People thought they couldn’t hurt the Oppenheim Group for years. An office with glass walls in West Hollywood, agents wearing high heels, and listings that began where most people’s budgets ended. Netflix made it so that everyone had to watch, and for a while, it looked like the show and the brokerage went hand in hand. Then, slowly, the cracks began to show. They weren’t on camera, but in the real world of selling houses.
It’s hard to say enough about how important it is that the Los Angeles luxury market has had a rough few years. High-net-worth buyers and sellers were both shocked by California’s so-called “mansion tax,” which added a big transfer surcharge to homes worth more than $5 million. When you add in rising interest rates and the fact that many wealthy people were leaving the state altogether, the Oppenheim Group’s fancy listings were sitting for longer than anyone wanted to admit. In public, Jason Oppenheim admitted the pressure by saying that 2023 net sales weren’t as high as they had been in the past. He put a brave face on it, as anyone would, but there was real tension underneath.
Some of the agents who made their names on Selling Sunset might have looked at that landscape and done a quick math problem. New York didn’t slow down as much. There is a different pace to the luxury market there, with different buyers and different commission structures. Mega-brokers like Ryan Serhant’s firm have a reach that a small office in West Hollywood just can’t match. Chrishell Stause, who was one of the show’s most recognizable faces for nine seasons, said she would be leaving in late 2025. It wasn’t subtle that she worked with Serhant. It was a message.

It seems like the show itself has become both a blessing and a ceiling as we watch this happen. It created a platform that was truly amazing. Agents who may have gone years without much attention became well-known almost overnight. But being famous on reality TV makes you tired in a certain way. A lot of former cast members have talked about how hard it was on their mental health to live out workplace conflicts on camera, season after season. There comes a time when the exposure stops being an asset and starts being a trap.
Everything became sharper after a lot of people were fired before Season 10. It was said that Emma Hernan, Mary Bonnet, Chelsea Lazkani, Alanna Gold, and Sandra Vergara were all fired in April, just a few weeks before filming was set to start. Fans were most upset when Bonnet left because she had been there since the pilot and her friendship with Jason Oppenheim didn’t seem to be affected by what the network decided. It looks like it wasn’t. Even days later, people on Reddit were still trying to figure out what was going on, putting together theories about Christine Quinn’s return and what she might have needed to do to clear the deck.
The fact that Christine Quinn is coming back is really its own story. Before she left, her relationships with almost everyone in the office were broken. Bringing her back while getting rid of the people she had problems with suggests a planned creative reset, or at the very least, a bet that her presence will draw more attention than the relationships she hurt. It’s still not clear if that risk pays off.
It’s harder to ignore the bigger picture. With the help of one of Netflix’s most popular unscripted shows, the Oppenheim Group built something truly amazing: a real brokerage with a real track record. But the market changes. People go. Right now, ambitious agents are drawn to New York more than they are to Los Angeles, even when Los Angeles is at its most glamorous. Five homes listed by Jason Oppenheim for $30 million or more are said to be coming on the market. He is still moving up to the ultra-luxury level and betting that Los Angeles will come back strong.
It seems like a good bet. The agents who helped build his brand, on the other hand, are putting theirs somewhere else more and more.