Brandi Glanville
Brandi Lynn Glanville (born November 16, 1972) is an American television personality, author, podcaster, and former fashion model.[1] Beginning her career as a model at age 16 after signing with Elite Model Management, she worked internationally in cities including Paris and appeared in print and runway campaigns for over 17 years.[2][3] Glanville rose to national prominence as a cast member on Bravo's The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, joining as a friend in season 2 and becoming a main housewife in seasons 3 through 5, noted for her direct and unvarnished communication style that often sparked on-screen confrontations.[4] She has authored two memoirs, including the New York Times bestselling Drinking and Tweeting and Other Brandi Blunders (2013), which detailed her divorce and experiences in reality television, and hosts the long-running podcast Brandi Glanville Unfiltered, where she discusses pop culture, personal anecdotes, and interviews guests.[5][6] Her public image is defined by candidness that has garnered a dedicated following for perceived authenticity amid the genre's frequent artifice, though it has also fueled notable feuds and departures from the series.[7]Early life
Family background and upbringing
Brandi Lynn Glanville was born on November 16, 1972, in Salinas, California, and raised in South Sacramento by her parents, Guy and Judith Glanville.[8][9] As the middle child in a family of three siblings—including an older sister, Tricia, and a younger brother, Michael—Glanville grew up in a working-class environment in what she has described as the "ghetto" of South Sacramento, an area characterized by modest economic conditions and urban challenges.[8][10] Her family's roots remained tied to the Sacramento region, reflecting a strong sense of local identity amid everyday struggles.[11] Glanville's upbringing involved typical family dynamics of the era, though she has alluded to a "colorful" childhood marked by the realities of their neighborhood, fostering early self-reliance through necessity rather than privilege.[11] Specific parental occupations are not extensively documented in public records, but the household's socioeconomic context emphasized practical resilience, as evidenced by Glanville's later reflections on independence shaped by limited resources. At age 16, demonstrating this self-determination, she left home to pursue modeling opportunities, signing with Elite Model Management and relocating to Paris, France, marking her initial break from family life.[8] This move underscored her proactive approach to forging her own path, influenced by the unvarnished lessons of her Sacramento origins.[11]Career
Modeling
Glanville began her modeling career at age 17 after being scouted by an agent in a Sacramento mall, leading to a swift relocation to Paris the following month.[12] She signed with Elite Model Management and pursued work across Europe and the United States, including stints in Hamburg, Munich, and Los Angeles, which involved extensive international travel over the course of her two-decade tenure in the industry.[13] This phase underscored the demanding nature of modeling, characterized by frequent relocations and a reliance on agency bookings in a highly competitive field where aspiring models faced rejection and instability to secure gigs.[12] Her portfolio included print appearances in magazines such as Glamour, Cosmopolitan, NW, and Beverly Hills Lifestyle, alongside runway work that she described as her primary strength over editorial shoots.[14][11] While specific high-profile campaigns remain sparsely documented, her sustained bookings through the early 2000s demonstrated resilience in an industry often criticized for its emphasis on youth, physical standards, and short career spans, enabling financial independence before transitioning to other pursuits.[11] The era's modeling landscape, marked by agency dominance and global market saturation, rewarded persistence but offered limited long-term security, as evidenced by the transient nature of many models' earnings.[14]Reality television
Brandi Glanville debuted on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (RHOBH) during its second season in 2011 as a recurring friend of cast member Adrienne Maloof.[15] She was promoted to a full-time housewife for seasons 3 through 5, from 2012 to 2015, during which her confrontational interactions became central to the show's dynamics.[16] Glanville returned in guest capacities for seasons 6, 9, and 10.[1] In season 3, Glanville's feud with Maloof escalated when she publicly disclosed that Maloof had used a surrogate for her twin sons, a private detail Maloof had kept confidential, leading to Maloof's departure from the series after that season.[17] Glanville positioned such revelations as enforcing accountability amid perceived hypocrisies, though detractors viewed them as boundary violations that prioritized drama over discretion.[18] Her tensions with Kim Richards in later seasons, including season 5, involved accusations of enabling Richards' instability while defending her own directness against group interventions.