Follows agents at real estate brokerage Douglas Elliman as they navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City.Follows agents at real estate brokerage Douglas Elliman as they navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City.Follows agents at real estate brokerage Douglas Elliman as they navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City.
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Okay take Selling Sunset, not great a fun "plot" to see the lifestyles of LA people who are notoriously fake and emotionally unavailable. All about the glitz glam and showing homes. And then since the characters are in this world they have small problems of contrived and interpersonal drama about she said this she said that and "I'm richer than you" type of stuff.
THIS IS (sort of) NOT THAT.
There are glimmers of an actual plot! With more meaningful stakes about who these women are as produced characters.
Selling a listing in Selling Sunset is "come with me on my listing" and "X was talking shit."
Selling a listing in Selling the City is "come with me on my listing" and "X was talking shit." AND "Let's make it as a team selling real estate and what does that look like and what does our success mean to us"
A little more on the plot.
A team of female realtors aspiring to be more successful are lead by their successful boss to become even more professionally successful. This professional success is deeply tied to their sense of self worth and social capital amongst their peers.
They are met with doubt and resistance from more established people and women in the field. Multiple dynamics come into play as some of the doubt and resistance comes from allies and colleagues of the boss.
This set up gives a deeper and richer show because of the multiple dynamics: colleague to colleague, mentor to mentee, boss to employees, friend to friend, coworker to coworker.
Yes, its popcorn TV. No, its not a Jane Austen novel.
THIS IS (sort of) NOT THAT.
There are glimmers of an actual plot! With more meaningful stakes about who these women are as produced characters.
Selling a listing in Selling Sunset is "come with me on my listing" and "X was talking shit."
Selling a listing in Selling the City is "come with me on my listing" and "X was talking shit." AND "Let's make it as a team selling real estate and what does that look like and what does our success mean to us"
A little more on the plot.
A team of female realtors aspiring to be more successful are lead by their successful boss to become even more professionally successful. This professional success is deeply tied to their sense of self worth and social capital amongst their peers.
They are met with doubt and resistance from more established people and women in the field. Multiple dynamics come into play as some of the doubt and resistance comes from allies and colleagues of the boss.
This set up gives a deeper and richer show because of the multiple dynamics: colleague to colleague, mentor to mentee, boss to employees, friend to friend, coworker to coworker.
Yes, its popcorn TV. No, its not a Jane Austen novel.
If you're looking for a real estate show, stay far away from this one. The show rarely showcases the real estate business and focuses instead on the most ridiculous and obscurely childish drama. Beyond that, you're forced to deal with both tacky style and conversation. I don't know where these people come from, but lord do they lack class and any sort of modesty. Genuinely cringeworthy and not worth the time.
Maybe they should focus more on selling so they'll stop telling the entire world about their unnecessary personal business and actually provide something worth watching.
Owning Manhattan was better once they focused more on the selling than the infighting/drama b.s. - I'd switch to that.
Maybe they should focus more on selling so they'll stop telling the entire world about their unnecessary personal business and actually provide something worth watching.
Owning Manhattan was better once they focused more on the selling than the infighting/drama b.s. - I'd switch to that.
Despite claiming multi-million sales achievements and being associated with "the best agent in the city," these girls are dressed in a manner that doesn't reflect such success. Their attire seems incongruent with the image typically expected from individuals who are purportedly successful and operating at such a high level. It's surprising to see this juxtaposition between their purported achievements and their choice of clothing, which appears to be quite casual or even disheveled, almost as if they don't care about maintaining a polished, professional image that aligns with their stated accomplishments.
I like two types of reality tv: feel-good shows like Queer Eye, Biggest Loser, etc., and the more guilty-pleasure type shows where you know there's going to be drama, but that's why you're there, like The Circle, or any of the many, many dating shows out there. This show is just garbage.
I was hoping to see luxury real estate in New York. That's about 5 minutes of the show. The rest is ridiculous drama that is cringy and had me rolling my eyes and saying "grow up". We never really find out if the people buy the apartments they're shown, but we definitely learn that these women still act like they are in high school. There are two guys in the show that seem to just be eye candy, from the slow closeup going up and down the shirtless body of the one guy, to the preview of the two of them playing basketball shirtless (I barely made it through the first episode and refuse to watch the rest).
I was hoping to see luxury real estate in New York. That's about 5 minutes of the show. The rest is ridiculous drama that is cringy and had me rolling my eyes and saying "grow up". We never really find out if the people buy the apartments they're shown, but we definitely learn that these women still act like they are in high school. There are two guys in the show that seem to just be eye candy, from the slow closeup going up and down the shirtless body of the one guy, to the preview of the two of them playing basketball shirtless (I barely made it through the first episode and refuse to watch the rest).
You would think we're in the 2000s. Jason and Brett Oppenheimer Have a knack for hiring the same type of female agent. Surprised we're still promoting it like it's something great. It's clearly all about looks. And cleverage. Everyone here is the same. All interchangeable. They all talk like a Kardashian valley girl. Vapid. Self entitled. Everyone is here for fame.
The real estate is so buried in the background. You barely have anything resembling real estate. The Opponheim Group should be embarrassed.
The soundtrack is super annoying.
I hope Steve Gold got paid a lot of money. He looks so lost in this and his dignity is depleting.
Netflix keeps scrapping the bottom of the barrel for taste. To think people worship them is beyond idiotic.
They are making shows for low IQ.
The real estate is so buried in the background. You barely have anything resembling real estate. The Opponheim Group should be embarrassed.
The soundtrack is super annoying.
I hope Steve Gold got paid a lot of money. He looks so lost in this and his dignity is depleting.
Netflix keeps scrapping the bottom of the barrel for taste. To think people worship them is beyond idiotic.
They are making shows for low IQ.
Did you know
- ConnectionsSpin-off from Selling Sunset (2019)
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- セリング・ザ・シティ ~NY、夢の豪華物件~
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime45 minutes
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- 16:9 HD
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