Netflix has reportedly commissioned a British version of its hit reality show Selling Sunset entitled Super Prime London.
The streaming show will be produced by the company behind The Apprentice and will follow a London-based property agency with highly wealthy clients, like the original show across the pond.
Selling Sunset tracks a group of agents as they sell high-end real estate in California, marketed by the now infamous Oppenheim Group.
Super Prime London will begin filming next year and will likely feature a number of charismatic and highly dramatic agents, just like breakout stars Chrishell Stause and Christine Quinn on the Los Angeles counterpart.
A TV source told The Sun : “Selling Sunset was the perfect blend of factual TV and reality gold, blending property porn and bonkers Americans with the lives and loves of the super glamorous cast.
“Whether the same can be achieved in London without the balmy temperatures and Hollywood views remains to be seen - but it’ll be great fun watching.
“Either way, estate agents could do with a boost to their image here in the UK.”
This comes after Christine Quinn left Oppenheim Group and the hit-Netflix programme to launch a cryptocurrency real estate business with her husband Christian Dumontet earlier this year.
Selling Sunset's Jason Oppenheim has said that Christine’s exit provided the show with a 'breath of fresh air' and that fans had become bored.
The real estate boss, 45, said he felt viewers were ‘tired’ of watching Christine's drama and confrontation unfold on the hit-Netflix docu-series.
He reckons Selling Sunset fans may have become bored of watching Christine play the constant villain against her fellow castmates.
"I think people were tired of watching that dynamic continue season after season," he explained. "[Her exit] provided a breath of fresh air for the office and for the show."
Since the show launched in 2019, Christine has come up against most of the other agents, including Chrishell Stause, Mary Fitzgerald, Heather Rae Young and, famously, Emma Hernan.
During season five, Emma, 30, claimed that Christine 'bribed a client' with $5,000 to quit working with her, something she strongly denies.
Jason says he's more than happy to move on from that particular bit of drama, telling Page Six: "It’s not the type of drama that I enjoyed being a professional real estate broker."
He told the outlet: "I wasn’t happy with the types of issues [about Quinn] being brought to my attention. I think it ran its course."