Bravo’s ‘Summer House’ drama is made for this political moment

Bravo’s ‘Summer House’ drama is made for this political moment


The long-running Bravo reality show “Summer House,” which chronicles a group of friends’ share house in the Hamptons, crescendoed into the first of a three-part reunion Tuesday night (the remaining episodes will air the coming consecutive Tuesdays). At the center of the episode: a salacious relationship among castmates Amanda Batula and West Wilson, a betrayal, rumors of infidelity and a friendship in ruin. Bravo fandom has christened the drama “Scamanda,” a portmanteau that unsubtly centers Batula.

Batula and Wilson confirmed online speculation in March that they were in a fledgling relationship or, as they characterized it in a joint Instagram statement, were exploring a “connection.” Both were attached to other “Summer House” cast members: Batula’s marriage to mainstay Kyle Cooke was dissolving and Wilson was in the throes of a yearslong on-again-off-again relationship with fan-favorite Ciara Miller.

The frenzy around “Scamanda” indicates something far greater than the influence and social currency of reality television.

“Scamanda” has become one of the most dominant cultural stories of the past few weeks. Incremental updates, including leaked audio from Tuesday night’s reunion, paparazzi-style photographs and fan-driven reports of the couple’s whereabouts have all but commanded internet discourse.

The frenzy around “Scamanda” indicates something far greater than the influence and social currency of reality television; rather it shows that entertainment has become the dominant framework through which Americans view culture. Here — in Batula’s and Wilson’s Instagram admission, single-camera confessionals, and Bravo producer and host Andy Cohen’s confrontation — is a shared national language, a rare semblance of monoculture and, indeed, a lens with which to understand present-day politics.

One question is, of course, why “Scamanda” so swiftly entered the zeitgeist and extended well past the typical reach of Bravo drama. The answer is a confluence of factors that amount to betrayal, not merely infidelity. For one, the show’s popularity hinges on viewers’ belief that the friendships, between both its women and men costars, are genuine.

Then there is Batula’s long-standing positioning as the moral party in her divorce. Arguably the most crucial, however, is the factor of race. Miller has led emotional and candid conversations about racism, anti-Blackness and the experience of Black women on camera many times since joining the cast in 2021. She divulged that she has received criticism for dating and being interested in white men, including Wilson. Bre DeShon, a political and cultural social media voice, posted a TikTok explaining that, “unfortunately [what Miller is experiencing] is a canon event that happens to every Black woman who operates in white spaces,” referring to Wilson’s poor treatment of Miller as a romantic partner.

Lindsay Hubbard, Kyle Cooke, Ciara Miller, Andy Cohen, Amanda Batula and West Wilson during the “Summer House Reunion.” Jocelyn Prescod / Bravo via Getty Images

“Scamanda” is primarily about the friendship between Batula and Miller, and in this case Batula has received the lion’s share of internet blowback, criticizing her for betraying Miller.

The internet has been extremely harsh and violent toward Batula for her treatment of both Miller and Cooke. Wilson, a white man, has predictably received but a fraction of the internet repercussions, representing a very specific archetype of a white man who uses his liberal voting record and therapy speak to qualify his poor and manipulative treatment of women.





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