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Shh! Don’t tell, but I’m addicted to Selling Sunset

Is it acceptable for a feminist with a PhD to enjoy the Netflix hit series? Julia Wagner thinks it is

September 17, 2020 15:56
UTgfWaRo

By

Julia Wagner,

JULIA WAGNER

3 min read

I f there’s one thing we’ve all had in common during lockdown, it’s screen time. Work, school, birthday parties, brit milah, weddings, shivas have all gone online, and the screen is still what many of us turn to for relaxation in the evenings.

Like most parents of young children, I’ve been grappling with my children’s viewing habits, while my own TV diet has changed. I’ve missed out on the usual daytime Holocaust-and-subtitled-documentary fare that my working week used to involve and in my exhausted evenings I’ve no appetite for serious stuff.

I’ve devoured Selling Sunset, the hit Netflix series showcasing multi-million dollar Los Angeles homes. It centres on the Oppenheim Group real estate brokerage run by twins Brett and Jason Oppenheim, their team of stunning sales agents and even more stunning properties. It is a cross between a Real Housewives series, A Place in the Sun, Grand Designs and Behind the Scenes at Martyn Gerrard (don’t get too excited, this doesn’t exist — yet — but remember that episode with Mary Portas in 2011?).

I was persuaded to give Selling Sunset a go after I saw a Facebook post by a friend — also a PhD-holding, Jewish feminist: “OK so who else is secretly and guiltily obsessed with Selling Sunset?” I asked if I should watch and she enthusiastically replied “Yes! Then we can discuss whether it’s a feminist show!”