[19] Glanville's unscripted bluntness polarized audiences, with supporters crediting it for injecting authenticity into the genre's often manufactured conflicts, while critics highlighted episodes of alcohol-fueled outbursts as erratic and disruptive.[20] Season 5's premiere drew 1.1 million viewers in the adults 18-49 demographic, its highest in three years, amid heightened drama involving Glanville.[21] Beyond RHOBH, she competed on season 7 of Celebrity Apprentice in 2015, exiting two weeks before the finale, and appeared on E!'s Famously Single in 2016.[22] In 2022, Glanville joined The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip season 4 but was removed early in 2023 following two alleged lewd incidents described by producers as erratic, prompting an internal investigation.[23] Glanville denied misconduct, attributing her exit to production decisions amid the show's competitive environment.[24] Her tenure across Bravo properties underscored a figure whose raw persona boosted engagement but consistently drew complaints of volatility.Writing, podcasting, and media
Glanville authored the memoir Drinking and Tweeting: And Other Brandi Blunders, published in February 2013 by Gallery Books, which chronicled her divorce from Eddie Cibrian, experiences with motherhood, and personal setbacks including a DUI, presented in a candid and unfiltered style.[25][26] The book debuted on the New York Times hardcover nonfiction bestseller list and e-book nonfiction list, reflecting commercial success driven by her reality television audience.[5][27] In 2014, she released the follow-up Drinking and Dating: P.S. Social Media Is Ruining Romance, published by HarperOne, which examined her post-divorce dating experiences amid social media influences and modern relational dynamics, maintaining her signature blunt commentary on romantic pitfalls.[28][29] Glanville launched the podcast Brandi Glanville Unfiltered on November 4, 2013, providing a platform for discussions on pop culture, relationships, reality television drama, and celebrity gossip, often featuring guest appearances from figures such as Andy Cohen, Claudia Jordan, and Jill Zarin.[30][31] By 2025, the podcast had produced over 540 episodes, enabling unedited exchanges that contrasted with scripted television formats and fostered direct listener interaction.[32][6] These ventures extended her public persona beyond broadcast constraints, emphasizing raw personal narratives over polished industry narratives, with the podcast's longevity underscoring sustained audience interest in her forthright perspectives.[33]Other ventures
Glanville launched the Unfiltered Blonde wine label in 2015, debuting with a Chardonnay produced in partnership with Rippey Wine Company in Lodi, California.[34] [35] She participated directly in flavor selection, blending decisions, and label artwork to create an affordable, everyday wine targeted at single mothers and priced accessibly.[34] [36] The release included promotional signings at Lodi Vintners Winery on June 6, 2015, drawing hundreds of fans.[36] In 2018, Glanville expanded the brand through licensing deals, partnering with Silver Buffalo to produce themed tabletop and barware accessories inspired by the Unfiltered Blonde label, such as glassware and serving items.[37] No public sales figures or broad market performance data for the wine or merchandise have been disclosed, reflecting the challenges of celebrity-branded beverages in achieving sustained commercial traction beyond initial hype.[38] Glanville has pursued speaking engagements as an extension of her public persona, with booking fees estimated between $10,000 and $20,000 per event as of 2024, focusing on topics tied to her reality television experiences and personal brand.[39] These appearances represent opportunistic diversification amid fluctuating television opportunities, though they remain secondary to her core media work.Personal life
Relationships and family
Glanville married actor Eddie Cibrian on November 8, 2001, after dating since 1998 and becoming engaged on New Year's Eve 1999.[40][41] The couple's marriage ended amid Cibrian's extramarital affair with country singer LeAnn Rimes, which became public in March 2009 when paparazzi photographs surfaced of the two kissing.[42][43] They separated later that year, with the divorce finalized on September 30, 2010; Cibrian wed Rimes in April 2011.[44][45] In response to the infidelity, Glanville publicly detailed the betrayal's emotional and relational fallout in her 2013 memoir Drinking & Tweeting and Other Brandi Blunders, attributing the marriage's collapse to Cibrian's choices and emphasizing her subsequent focus on self-reliance over prolonged grievance.[46] She has described the affair's exposure as a catalyst for personal reinvention, rejecting narratives of perpetual victimhood in favor of candid accountability for all parties involved, including her own media-fueled reactions.[47] Initial social media exchanges with Cibrian and Rimes escalated tensions, but Glanville later expressed efforts toward civility, stating in 2016 that she had no interest in disrupting their union.