They sit down, and Emma insinuates this is not the first time they met, and Christine says, “Honey, that’s fine. Christine instead decides to talk to Emma, her ex-boyfriend’s ex-girlfriend whom she marauded at the Crunch on Sunset, well-known for its cruisy steam room. The episode starts at the end of the doggy birthday party, and Christine says she can’t deal with Mary’s “frantic energy” as if she is not the one who came to her doggie party after not inviting Mary to her baby shower. But nope, she wants Christine to choke on a pair of Versace branded leggings and a matching top, which should be easy because Christine owns about 90 of them. If this were all for show, she would know that she has to make up with Christine at some point to keep the plot moving along. I want nothing to do with her.” She sets a hard boundary when it comes to Christine. What changed my mind? Well, it is the scene where Mary talks to Vanessa and says, “Stop talking for a second. I think she’s actually that awful and horrible of a person. I don’t think Christine is putting it on for the show anymore.
Otherwise, why would these people actually behave like the sort of CGI monsters that threaten a rural village in a kung fu movie?Īfter this episode, I think that I’m changing my stance on this one. I just assume that everything we’re seeing is fake and it must all be one giant put-on. When it comes to Selling Sunset, I’m the exact opposite. Oh, of course, Meredith Brooks rented a 10-bedroom house for her whole family that they “can’t use” and now the women are going to go on a trip. When it comes to reality shows like the Real Housewives, I always err on the side of thinking that everything happening on screen is real.