Column: The very L.A. lessons at the heart of reality TV smash 'Vanderpump Rules' (2024)

For 11 seasons, Bravo’s “Vanderpump Rules” has followed the triumphs, tragedies and tomfooleries of a group of Hollywood 20-something nobodies who became 30-something wannabes as the show became a reality TV juggernaut.

Never heard of it? Maybe it’s for the better — but you’ve been missing out on an unlikely morality play about who makes it and who doesn’t in the eternal heartbreak that is Los Angeles.

It started as a series about the wait staff at SUR, a loud, overpriced West Hollywood restaurant whose star dish is fried goat cheese balls that aren’t as appetizing as they sound. The protagonists, only one of them a native Angeleno (if you count West Covina), slung co*cktails and delivered dishes while pursuing their entertainment dreams — and each other.

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“Vanderpump Rules” stuck out above its fellow L.A.-based reality shows because it created its own version of William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County — a self-contained world that saw the rest of the universe through its limited prism. Fans breathlessly followed the marriages, divorces, flings and affairs of the millennial cast on the small screen and debated the plot twists online. In real life, they flocked to businesses that figured in the show — SUR, the since-closed PUMP, TOMTOM, Schwartz & Sandy’s, Vanderpump Dogs — with the fervor of Christian pilgrims on the Via Dolorosa.

Among the faithful? Me.

Television

‘Vanderpump Rules’ executive producer Alex Baskin on ‘Scandoval’ and what’s in store for Season 11

Alex Baskin, the executive producer of Bravo’s “Vanderpump Rules,” looks back at Season 10 and “Scandoval,” and discusses what fans can expect for Season 11, premiering on Tuesday.

Jan. 28, 2024

My wife and I have visited most of these sites, and we repeat dialogue from episodes to each other in front of befuddled friends who can’t understand why we bother with such trash television (among the most cryptic lines: “It’s not about the pasta”). For my birthday, she gifted me a T-shirt featuring a worm with a mustache bracketed by the phrase “You’re a Worm with a Mustache.” That’s the memorable insult that James Kennedy (the DJ of the group) hurled at Tom Sandoval (the resident lout) last season after Sandoval — who had a girlfriend — became romantically involved with Kennedy’s ex-girlfriend.

That drama — appropriately christened “Scandoval” — brought “Vanderpump Rules” a mainstream prestige it had never known, including two Emmy nominations and thoughtful coverage in publications across the world. It wasn’t the first time an affair on the show led to widespread attention. Two years earlier, the end of the relationship between Lala Kent and movie producer Randall Emmett was followed by a Times investigation portraying Emmett as a flimflam man who kept casting Bruce Willis in his schlocky movies despite the actor’s dementia (Emmett denied both charges).

I first tuned into “Vanderpump Rules” for its addictive schadenfreude: you delighted in seeing the mistakes of your youth play out among a new generation, except in showier locales. You stayed around to see if the protagonists changed for the better as they aged (spoiler alert: most didn’t). Despite the WeHo setting and the troupe’s overwhelming whiteness, any Angeleno could identify with them. They weren’t already rich, like the people in the show Vanderpump spun off from, “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills,” or the pioneering series “The Hills” and “The Kardashians.” They didn’t start out living in a rich man’s world, like the people in “Shahs of Sunset,” “Flipping Out” or “Million Dollar Listing: Los Angeles.”

The “Vanderpump Rules” crew were the quintessential Angeleno archetype: the striver from nowhere, with something to prove.

This season, however, the show offered a profound lesson in what to do when you find yourself kicked to the proverbial curb, like almost everyone in the big city eventually is.

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Column: The very L.A. lessons at the heart of reality TV smash 'Vanderpump Rules' (2)

A scene from the Season 11 finale of “Vanderpump Rules.” From left, Lala Kent, Scheana Shay, Tom Sandoval and Tom Schwartz

(Kim White / Bravo)

The big plot line this year involved Sandoval and Ariana Madix, his longtime beau who broke up with him after Scandoval. Cameras captured them at their Valley Village home, communicating only through an ebullient personal assistant, Ann Maddox. The other Vanderpumpers kept trying to create scenarios where Madix would have to talk to Sandoval and at least make peace, so the show could go on like old times.

It didn’t happen, because Madix had moved on — and not just romantically. She appeared on “Dancing with the Stars,” starred in a Broadway revival of “Chicago,” wrote a best-selling book and shilled for major brands such as Bic, Glad and Chili’s in self-referential commercials. Just last week, Madix and castmate Katie Maloney opened a West Hollywood sandwich shop called Something About Her that’s already drawing hours-long lines (yes, my wife and I plan to go).

As the season progressed, though, it dawned on the rest of her jealous frenemies that Madix’s newfound fame and refusal to reconcile with Sandoval endangered the future of “Vanderpump Rules.” They realized they hadn’t branched out like she had and that their livelihoods would end if their Bravo gravy train petered out.

These tensions blew up in the season finale, when Sandoval broke the fourth wall and huffed about Madix to sympathetic cast members — “Don’t sit back on your lazy ass and collect a f— check for doing nothing” — all because she refused to speak to him at a whiskey launch party in San Francisco. In the last installment of a three-episode reunion special that aired this week, Kent snarled at Madix, “If you’re not going to give a f— about your position on the show, I’m going to need you to give a f— about mine.”