[48][49] Following the divorce, Glanville engaged in short-term relationships with figures including comedian Theo Von in 2016 and DJ Jordan Davies in 2017, often addressing romantic setbacks with unfiltered commentary on trust erosion from past experiences.[50] She has remained unmarried, highlighting in interviews a pattern of prioritizing independence amid celebrity dating's inherent scrutiny and infidelity risks.[51] By June 2025, Glanville demonstrated pragmatic family coordination by attending their son Jake's high school graduation on June 12 alongside Cibrian and Rimes, posing for group photos and describing the event as a positive milestone despite historical strains.[52][53] This gathering underscored a shift toward functional coexistence driven by shared obligations, rather than unresolved acrimony.[54]Children and co-parenting
Glanville and her ex-husband Eddie Cibrian share two sons, Mason Cibrian, born in June 2003, and Jake Austin Cibrian, born on April 15, 2007.[55][56] Following their 2010 divorce, Glanville and Cibrian established joint custody arrangements focused on maintaining stability for the children, with Glanville repeatedly stressing the importance of consistent parental involvement amid their high-profile separation.[57] In interviews, she has described prioritizing the boys' needs over personal animosities, noting that co-parenting dynamics improved as the children aged.[58] Glanville has highlighted positive co-parenting interactions with Cibrian and his wife LeAnn Rimes, including joint celebrations such as Mason's 18th birthday party on June 2, 2021, where family photos were shared publicly to demonstrate unity.[56][59] She visited Cibrian's home for Christmas in 2024, stating on her podcast that such gatherings occur "because of my kids," countering earlier media portrayals of ongoing conflict with evidence of collaborative holiday observances.[57] Glanville attributed these efforts to a deliberate choice to "take the higher road" for the children's well-being, though she acknowledged periodic tensions in past statements.[60][61] Efforts to shield the children from fame have included Glanville's refusal to allow them to appear on camera during her Real Housewives of Beverly Hills tenure, citing protectiveness against public scrutiny.[62] She has objected to Rimes posting images of the boys online, as in a 2012 E! interview incident, arguing it exposed them unnecessarily to media attention.[63] Despite these measures, successes are mixed; Mason entered professional modeling by age 19, participating in public-facing work, while Glanville has defended her reality TV role to her sons by framing it as "acting" to mitigate its impact on family life.[64][65] Criticisms of her parenting surfaced in 2014 when she referred to then-7-year-old Jake derogatorily on her podcast, prompting backlash over emotional handling amid fame's pressures, though Glanville later emphasized rehabilitation of such public missteps through focused family priorities.[66]Health challenges
Glanville has publicly acknowledged struggles with alcohol consumption during her time on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, admitting in the 2014 reunion special to using alcohol alongside prescription medications, which contributed to perceptions of problematic drinking patterns.[67] She has described efforts to address these issues, including reflections on addiction not being a negative label, amid co-star concerns about her behavior.[68] However, reports indicate ongoing challenges rather than sustained sobriety post-show, with accusations in 2023 that production encouraged excessive drinking during filming.[69] In July 2023, Glanville began experiencing facial swelling and disfigurement, which she attributes to a possible parasite contracted from food consumed while filming Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip in Morocco.[70] Symptoms have included recurrent swelling, speech difficulties, tooth loss, and severe pain, prompting her to dissolve facial fillers in an attempt to alleviate complications.[71] She has spent thousands on diagnostic tests and treatments, consulting specialists such as an infectious diseases expert who is investigating the issue, though plastic surgeon Dr. Terry Dubrow, whom she saw in January 2025 for procedures including removal of small tissue samples, has stated that a parasite is not responsible and expressed concern over the underlying cause.[72][73][74] Glanville was hospitalized in April 2025 after severe neck and head immobility lasting four hours, requiring her to call 911; she was discharged the following day but continued battling the condition.[75][76] The ordeal has led to documented mental health impacts, including deep depression and suicidal ideation reported in August 2025, which she linked directly to the physical suffering and diagnostic frustrations, though she has pursued proactive steps like new treatment plans while criticizing delays in effective medical intervention.[77][78]Financial and legal matters
