When a genuine scandal falls into the hands of TV writers at no cost to them, a certain kind of silence descends upon their workspace. That’s essentially what happened in March 2023 when it was revealed that Tom Sandoval had been seeing Raquel Leviss in secret while he was still seeing Ariana Madix, his co-star and longtime partner. That plot was not written by Bravo. When life handed it a camera, it simply had them pointed in the correct direction.
The subsequent figures provide their own narrative. More than two million people watched the first episode that aired after the affair was made public across all platforms, which is almost twice as many as the live audience from the previous week. Andy Cohen’s late-night companion program on Bravo also saw a significant increase. None of this occurred as a result of producers suddenly becoming more proficient in their roles. Millions of people wanted to witness genuine heartbreak unfold in almost real time, and Bravo had the wisdom to stay out of the way.
It’s easy to overlook the speed at which the suffering became profitable. The most likeable person in the entire situation, Ariana Madix, ended up landing brand deals from BIC, SoFi, Lay’s, and a few other companies keen to capitalize on her increased prominence. Sales of one razor line increased by 35% in the two weeks following the airing of an advertisement featuring Madix, according to BIC’s marketing team. It’s a peculiar form of alchemy—public humiliation transformed into business leverage almost immediately. The optics didn’t seem to bother advertisers. If anything, the controversy increased rather than decreased the spot’s shareability.

Although Scandoval might be the clearest example of the formula functioning precisely as intended, this isn’t particularly new for Bravo. For the past 20 years, the network has discovered that viewers do not watch the parties or dinners. They pay attention when something breaks. A few years ago, “The Real Housewives of New York” put the opposite theory to the test when the network decided to completely cancel the show rather than deal with a cast that had become genuinely difficult to defend. It turned out that the original cast members were missed more than anyone at Bravo had anticipated, and the reboot ran for two seasons before being sent back for repairs.
Since then, Vanderpump Rules has encountered a similar situation. The show has had difficulty recapturing what initially made it captivating after retooling the entire cast in late 2024, replacing the original SUR staff with a younger, glossier group. Online viewer reaction has been skeptical, with many comments accusing the new cast of trying too hard to create the kind of drama that once appeared on its own. Some reports indicate ratings drops as steep as 80%.
The true lesson here may lie in that distinction. It’s important to consider whether the network has realized that Bravo did not engineer Scandoval. Naturally occurring chaos reads like television gold. Episode after episode, chaos that is obviously being pursued begins to resemble witnessing someone try too hard at a party. It’s unclear if casting a new cast at SUR’s dining room will ever duplicate what happened nearly by accident three years ago, and the new “Vanderpump Rules” hasn’t found that line yet.