Madix cried but didn’t break. “Vanderpump Rules” is now on hiatus; meanwhile, she’s filming another show, this time as the host. She learned the most important lesson L.A. offers: When you get lemons, make margaritas. Build on what brought you down. Pick yourself up and move on. Hustle toward new ventures, new friends. Don’t live in the past.

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The rest of the “Vanderpump Rules” haters have yet to learn that lesson. May the rest of L.A. tattoo it on our collective hearts.

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Column: The very L.A. lessons at the heart of reality TV smash 'Vanderpump Rules' (2024)

FAQs

What is the controversy with Vanderpump Rules? ›

One year ago, the landscape of reality TV shifted dramatically when Vanderpump Rules star Tom Sandoval committed a grave mistake. Despite being in a nearly decade-long relationship with Ariana Madix, he engaged in a prolonged and secretive affair with their friend and co-star, Raquel Leviss.

What the heck is Vanderpump Rules? ›

A spin-off of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, it has aired eight seasons and features Lisa Vanderpump and the staff at her restaurant SUR in West Hollywood. The lifestyle of the L.A. working girls and boys are simply GOOD reality TV.

Is Vanderpump a reality show? ›

For 11 seasons, Bravo's “Vanderpump Rules” has followed the triumphs, tragedies and tomfooleries of a group of Hollywood 20-something nobodies who became 30-something wannabes as the show became a reality TV juggernaut.

How many Vanderpump Rules are there? ›

Developed as the first spin-off from The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, it has aired eleven seasons and focuses on Lisa Vanderpump and the staff at her restaurants and bars: SUR Restaurant & Lounge, Pump Restaurant, and Tom Tom Restaurant & Bar, in West Hollywood, California.

Do Vanderpump Rules get paid? ›

According to the Hollywood Reporter, core cast members of Vanderpump Rules make $25,000 per episode. I'll give you a moment to do the math. Actually, kidding, I would never make anyone do math! Ariana is making up to $600,000 per season, depending on her episode count.

Does Raquel still work at Sur? ›

Vanderpump Rules star Raquel Leviss will not appear in season 11 of the hit Bravo show, which is currently filming, as she said she has no plans to return to reality TV. Rachel "Raquel" Leviss has officially exited out of the back alley of SUR for the last time.

Why did Vanderpump Rules cast get fired? ›

When reports of Stassi and Kristen filing a false police report against former co-star Faith surfaced, Stassi and Kristen were fired from Vanderpump Rules, citing racist motivations.

Who is the richest cast member of VPR? ›

Lisa Vanderpump - $90 million

Lisa Vanderpump is the wealthiest cast member in the series. Besides starring on the show, she is the executive producer. She and her husband, Ken Todd, operate several restaurants, including SUR, TomTom, Pump, and Villa Blanca.

Are Tom and Raquel still together? ›

While both Sandoval and Leviss confirmed they were still in love during the June 7 reunion episode, he revealed in December that she had cut him out of her life for good. "We were best friends," Sandoval lamented on the Dec. 7 episode of the Two T's in a Pod podcast. "It's heartbreaking to go through.

Who owns Chateau Rosabelle now? ›

Château St. Joseph is located near Carcassonne, a medieval city about 50 miles southeast of Toulouse. The castle is located in Mazerolles-du-Razès, a small town in the Occitanie region of France. According to the property's website, the château is owned by Delphine and Frédéric Roubieu, a married couple with five kids.

Was Vanderpump Rules Cancelled? ›

So, TL;DR: Vanderpump Rules is not canceled although a potential 12th season has not been announced yet, and the show will take a filming hiatus to regroup until further notice. Cool-cool-cool.

Who is the highest paid actor on Vanderpump Rules? ›

As one of the three original main cast members left on Vanderpump Rules—along with Tom Sandoval and Katie Maloney—Scheana is one of three highest-paid cast members on Vanderpump Rules behind executive producer Lisa Vanderpump, according to original cast member Stassi Schroeder.

Who is the oldest on Vanderpump Rules? ›

  • Katie Maloney is currently 37 years old. ...
  • Scheana Shay's age came up in a recent episode, where she chastised Sandoval for bringing up her affair with Eddie Cibrian sixteen years prior. ...
  • Scheana was born in the year 1985 and will turn 39 on May 7th. ...
  • Lisa Vanderpump is 63 years old and will turn 64 on September 15th.
May 1, 2024

What is the biggest Vanderpump Rules scandal? ›

One of the most truly egregious moments in Vanderpump (or TV) history, was when fans learned of the affair between Tom Sandoval and Rachel Leviss. It came as such a surprise to audiences because Tom had been in a committed relationship with Ariana Madix for close to a decade.

What is the biggest vanderpump scandal? ›

One of the most truly egregious moments in Vanderpump (or TV) history, was when fans learned of the affair between Tom Sandoval and Rachel Leviss. It came as such a surprise to audiences because Tom had been in a committed relationship with Ariana Madix for close to a decade.

What is the lawsuit against Vanderpump Dogs? ›

Back in 2020, a dog groomer sued Vanderpump Dogs for sexual harassment. She claimed that her manager harassed her and created “intolerable work conditions.” Eventually, the former employee dropped her case. In Bulux's situation, Vanderpump Dogs claimed they weren't properly served court documents for the lawsuit.

What is happening with Vanderpump Rules? ›

According to Lisa Vanderpump, she and the rest of the cast are pumping the breaks after an intense season that commenced once Scandoval unfolded last year. “Vanderpump Rules is on hiatus just for a little bit,” Lisa told E! News during Disney's 2024 Upfront presentation on May 14.

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