Glanville's net worth has been estimated at approximately $5 million during the peak of her reality television career, derived primarily from appearances on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, book sales, and modeling.[79] More recent assessments place it closer to $500,000, reflecting declines amid reduced income opportunities.[80] In August 2025, Glanville publicly disclosed severe financial strain, stating she had exhausted her savings after incurring over $130,000 in medical treatment costs during a two-year health ordeal that limited her ability to work.[81] She described struggling to pay bills and feeling like a "loser," attributing the downturn to downtime from illness rather than prior earnings mismanagement, though observers have noted her history of high spending during prosperous years.[82][83] Legally, Glanville filed a lawsuit in August 2019 against her landlord, alleging toxic mold in her rental property caused health issues for her and her sons, seeking $1.5 million in damages; the case settled for a six-figure sum.[84][85] In 2024, she pursued claims against Bravo and executive producer Andy Cohen, alleging sexual harassment and network retaliation following an incident on The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip, but her legal team withdrew representation, stalling the suit due to evidentiary challenges tied to a related assault allegation by Caroline Manzo.[86][87] Glanville has claimed this fallout contributed to blacklisting, exacerbating her income loss, though Bravo has denied the harassment accusations.[88]Controversies
On-show behavior and feuds
Glanville's tenure on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (RHOBH) from seasons 2 through 5, plus guest appearances, featured a persona defined by blunt confrontations and accusations of castmate duplicity, which she framed as authentic "real talk" exposing underlying hypocrisies in the group's dynamics.[18] Her interactions often escalated into verbal altercations, such as the season 5 episode where she slapped Lisa Vanderpump during a heated argument at an event, drawing 1.961 million viewers—the highest for the series since January of that year—and exemplifying how her volatility correlated with spikes in audience engagement.[89] Glanville maintained that such outbursts stemmed from principled stands against manipulation, as in her claims that Vanderpump orchestrated efforts to discredit her via tabloid leaks and alliances, labeling the latter "my own personal devil" for attempting to sabotage her career.[90] Central to her RHOBH arc were prolonged clashes with Kyle Richards and her sister Kim, originating in season 3 over personal boundaries and escalating into public accusations of favoritism and denial, which Glanville cited as emblematic of Richards' selective accountability toward family issues.[18] These feuds intensified during the season 9 "Puppygate" scandal, where Glanville aligned with Vanderpump against Richards and others, alleging a conspiracy to frame Vanderpump for leaking stories to the press, though she later distanced herself from Vanderpump amid shifting loyalties.[91] Detractors portrayed Glanville's style as disruptive and overly aggressive, contributing to her full-time exit after season 5, yet proponents, including segments of the fanbase, credited it with injecting unfiltered candor that sustained viewer interest, evidenced by sustained discussion in online forums despite polarized opinions on her likability.[92] Beyond RHOBH, Glanville's feuds extended to inter-franchise rivalries and personal entanglements, notably her decade-long animosity with LeAnn Rimes, sparked by Rimes' 2009 affair with Glanville's then-husband Eddie Cibrian, leading to public Twitter exchanges and claims of boundary violations like Rimes driving by Glanville's home.[93] The conflict appeared resolved by 2018, with Glanville declaring an end to hostilities for their children's sake and a family reunion selfie, but reignited by May 2025 amid fresh disagreements, underscoring persistent relational tensions despite intermittent truces.[94] Similarly, her longstanding grudge against Real Housewives of New Jersey alum Caroline Manzo resurfaced in August 2025, when Glanville named an undiagnosed facial parasite "Caroline" in a TikTok video, a pointed reference to their prior clashes during crossover events, highlighting how such petty jabs perpetuated her reputation for unyielding animosities across Bravo's ecosystem.[95]Sexual misconduct allegations
