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Is Lisa Vanderpump Actually Leaving 'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills'?


A collective gasp rang out in certain corners of the Internet on Wednesday, November 14, when Radar Online published a report that Lisa Vanderpump, one of the original cast members of Bravo’s Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, would be leaving the show after eight years.

According to Radar’s source, the decision came because Vanderpump was grieving over the death of her brother and overwhelmed with various professional projects. “She was dealing with grief, filming Vanderpump Rules, opening [new restaurant] TomTom, and running the Vanderpump Dog Foundation,” their source says. “She was not equipped to handle Housewives, even before the drama happened.”

But a source close to the Bravo show, however, tells Glamour she’s still a key player. “Lisa will appear in the majority of episodes this season. She has not been filming at every event, but fans can expect to see her throughout. The show will return to Bravo in early 2019.” And we’ve already seen her play a large role in the trailer for the upcoming season of Vanderpump Rules, her spinoff show centered around the staff at her restaurant S.U.R.

That’s not to say that there isn’t drama afoot on the show. (Would you want it any other way?) Fellow members of the cast, like Kyle Richards and Dorit Kemsley, have been posting on Instagram from a trip in Europe…and Vanderpump is noticeably absent. The Bravo spinoff handle of the popular Comments by Celebs noticed a snarky comment about the absence from Richards. Again, though, it’s not unheard for a Housewife to miss one of their famous getaways. That said, nothing is ever quite the same without LVP is it?

Fans of the franchise expressed their shock and dismay on social media.

For her part, Vanderpump kept it simple on Twitter writing, “Let’s just focus on the important things right now.”

Let’s just hope we get to the bottom of all of this during a juicy new season of RHOBH.





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What Exactly Does an Accountability Coach Do? Allow 'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' Star Teddi Mellencamp to Explain


Recently, on the Today show, Megyn Kelly mentioned that she’d asked her stepfather to “fat-shame” her when she felt she was gaining weight during law school. “I said to my stepfather, ‘If you see me go to that kitchen one more time, you say, ‘Where are you going, fatass?’ And it worked!” she told her guest “Fit Mom” Maria Kang. Kelly also said she thinks sometimes other women want to be shamed, referencing the business that Real Housewives star Teddi Mellencamp has built as an accountability coach. But Mellencamp would like to clear something up: Her business and the request Kelly made of her stepfather are not the same thing. Mellencamp’s coaching business acts as a one-stop shop for women to have, essentially, an on-call personal trainer, nutritionist, and even therapist to help them set goals and check in frequently to make sure those goals are being met, exploring any road blocks they might hit along the way together. “Never in a million years would I—or anybody who works for me—put somebody down or shame them,” Mellencamp tells Glamour. “Everything comes from a positive, loving place.” So what is working with an accountability coach actually like? Glamour spoke with Mellencamp and one of her clients, On-Air With Ryan Seacrest cohost Tanya Rad, to find out.

Glamour: OK, first off, Teddi—how did you become an accountability coach?

Teddi Mellencamp: I’ve always been a weight fluctuater, even as a kid. My mentality was, I work hard and my reward is to eat hard. But it was making me upset. I realized I should be living a balanced life [and I put that in practice]. Then I realized: I’m not the only one out there who needs this. So I started just working with my friends. It was very much a heart project.

Glamour: And what does it mean once someone signs on as a client?

Teddi: Before I accept anyone, I let them know the ground rules. I start with a two-week jump start, and during that time I say: if you aren’t able to submit a text with proof of the following things (and sorry, I can’t tell you exactly what they are!), you’ll be removed from the program and not be refunded. Nobody wants to throw money away, especially over something they wanted to do in the first place. That’s really motivating. And then the difference between me and a personal trainer is, a trainer doesn’t know what you’re doing the other 23 hours of a day. But with my clients, they’re sending me proof, they’re talking me through their schedule. We do a picture day one, at two weeks, at six weeks. They’re seeing the progress. That’s what the program is.

Glamour: Tanya, what made you want to work with Teddi?

Tanya Rad: I got introduced to Teddi because my makeup artist was going through the program. I noticed not only that she’d lost weight but that her mind-set changed—she’d never seemed better. She knows me really well, and she said, “I think you would really benefit from this.” I work in radio, and I do a lot on camera, and I’ve never really felt comfortable. I thought it was my weight. I was one of those bandwagoners who jumps on a fad diet, tries for three days, and stops. So I reached out to Teddi and said, “I really wanna do this,” but I wasn’t really ready to commit. A month or two went by, and then I realized I needed to do this.

Teddi: Tanya, I hope you don’t mind me sharing this, but the reason she originally didn’t want to do it is I require you to be active for an hour a day. Every day. It can be whatever—walking, yoga, hiking, Spinning, anything. But she said, “I can’t do that.” And I didn’t push her. I will never push someone that’s not ready. And I didn’t hear from her for a while! But what I say to women who tell me that is: You don’t have to give it a 10 out of 10 every single day. I film a TV show, I have kids, I have a husband, I have a business, and I’m able to carve out an hour a day for me. I’ll say: Explain to me how you can’t do that as well. And 99 percent of women don’t have an answer.

