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The bench gets deeper.
The founding cast intact, plus three new voices — the first real test of whether a bigger roster keeps the office friction sharp.
A rhythm worth tracking.
Season 2 keeps the entire founding cast and adds to it: Romain Bonnet and Davina Potratz move from recurring to main status, and interior designer Amanza Smith joins the roster outright. It's the first time the show widens its ensemble rather than simply returning it, and the larger group raises the stakes on an already crowded office. Eight episodes prove the format scales past its original seven.
The #04 slot.
Slot #04 of 6 in the Selling Sunset Editor's Canon. Season 2 is the first season to grow the ensemble rather than just return it. Romain Bonnet and Davina Potratz move up from recurring status, and interior designer Amanza Smith joins outright, giving the brokerage a bigger bench without losing anyone from the founding cast. That's a meaningful test for a format built on close quarters, and the season passes it — the office dynamics stay just as sharp with three more people in the room. It's a clean, confident expansion, but it's also mostly a continuation of what Season 1 already built rather than a reinvention, which keeps it a strong A rather than S tier.