In January 2023, while filming season 4 of Peacock's The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip in Morocco, Caroline Manzo alleged that Brandi Glanville forcibly kissed her on the mouth twice and groped her vagina without consent after Glanville had been drinking.[96] [97] Manzo, a former cast member of The Real Housewives of New Jersey, reported the incident to production staff, who halted filming and removed Glanville from the set; the season was ultimately shelved and never aired.[98] [96] Glanville denied the assault claims, stating that Manzo did not verbally or physically object during the interactions and that video footage would show no resistance, describing the kisses as brief and mutual in the context of the show's alcohol-fueled environment.[99] [100] She asserted she was intoxicated but not "blackout drunk," and criticized the allegations as inconsistent with reality television norms where physical contact, including kissing among castmates, is commonplace and often encouraged for drama.[99] [101] Glanville further questioned selective application of misconduct standards, noting that similar behaviors by male figures in the industry, such as host Andy Cohen's past comments, have not resulted in equivalent scrutiny or consequences.[99] Bravo conducted an internal investigation into the incident but did not publicly discipline Glanville, leading her to claim she was "vindicated" by the network despite the fallout.[102] In January 2024, Manzo filed a civil lawsuit against Bravo, Peacock, and production companies, alleging negligence in failing to ensure a safe environment and allowing Glanville's behavior after prior warnings about her intoxication; the suit seeks damages but does not name Glanville as a defendant.[98] [96] No criminal charges were filed against Glanville, who reported suffering severe professional repercussions, including lost bookings and temporary blacklisting by Bravo, as well as mental health impacts that led her to contemplate suicide in April 2025.[103] [104]Disputes with Bravo and industry figures
In January 2023, Glanville was removed mid-filming from The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip in Morocco, an event she later attributed to unfair treatment by Bravo executives amid ongoing production tensions, marking the onset of her public fallout with the network.[92] She claimed this ejection, without specified violations at the time, exemplified Bravo's selective enforcement of conduct rules, where cast members' provocative behavior—previously incentivized for ratings—was retroactively penalized against her. Bravo has not publicly detailed the removal reasons beyond general production decisions, though Glanville framed it as part of a pattern of power imbalances favoring network insiders. Escalating in February 2024, Glanville's attorneys sent a legal letter to NBCUniversal and Warner Bros. Discovery accusing Andy Cohen, Bravo's executive vice president and host of Watch What Happens Live!, of sexual harassment, citing a 2022 video call in which he allegedly boasted about his intent to engage in sexual activity with another Bravo personality while intoxicated.[105] [106] Cohen responded publicly the same day, apologizing for the "inappropriate" video and stating it crossed a line, while denying any solicitation of Glanville herself.[107] An internal investigation by NBCUniversal, prompted by these and related claims from former cast member Leah McSweeney, cleared Cohen in May 2024 of allegations involving drugs, alcohol promotion, and sexual harassment, with Glanville's lawyer dismissing the probe as inadequate due to its reliance on Cohen's self-reported conduct.[108] Glanville pursued a lawsuit against Cohen and Bravo for harassment and retaliation, asserting the network's culture enabled executive overreach and subsequently blackballed her from opportunities due to her candor in exposing it.[8] However, by October 2024, sources indicated the case was shelved, reportedly undermined by counter-allegations from Caroline Manzo—who accused Glanville of sexual assault during the 2023 Morocco trip—casting doubt on Glanville's victim narrative and highlighting her own alleged boundary-crossing behaviors as reciprocal rather than one-sided.[86] [109] Glanville denied Manzo's claims, insisting her actions aligned with Bravo's long-tolerated "risqué" expectations for female cast members, while critics, including industry reports, argued her career stagnation stemmed from self-sabotaging patterns rather than systemic retaliation.[110] Through 2024 and into 2025, Glanville amplified her grievances on social media, decrying Bravo's "toxic" environment and claiming the stress from the disputes exacerbated her health issues, leaving her financially strained and unable to secure work—assertions she tied to industry-wide ostracism for challenging executive authority.[111] [112] In August 2024, she tearfully stated on video that Bravo and Cohen had "ruined" her life, rendering her "broke and sick," and by December 2024, blamed the network for facial disfigurement linked to stress-induced conditions.[111] Supporters viewed her as a whistleblower illuminating unaddressed power dynamics in reality TV, where cast loyalty is demanded but reciprocity absent; detractors countered that her unfiltered outbursts, including recent tirades against figures like Manzo, perpetuated her isolation, with empirical timelines showing Bravo's tolerance waned as her viability for ratings diminished post-RHOBH tenure.[113] No independent evidence has substantiated broad blackballing beyond her public claims, though the failed litigation underscores causal factors like mutual allegations eroding credibility on both sides.Philanthropy
Charitable contributions
