The author critiques women who view relationships with peers through a lens of competition, highlighting an example in the evolving dynamics between Brit Eady and Kenya on RHOA. The current season has garnered attention due to its intriguing storyline following a major press leak, coinciding with Bravo's increased scrutiny over past conduct. The narrative revolves around allegations and public perceptions amid a backdrop of attempts at damage control from the network. Kenya's potential firing may reflect the impact of these collective efforts to restore the show's integrity.
In my humble three decades navigating this planet as a female, I've learned not to trust a very specific demographic of fellow women: the ones who immediately and almost gleefully proclaim that they've never gotten along with other girls.
For the first time in years, RHOA has a genuinely intriguing, fourth-wall-shattering storyline that broke in the press before we had the chance to watch it unfold on camera.
It's safe to say the network was running a tighter ship than usual ... or at least wanted to look like it was.
Based on tonight's episode, Kenya's firing/demotion ... might have been collateral as part of the network's damage control.
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