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Selling Sunset Season 8 Review: A Formula Gone Flat

When Reality Runs Dry

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
9 months ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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The Netflix reality series Selling Sunset has been entertaining fans with high-end real estate and juicy Hollywood drama since 2019. Following the lives of the glamorous agents at the Oppenheim Group brokerage, the show’s popularity has led to eight seasons so far of following luxurious home tours and interpersonal intrigue. Season 8 premiered in late 2024, raising expectations for more dramatic developments in both property listings and relationships.

This current season opens with familiar faces like Chrishell Stause and Mary Fitzgerald going about their jobs showing multimillion-dollar mansions to wealthy buyers. New agent Alanna Gold also makes an appearance, hoping to prove herself amongst veteran colleagues.

Storylines set up early on hint at issues both continuing from previous seasons and completely new accusations surfacing between cast members. With so many personalities converging under one high-pressure work environment, tensions inevitably flare on a regular basis. However, after so many similar scenarios playing out over the years, some may wonder how engaging the well-worn formula can remain.

Growing Drama

Selling Sunset follows a tried-and-true formula for reality television. Each episode focuses on a different luxury home listing in Los Angeles, with accompanying drama both career-related and personal.

Typical installments showcase an Oppenheim Group agent showing high-end properties to the super rich, while private conflicts between cast members play out simultaneously. Lengthy seasons unfold by continuing storylines across multiple 30-minute drops each week.

This narrative structure allows for intimate glimpses into ostentatious real estate, as well as tensions constantly simmering amongst agents under one roof. Individual episodes center temporarily heated disputes that ultimately culminate season-long. Competition over listings fuels resentment, while gossip spreads private issues into the open. All the while, the ongoing mission is selling multimillion-dollar mansions through sheer force of personalities.

Central to the series since debut is the intimacy of cameras embedded within the Oppenheim offices. Here, drama arises naturally as colleagues squabble while facing rigorous demands as elite realtors. With egos and envy constantly colliding under industry stress, personal drama becomes the show’s other ‘listing’. Though repetitive, this formula taps into desires to peek behind luxurious wealth while watching interpersonal fireworks.

Returning Favorites

Viewers of Selling Sunset are reacquainted with heads of the Oppenheim Group as season eight begins. Chrishell Stause remains a central figure, balancing career ambition with her personal life following divorce. Mary Fitzgerald’s real estate skills continue impressing buyers, though she finds her close relationship with Romain comes under judgment.

Selling Sunset Season 8 Review

Heather Rae El Moussa, now married to Tarek, deals with the challenges of being a newly married working mother. Emma Hernan still encounters issues from her past surfacing through rumors. Though skilled colleagues, tensions between Christine Quinn and Davina Potratz show no sign of easing.

A newcomer to the crew is Alanna Gold. Holding past struggles with low self-esteem, she aims to distinguish herself from the start. Alanna’s claim of owning an entire west coast town brings intrigue to coworkers as her background remains mysterious.

All must strive to impress billionaire buyers drawn to Los Angeles’s most opulent properties. With new luxury listings on the market and clients demanding top service, professional feuds show little sign of subsiding either. Through both career highs and low-blown scandals, the drama of season eight comes from these familiar faces and how their dynamic stories intersect once more.

Recurring Tensions

As with past installments, Season 8 unfolds key dynamics through individual episodes. Early on, Episode 2 highlights growing friction between new-hire Alanna and longtime agent Chelsea. While showing a mansion together, tensions flare as their opposing styles become clear.

Selling Sunset Season 8 Review

Episode 4 then depicts Mary fielding criticism for her close friendship with businessman beau Romain. Despite professional success, whispers on social media question if she’s “too distracted” by her romance. This seeds doubts that span the season.

Halfway through, Episode 7 presents heated allegations between cast members. Nicole directly accuses Emma of infidelity, much to the shock of colleagues. Finger-pointing ensues as sides are chosen, threatening the very foundation of their workplace bonds.

In the finale, long-brewing issues come to a head. Chrishell rejects filming further with Nicole following her previous claims. Whereas Chelsea and Bre’s argument over childcare arrangements boils over. As with past seasons, little is fully resolved by these climactic personal attacks before closing credits roll.

While luxury property remains the ostensible focus, ongoing intrigues between agents prove a dependable source of serialized drama. Repeated tensions ensure viewer investment in personalities, even as story beats grow familiar. For better or worse, interpersonal clashes drive both individual episodes and overarching season narratives.