Glamour: Tanya, what’s it like to work with someone who holds you accountable?

Tanya: I remember there was one day when they were coming to do my makeup at 6:30 A.M. I told Teddi, “I don’t have the time to do something active [that day].” And she said, “What are you doing at 5 A.M.?” I said, “I guess I’m running!” In my mind I thought my day was completely booked. All it takes is that one change in perspective. It sounds crazy but it is doable.

Glamour: How does the feedback work?

Teddi: What I try to tell all the women—and what I tell myself—is if you have plans to go to a birthday party and you just want to go and drink and eat a ton of food, that’s not really not that good of a friend. If you want to go to celebrate your friend and drink a glass of wine, indulge in the things you love! But if you’re going basically just to go off the rails, it isn’t about the party; it’s about your surroundings. It’s mental. If you’re leaving your dinner and then getting a bad phone call from somebody you’re dating and then going to a drive-through and having a second dinner—which people do!—that’s not gonna make you feel better. But I’m somebody who listens. I understand. I have been there. I’ll say things like, “Well, are you full right now? Then you don’t need to do that! These are the things I like to do instead: I like to go on a walk, take a bath, pick a show to binge-watch.” It’s really just about diverting your attention.

Tanya: The program isn’t so crazy where I can’t live my life. Teddi really just gives it to me straight: “You can do this, I believe you can do this.” And then I do it!

Glamour: Teddi, are there certain personality types your coaching works better for? It seems like some women want harsher feedback, some women want support, some women want to be left alone….

Teddi: I’m pretty good at reading people. Some women do need you to be more aggressive, and some women need you to be more soft, but either I or someone on my team can make that happen. Personally, I tend to work best with straight shooters, which is why I love my working relationship with Tanya! We’re both straightforward.

Tanya: I could never be a Teddi to somebody else, but I like it for me. Especially in the beginning, when you’re shaping new habits, if someone was like, “Oh, it’s OK that you ate that burger, it’s fine, whatever,” maybe I wouldn’t have taken the program as seriously. Back then, I felt like I really needed help. I think I’m better at it now. Honestly, I never used the word accountable before, but I’m so accountable these days, about everything. If I say I’m gonna be somewhere at 12:30? Now I’ll be there at 12:30.



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You Don't Become Lisa Vanderpump by Accident: Inside the World of 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' MVP


Lisa Vanderpump is freezing. Sitting on a bench in New York’s West Village, her alopecia-stricken Pomeranian Giggy in one arm and a Pantone purple Chanel in the other, she grits her teeth against the elements. “My nose is about to fall off,” she insists to no one in particular. Then, more quietly, “Too. Cold.” Though it’s nearly 40 degrees Fahrenheit—practically tropical after the maddening chill of the past week’s #BombCyclone—London-born Vanderpump, 57, isn’t used to begrudging the annual slog of winter.

Once she and her crew are ushered inside brunch-all-day bistro Café Cluny, shed their jackets, and toss two low energy Pomeranians into a banquette (Giggy is joined by Puffy, a rescue Pomeranian who also suffers from hair loss), the chill thaws considerably. “Let’s have some lunch,” Vanderpump crows to the group, which includes husband Ken Todd, a compact car of a man in cashmere, daughter Pandora, 31, a publicist, and two other well-turned-out Brits. “I’m the eating housewife!” Everyone laughs politely, the way you might if the queen made a joke.

For the past eight years, Lisa Vanderpump has served as something of a pop culture anomaly: In a franchise that rewards immaturity and instability, she peddles neither. While other Real Housewives have found themselves wading through divorce, substance abuse, even jail time—some going as far blaming a “Housewife curse”—Vanderpump, 57, has steadily if not smugly thrived. Like a fine Vanderpump Rosé, she only gets better with age.

In person, Lisa Vanderpump looks like a flattering caricature of Lisa Vanderpump. Her hair, which I can best describe as Kate Middleton-esque, perfectly complements her pert nose, which nicely offsets her heavily-lashed eyes. (“Individuals,” she tells me. “I can sleep in them and you just take your makeup off around them. Kyle Richards taught me that trick.”) Her purse matches her blouse which matches Giggy’s jacket. The whole thing looks exhausting, but Vanderpump insists she can pull herself together in ten minutes flat. “Some of the girls take a glam squad with them when we go on trips. I don’t do that,” she says. “I have to be made up and put together every day for the restaurants, so it wouldn’t make sense for me.”

It’s a velvet-covered dart, sure, but the point is this: Unlike other reality stars, even her co-stars, Vanderpump has more important stuff to do than get ready all day. A fundamental part of the Lisa Vanderpump brand, in fact, is that she never wanted to be a “reality TV star” in the first place. “They asked me twice to audition and I said, ‘Not for me, thanks,” she says. It was only after her friend Jennifer Stallone—”Sly Stallone’s wife,” she notes—made her watch The Real Housewives of New York that she reconsidered. Her friend, news anchor Robert Kovacik, drove her to the audition.

