with a Little Fame)

Off-screen, Leveille is back to work. His appearance on Love Is Blind, followed by talk shows, have made him somewhat of a celebrity.

 “That guy gave me a strep throat test!” one fan posted online.
Leveille said he doesn’t mind the attention.

“People ask me for pictures, and I’m glad to do it,” he said. “I’m an extrovert – I don’t mind at all.”

Leveille, who was home-schooled through high school, was a student at a Minnesota college when he came to Rutgers through a summer program for low-income students to participate in research. That experience led to publishing a paper on Alzheimer’s disease – and a meeting with Joseph to learn about becoming a physician assistant.

Two years later, he was accepted into our physician assistant program.

“He had so much depth and compassion,” Joseph said. “At the time, he was working overnight shifts at a traumatic brain injury facility to pay for school — and still had a 3.9 GPA. He loved working with people and helping them.”

She added, “So, the boy with the longboard turned out to be one of the best students I’ve ever met.”

As for the longboard? Leveille calls it his“emotional support.” Skating helps ease his anxiety. And yes, it really was his idea to ride it up to the altar (with Monica’s consent).

Leveille was planning to return to the PA program in the fall as part of a panel of alumni to speak with students.

He might even glide in on his board.

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