Originally appeared on E! Online
Luxury is getting a new area code.
After the sky-high success of "Selling Sunset" and its spinoff, "Selling the OC," Netflix is setting its sights on a new city: New York.
According to the streaming giant, "Selling the City" will follow "a dynamic group of no-nonsense, kickass agents at Douglas Elliman as they navigate the cutthroat world of luxury real estate in New York City."
We've got the news you need to know to start your day. Sign up for the First & 4Most morning newsletter — delivered to your inbox daily. >Sign up here.
And with the promise of stunning real estate and equally alluring personal drama, all set against the backdrop of a fiercely competitive city, Netflix's newest spinoff looks to be just as addicting as the first two series.
Though the cast won't be revealed until a later date, production is set to start this spring and will accumulate to eight 45-minute episodes. The series will also see Adam DiVello — who created "Selling Sunset" and "Selling the OC" — return as an executive producer.
Meanwhile, "Selling Sunset" released its seventh season last year, with an eighth already confirmed, while the third season of "Selling the OC" recently hit viewers' screens.
The Love Lives of "Selling Sunset" Stars
And it was the OC spinoff, also featuring realtors from California's The Oppenheim Group, that was particularly frosty, featuring feuds between cast members Alex Hall vs. Kayla Cardona, Sean Palmieri vs. Austin Victoria and Alexandra Rose vs. Alexandra Jarvis.
And while it may have seemed like the ongoing ice between Hall and Cardona may have seemed to thaw onscreen, the two stars confirmed they went right back to where they started after filming ended.
As Cardona told E! News' Francesca Amiker, "I knew that her apology was not genuine, but I still gave her a chance and after filming was over and all that happened. She continued to talk negatively about me on social media and we are no longer on speaking terms. I already knew that all of that was completely fake and for the camera."
Meanwhile Hall, who noted the genuine moment the two shared on camera, agreed things between them soon took a turn.
"It was a nice weight that had been lifted and we both agreed on that," she told E! News. "And then less than 48 hours later, I'm being sent TMZ news that she's going on and saying like horrendous things and accusations towards me, which just threw me for a loop. And I'm just like, 'What on Earth?' It's just the inconsistencies."