Luxe for life: How Selling Sunset became TV’s most addictive reality show
22.04.2022 - 12:15
/ msn.com
Netflix’s Selling Sunset – Chrishell Stause and Christine Quinn are facing off. “So many times you’ve brought toxic energy to me,” Stause tells her co-worker. “Every time I deal with you, you do something insanely, ridiculously hurtful.
Like telling all the girls not to like my Instagrams. Like when you had a party and you made fun of me on the drinks list to hundreds of your guests. ” It was a custom cocktail consisting of Hendrick’s gin, pineapple juice, tonic and lime, and called “Chrishell’s Two-Faced Tonic”.
As the two women lay out their feelings, the pair’s friends and co-workers watch from the sidelines, taking bets on who will get thrown into the swimming pool. That tension-filled moment was an early highlight of Selling Sunset, which enters its fifth season on 22 April. A reality show documenting a fantasy land of extreme wealth, with stiletto-heeled agents selling luxury homes to the world’s richest buyers, the series has since reached a level of success and visibility beyond the cast and crew’s wildest imaginations.
“It [became] this watercooler show,” Stause tells me. “People started watching it and then started talking about it. Next thing you know, it felt like everybody was watching it and talking about it.
”Selling Sunset creator and executive producer Adam DiVello – who previously produced the OG SoCal reality shows The Hills and Laguna Beach – is similarly grateful for the overwhelmingly positive reception. He gets sent “hundreds” of potential show ideas a week, “and usually it’s never the right cast of people. ” Not so with Selling Sunset.
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