Capturing Conflict

Season 8 maintains Selling Sunset’s polished presentation across its technical aspects. Crisp cinematography continues delivering the over-the-top opulence of LA’s luxury real estate market. Sweeping aerial shots showcase sprawling estates with striking visual flair.

Selling Sunset Season 8 Review

Meanwhile, artful establishment of mood frames inter-office clashes. Tight close-ups intensify heated confrontations, drawing audiences deeper into personal disputes. Skilled editing ratchets tension across episodes, teasing broader story arcs into climactic conclusions.

After many seasons, the format retains expertise in weaving real property tours with vivacious drama. Location scouting fresh extravagant listings keeps the setting feeling fresh. However, some notice performances evolve to feel more heightened and inauthentic over time.

While newer episodes uphold high production values, questions arise if enforced storytelling harms reality. Nevertheless, skilled camerawork and editing sustain immersion into these familiar personalities. Even as complaints of artificiality grow, technical execution preserves gripping viewing of Selling Sunset’s indulgent world.

Losing Its Luster

By its eighth installment, the intrigue of Selling Sunset appears to have lost some of its shine. While still delivering glimpses of over-the-top wealth, Season 8 shows signs of failing to break new dramatic ground. Many familiar squabbles play out without much progression as cast members tread paths viewers witnessed arise seasons ago.

Selling Sunset Season 8 Review

Accusations and rumors roiling between colleagues stir interest, yet their core substance seems copied from earlier scripts. Luxury listings retain visual splendor, but their screen time feels reduced. With so many episodes now streaming, this current volume struggles to justify renewal beyond brand loyalty. Revisiting the same dynamics triggers questions on how engaged fresh audiences could remain.

That’s not to say the season proves entirely unenjoyable. Its reality format holds simple charms for some looking to switch off and indulge in Beverly Hills fantasies. Yet repetitive tropes elicit less emotional investment over time. Even die-hard fans may find their tolerance waning for cookie-cutter conflicts hastily patched up by season’s end.

While Selling Sunset undoubtedly amplified popularity for opulent real estate pornography, Season 8 signifies the reality genre’s conventions now hamper legitimately compelling television. Its future appears at a crossroads—reinvent storyline formulas or accept dwindling returns on a once-lucrative concept grown tired and lacking meaningful progression.

Stay or Stray

With eight seasons under its belt, passion for Selling Sunset remains strong amongst dedicated fans of its glitzy world. However, for those yet to immerse in West Hollywood’s most opulent real estate circle, Season 8 provides minimal fresh intrigue.

Selling Sunset Season 8 Review

Longtime supporters satisfied exploring deeper layers of favorite cast members might find occasional sparks of interest. Nevertheless, repetition grows wearisome for casual audiences. New episodes offer little to pull in newcomers beyond the short-lived visual splendor of lavish properties.

While the show currently maintains viewership supporting further renewal, its future path seems unclear. Reinvention appears necessary to attracting and rebuilding enthusiasm. Otherwise, networks risk fatigue, eroding interest in formulaic iterations.

In the end, only the most loyal fans may feel this volume worthwhile. But casual viewers seeking novelty would be wise looking elsewhere. With creative stagnancy signaling declining returns, Selling Sunset risks either cancellation or requiring dramatic reinventing to rekindle former luster. For now, its prime appears to have passed, but fond memories linger of high-gloss drama in its earlier peak.

The Review

Selling Sunset Season 8

6 Score

While still delivering escapist viewing of LA's elite real estate scene, Selling Sunset Season 8 shows the reality format has grown tired, relying too heavily on replicas of past dynamics. Continuing risks alienating all but the most ardent loyalists. A format revamp seems necessary to halt decline into repetition without progression.

PROS

  • High production values and beautiful visuals of luxury properties
  • Familiar characters are enjoyable for fans invested in their stories.
  • Offers an entertaining peek into the lavish lifestyles of LA elites

CONS

  • Narrative feels stale and repetitive, relying on old conflicts.
  • Not much has progressed overall between the past and current seasons.
  • Unlikely to attract or engage new viewers without fresh elements
  • Risks losing interest of casual/past fans through lack of innovation

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Adam DiVelloChrishell StauseChristine QuinnFeaturedJason OppenheimMary BonnetNetflixRealitySelling SunsetSelling Sunset Season 8
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