Not All Diamonds and Rosé
The Inside Story of The Real Housewives from the People Who Lived It
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- USD 12.99
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- USD 12.99
Descripción editorial
THE INSTANT #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER!
“I like to think of Not All Diamonds and Rosé as the ultimate reunion. I know readers will be surprised, entertained, and even shocked at what’s in store." —Andy Cohen
Dave Quinn's Not All Diamonds and Rosé is the definitive oral history of the hit television franchise, from its unlikely start in the gated communities of Orange County to the pop culture behemoth it has become—spanning nine cities, hundreds of cast members, and millions of fans.
What is it really like to be a housewife? We all want to know, but only the women we love to watch and the people who make the show have the whole story. Well, listen in close, because they’re about to tell all.
Nearly all the wives, producers, and network executives, as well as Andy Cohen himself, are on the record, unfiltered and unvarnished about what it really takes to have a tagline. This is your VIP pass to the lives behind the glam squads, testimonials, and tabloid feuds.
Life’s not all diamonds and rosé, but the truth is so much better, isn’t it?
“This exhaustive oral history features dishy interviews with 185 cast and crew members behind the Bravo phenomenon. Fans will delight to read about how it all got started.”
—New York Post
Includes Color Photographs
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Quinn debuts with a tell-all oral history of the Real Housewives franchise that's as sweeping as it is scandalous. Pulling from more than 175 interviews with Housewives, "Bravolebrities," producers, and network executives, Quinn takes readers from Orange County—where the show took off in 2006—to Housewife cities New York; Atlanta; New Jersey; Washington, D.C.; Beverly Hills; Miami; Potomac, Md.; and Dallas, as the show's cast and crew dish on behind-the-scenes drama about everything from rivalries between the women to affairs, faked cancer, and firings. Musing on the show's title, former network executive Lauren Zalaznick explains that while its cheekiness was "a play on Desperate Housewives and The OC,"its on-screen characters "worked hard every day." Though executive producer Andy Cohen confesses he was "ready to kill the show," due to bumps in production the first season, he adoringly recalls how the Real Housewives' ability to capture the fascination of his friends (and millions of others) changed the trajectory of his life. In addition to pages of snarky banter between Housewives, the book concludes with a delightful "Tagline Catalog" of unforgettable quotes from the shows—such as Lynne Curtin's classic adage, "It's not about how much money you have, it's about how good you look spending it." Fans will drink this up as quickly as the Housewives would a glass of champagne.