In July 2013, Glanville participated in a Charitybuzz auction offering a "Ultimate Housewives Experience," including a lunch with her and Lisa Vanderpump at Villa Blanca, plus her worn Oscar de la Renta dress, which raised over $10,000 for cancer patient support.[114][115] The auction leveraged her celebrity status to generate funds, though the specific beneficiary foundation was tied to a personal connection involving a friend's family member's illness.[116] Glanville has publicly endorsed the Make-A-Wish Foundation, selecting it as her designated charity during her 2015 stint on The Celebrity Apprentice and promoting walks and donations through social media appeals.[117] These efforts focused on fulfilling wishes for children with critical illnesses, aligning with her expressed interest in pediatric causes, though documented personal financial contributions remain unspecified beyond advocacy.[118] She attended the David Foster Foundation's Miracle Gala and Concert in Calgary on September 27, 2014, an event that raised $8.2 million for children requiring organ transplants, and urged donations via Twitter.[119][120] Her involvement included on-site support alongside fellow Real Housewives of Beverly Hills cast members, contributing to visibility for the foundation's mission.[121] On May 7, 2015, Glanville received the Women of Achievement Award from the Associates for Breast and Prostate Cancer Studies at their annual Mother's Day Luncheon in Beverly Hills, recognizing her role in raising awareness for cancer research and treatment.[122][123] The honor highlighted her platform's potential impact, though it coincided with her active Real Housewives tenure, suggesting publicity synergies over sustained, independent philanthropy.[124]Bibliography
Published works
Glanville co-authored her debut book, Drinking and Tweeting: And Other Brandi Blunders, with Leslie Bruce, published by Gallery Books in February 2013. The memoir chronicles her divorce from actor Eddie Cibrian amid his affair with LeAnn Rimes, her struggles with alcoholism, and her rise to fame on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, presented in a candid, unfiltered style emphasizing personal anecdotes over polished narrative. It debuted at number 2 on the New York Times hardcover nonfiction bestseller list and number 1 on the e-book nonfiction list, remaining on the former for multiple weeks.[5][27] Reviews highlighted its raw honesty and entertainment value, though some critics noted its reliance on sensationalism typical of celebrity memoirs.[125] Her follow-up, Drinking and Dating: P.S. Social Media Is Ruining Romance, also co-authored with Bruce and released by HarperOne in March 2014, shifts to a self-help format offering relationship advice drawn from Glanville's post-divorce experiences, critiquing modern dating influenced by social media and celebrity culture. It similarly attained New York Times bestseller status, reflecting sustained commercial interest in her voice. Reader feedback, averaging 4.1 out of 5 stars across hundreds of Amazon reviews, praised its humorous, relatable insights into romantic pitfalls, while acknowledging its informal tone as both a strength and limitation for serious guidance.[126] No subsequent books have been published as of 2025.Filmography
Television roles and appearances
Glanville rose to fame as a cast member on Bravo's The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, initially appearing as a friend of Adrienne Maloof in season 2, which premiered on September 5, 2011. She became a main housewife for seasons 3 through 5, airing from 2012 to 2015, where she documented her post-divorce life, co-parenting, and interpersonal conflicts with castmates. Glanville returned in a recurring "friend of" capacity for seasons 9 and 10 in 2019 and 2020, making guest appearances amid ongoing franchise dynamics. Beyond RHOBH, Glanville participated in other Bravo and Peacock reality series. She competed as herself in season 2 of The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip in 2022, joining alumni for tropical retreats and challenges across seven episodes. In 2023, she appeared as a contestant on three episodes of The Traitors on Peacock, navigating deception and eliminations in a competitive format. Glanville has made scripted guest and cameo appearances in television productions. In the 2016 Syfy TV movie Sharknado 4: The 4th Awakens, she portrayed Tech Whitley, an Astro-X technician aiding in shark disaster response. She guest-starred as Heidi in a 2021 episode of the Netflix sitcom Family Reunion.| Year | Title | Role | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011–2015 | The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills | Herself (main cast seasons 3–5; friend seasons 2, 9–10) | Reality series |
| 2016 | Sharknado 4: The 4th Awakens | Tech Whitley | TV movie |
| 2021 | Family Reunion | Heidi | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2022 | The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip (season 2) | Herself | Reality series[127] |
| 2023 | The Traitors | Herself (contestant) | Reality competition (3 episodes)[127] |