The Real Housewives Of San Fernando Valley- A X... Jun 2026

Who can build the biggest "Modern Farmhouse" on the block?

Beverly Hills is about hiding your problems behind Givenchy sunglasses. The San Fernando Valley is about parking your broken-down Range Rover in front of your problems and live-streaming the tow truck.

While Bravo has yet to release the official headshots, the "X" (formerly Twitter) leaks have been flying. The Real Housewives Of San Fernando Valley- A X...

The Valley is home to a new wave of tech wealth. This housewife lives in a fortress in Woodland Hills or a modern architectural marvel in the hills of Porter Ranch. She is bored, brilliant, and dangerous. Her husband is always "working" (or gaming), leaving her with unlimited credit limits and a desperate need for attention. She is the instigator, bringing the drama that drives the ratings.

: The series premiere on January 8, 2026, was a major success, becoming Bravo's second-best series debut ever on Real Housewives Connection Who can build the biggest "Modern Farmhouse" on the block

A former adult film actress turned “intimacy coordinator for prestige cable,” Lacey represents the Valley’s dual identity. She owns a mid-century modern in Studio City that she has filled with taxidermy peacocks. She is savagely intelligent, constantly quoting Proust while threatening to release the receipts from the “Pool Boy Incident of ’22.” Her feud with Shea would be legendary.

focuses on friends navigating life in the San Fernando Valley as they trade Hollywood nightlife for "suburban schedules" and parenthood. Season 3 Updates While Bravo has yet to release the official

What do you think? Who should be the seventh Housewife? Drop your cast picks in the comments. And remember: What happens in the Valley… ends up on a podcast.

Calabasas is the capital of the "New Money" social media elite. A younger Housewife who built an empire on TikTok or Instagram would bring a fresh, tech-savvy friction to the group.

Furthermore, the Valley has a distinct identity separate from the "polished" vibe of Beverly Hills. There’s a bit more grit, a bit more heat, and a lot more room for the explosive arguments that make the franchise a success.

If the tagline for Beverly Hills is "money buys you class," the tagline for the Valley might be something far grittier, far louder, and infinitely more complicated. This is an article exploring what The Real Housewives of San Fernando Valley would look like—not just as a spin-off, but as a cultural thesis on the "other" side of Los Angeles.