“Selling Sunset”: The ugly look at the beautiful life in Los Angeles

“Selling Sunset”
Money, sex, catfights: The ugly look into the beautiful world of luxury real estate agents in Hollywood

Mary Fitzgerald, Christine Quinn and Heather Rae Young are real estate agents – and captivate viewers on “Selling Sunset”.

©Netflix

The Netflix series “Selling Sunset” has triggered a hype. Viewers follow realtors and their bosses as they sell the most expensive homes Los Angeles has to offer. But in truth, the reality show is about something completely different.

Successful reality shows follow a fairly simple pattern: They drive viewers crazy – and are dramaturgically so well done that you can’t look away. Anyone who has internalized this can state that Netflix is ​​broadcasting one of the best reality formats of recent years with “Selling Sunset”.

At its core, the plot of “Selling Sunset” is simple: viewers take a look behind the scenes at the “Oppenheim Group”, one of the most important real estate companies in Los Angeles. Jason and Brett Oppenheim, identical twins, are the bosses and founders – and are supported by women. Exclusively by women. At least on TV. Because in reality, the Oppenheims also hired male brokers, but they obviously didn’t fit into the concept of the show. And that’s where the problem starts.

Selling Sunset

The crew of “Selling Sunset” – here the drama is more important than the real estate

© Lindy Lin / Netflix

It may be that viewers begin to daydream when they see what imposing mansions the luxury real estate agents are selling in the hills of Hollywood. Homes that peak at $75 million. But as impressive as the pools, views and facilities are, something else lures viewers to the screen: the catfights of the women who always claim to be “best friends” and “like family”, the smirking, the personal dramas, the underhandedness and teasing. From, you have to admit, self-confident, strong and also successful women, who in the end also have to serve a cliché: they have to look good. If you think women look good with lots of botox on their faces and lots of silicone on their boobs. While their bosses are of course men. And the vast majority of paying customers too. What image of women does that convey? Well, maybe just what unfortunately suits this part of town on the American west coast. Welcome to Hollywood!

“Selling Sunset”: More and more viewers, more and more attention

For Chrishell Stause, Heather Rae Young, Christine Quinn, Maya Vander, Mary Fitzgerald, Amanza Smith and Davina Potratz, the plan is still working: the perfectly staged show has meanwhile triggered a real hype, in the USA and also in Great Britain Ladies with their (also private) superficialities are an integral part of the tabloid press, while the number of viewers increases from season to season. Money, sex, catfights. The makers of “Selling Sunset” know at least as well as the brokers how to sell a product.

At the same time, they have created a show that can also be understood as an alternative to similar formats: no less well-off people are presented, no proles are dragged through the dirt, there is no insight into the abysses of our society. Instead, you only see people who are doing damn well – at least until the moment when the private dramas start. Because, reality says hello, they cannot be solved with the horrendous sums that the brokers rake in when they have successfully brokered a luxury property.



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Only the producers know how much of the divas’ fake smiles are real. Of course, the series is scripted, of course everyone involved knows that there are cameras everywhere, but the fact is that all the characters involved exist in reality. “Selling Sunset” isn’t about truth anyway. It’s about taking viewers into a world that most people can only dream of, if they want to dream about it. And then to show them that looking into the beautiful, fake world of Hollywood is pretty ugly.

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