Kyle Richards brings the drama in a new sneak peek from season 14 of Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
In the latest teaser for her series, the 55-year-old reality star, who fans think is “aging in reverse”, broke down in tears and stormed away from the cameras.
‘I’m done! I’m not doing this anymore!’ she declared as tears streamed down her face.
“A classic Kyle runway,” wrote one fan who saw the clip on Bravo’s Instagram page.
Another sarcastically joked: “Kyle is crying again. What a surprise.”
Kyle Richards brings the drama in a new trailer for season 14 of Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. The 55-year-old reality star declares “I’m done! I’m not doing this anymore!” and storms out of the room in the sneak peek.
The tension doesn’t end there.
In another clip, her co-stars Dorit Kemsley and Sutton Stracke face off.
“This is not real,” Kemsley, 48, tells Stracke, 52.
The boutique owner replies: “This is the most real thing there is.”
“Forget pumpkin spice — this fall is all about housewives,” the folks at Bravo wrote alongside the clip.
They then tagged not only #RHOBH but also the Housewives shows set in Salt Lake City, Potomac, and New York City.
The RHOBH cast will include not only veterans Richards, Stracke and Kemsley, but also Garcelle Beauvais, Erika Jayne and newcomer Bozoma Saint John.
Actress Jennifer Tilly, 65, has joined the show as a “friend” of the cast.
Richards’ split from husband Mauricio Umansky, 54, recently became more complicated.
The real estate agent and former Selling Beverly Hills star is being sued for alleged fraud in obtaining $3.5 million in PPP (Paycheck Protection Program) and CaresAct loans during the Covid-19 pandemic.
In another clip, Dorit Kemsley and Sutton Stracke confront each other. “This is not real,” Kemsley, 48, tells Stracke, 52. The influencer responds by saying, “This is as real as it gets.”
Richards’ split from husband Mauricio Umansky has become complicated. Their company is being sued for alleged fraud in obtaining $3.5 million in PPP (Paycheck Protection Program) and CaresAct loans during the Covid-19 pandemic. He has denied the allegations.
The lawsuit was filed in July 2023 according to In touchbut the court recently made the documents public.
The whistleblower, Relator LLC, claims that those programs were intended to keep small businesses afloat and allow them to pay their employees, while The Agency’s profits “would have been minimally impacted, if at all, because its revenue was based on a percentage of real estate transactions, typically between millionaires and billionaires, not consumers who were unable to purchase property or dine out due to COVID-19 restrictions. In fact, The Agency’s business grew tremendously during the COVID-19 pandemic.”
The lawsuit alleges that The Agency had sales volume of $6 billion in 2019, but that volume increased to $6.5 billion in 2020 and “skyrocketed to $11.2 billion in 2021.”
Umansky and his partner William ‘Billy’ Rose have denied the allegations.