PHOTO: Bravo

Lisa Vanderpump on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

“I didn’t realize how life changing it would be. I don’t think anybody did,” she says over an omelet (see: Housewife, Eating). “I never intended to make my career from it, but I was smart, and I used the show to draw attention to my businesses.”

No kidding. The restaurateur’s résumé now boasts a reported 26 eateries (including PUMP and SUR, which stands for “Sexy Unique Restaurant”), a spinoff series, Vanderpump Rules, now in its sixth season, a canine rescue center, a documentary about the Chinese dog meat trade, and a gig as Editor-in-Chief of Beverly Hills magazine. Her net worth is reported at $65 million, which arguably makes her the most powerful Housewife of them all.

“When people say, ‘The Housewives belittle women,’ I disagree,” she says. “Look what Kyle Richards is doing right now. She’s producing her own TV show. Look at what Erika [Jayne]’s doing. She’s 45 or 46 years old and doing what she wants to. Look at me, going to congress and speaking to the United Nations and building a brand. I think that’s empowering for women.”

But with great visibility comes great responsibility, something Vanderpump, a fierce advocate for LBGTQ rights, understands. “I am a heterosexual woman who can be a conduit to people who might not listen otherwise. I take that very seriously,” she says. “Even the word ‘tolerance.’ I’ve always said, ‘I don’t understand this word.’ We’re going to ‘tolerate’ someone because they’re gay? Fuck off. That’s not what life’s about. It’s about embracing. It’s about understanding.”

When I ask about President Trump, whom she’s never publicly condoned or condemned, she grows serious. “I can’t vote, so I’ve never really had to make a statement, but there are aspects of both parties I do totally understand and would vote for,” she says diplomatically. “I think a lot of people know where my allegiance lies, and what I believe in.”

Regarding the #MeToo movement—and the recent sartorial demonstration at the Golden Globes—she is less opaque. “I didn’t really agree with the need for everybody to wear black to show solidarity. For me, there’s got to be a little bit of a divide, an ability to say, ‘OK, this is about entertainment. Let’s drop it and enjoy the moment,'” she says. “I think the one good thing that’s really going to come out of this is that women aren’t going to be as afraid to speak up. Have I been sexually harassed? Of course. I think most women have at some point. It’s just to what degree. I think we’ve got to judge each [accused person] individually.”

Lisa Vanderpump on Watch What Happens Live

It’s one of those admissions that feels personal at the moment, but when you go back to review the tape, you realize almost nothing has been revealed. And that’s another thing about the Lisa Vanderpump brand: It’s careful. Vanderpump is warm, but with boundaries. Endearing, but rarely vulnerable. She is, in so many ways, unimpeachable. And if her on-screen persona is to be believed, few get much closer. There’s Ken, of course, whom she married 35 years ago after a six-week-long courtship, their two children, Max and Pandora, and a fairytale-like coterie of pets, which includes a swan named Panky. And, for now, she and Kyle Richards, with whom she’s had a notoriously rocky relationship, have reached an accord. “There’s a very authentic friendship there,” she says. “I don’t have a sister, but she’s someone who’s so close to me. If she’s hurting, I’m hurting.”

After eight seasons on the show together, the veterans seem to have established a code of conduct. “I’m sensitive to the other women. If there’s something that isn’t for public consumption, I’ll think to myself, ‘This isn’t for now.’ Kyle’s the same as well,” she says. So what constitutes a breach? “The year that Brandi [Glanville] exposed Adrienne [Malouf’s surrogate pregnancy] was devastating to her,” she says. “It’s not something any of us would have done.” It’s firm, but vague. It’s also the end of that topic.

With our plates cleared—and an appointment with the New York Times waiting uptown—Vanderpump and her team begin to mobilize. A driver is alerted. Pandora drains her white wine. Ken helps Giggy and Puffy into their outerwear. I’m not ready to leave. Maybe it’s the hairless dog in the jester costume still nibbling hand-torn bits of chicken, the midday Sancerre, or Vanderpump’s walnut-size diamond directing sunlight into my eyes, but I feel like I’ve entered a more-decadent, colorful, fragrant, downright reasonable realm. I tell her as much, and she doesn’t seem surprised. “It’s my job to do that,” she says. “People feel more comfortable when everything about their ambiance is just right. And no one does it better than I do. I know if the music’s at the right volume. I know if the lighting is right. I know—and maybe other people wouldn’t notice—but when it’s right, people feel better.”

She’s talking about her restaurants of course, but it’s as close to a brand ethos as you’ll get. “Make your environment as beautiful as you can because you’ll feel so much better,” she says. “I want to feel that I’m immersed in things of beauty. Authenticity and beauty combined make for a fabulous combination.” After all, the rest is just unfortunate weather…or bad lighting. “I liken it to this: You know when you’re in a beautiful bar and then you get in the elevator and it’s that bright light and you’re like, ‘Ugh’? It’s a culture shock. I don’t ever want to feel like that.” And so she never will.



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