Shahs of Sunset is an American reality television series that airs on Bravo. The series debuted on March 11, 2012. The series follows a group of Iranian American friends living in Beverly Hills (and the greater area known as "Tehrangeles"), who are trying to juggle their active social lives and up-and-coming careers while balancing the demands of their families and traditions. It is the second American reality television show about Iranians after E!'s Love Is in the Heir in 2004.
Work on the fourth season was underway when Ryan Seacrest Productions (RSP) and Bravo denied the show's post-production crew a union contract. The crew went on strike with the support of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. Bravo fired the crew and the fourth season had been delayed. Eventually, RSP "ratified a union agreement, ending the month-long strike." The fourth season of Shahs of Sunset premiered on March 2, 2015. In June 2015, the show was renewed for a fifth season.
Current Shahs
Reza Farahan
Born in Tehran, Iran in 1973, raised in Beverly Hills, Farahan is a real estate agent in Los Angeles. Married to Adam. He is openly gay and often struggles with gossip and prejudice regarding his sexuality. He wanted to participate in the show after seeing news reports of the suicides of teenagers who were bullied because they were gay, and he wanted to help by portraying a positive image of both gay people and Middle Easterners. Reza has been in a relationship with Adam Neely, a former fashion model, who works for Ryan Murphy, in post production, on his various shows. They have been involved since 2010, and their engagement was featured in the third season finale. In season four, Adam and Reza have complications in their relationship and call off the wedding after tumultuous issues arise inside their group of friends following a fake rumor of the drunk MJ carrying the gay couple's love child. Reza and the gang continue to go on, what would be Reza's and Adam's wedding trip, to Thailand. His father is Jewish, and his mother is Muslim. In an episode he reveals his father converted to Islam to marry his mother. When his parents' marriage ended in divorce, his father moved back to New York to be with his Jewish family; in an episode it's revealed that Farahan's paternal grandmother pressured his father and rejected Reza because he was not Jewish. He works with MJ at Keller Williams Realty.
Golnesa "GG" Gharachedaghi
Gharachedaghi is an entrepreneuse who begins the show unemployed and financially dependent on her father. She comes from a wealthy, nominally Muslim family. She lunches with her friends during the day and socializes at night. She has eight tattoos, including one on the inside of her lip. With a fiery, combative personality, she claims to have been kicked out of a number of schools while growing up due to fighting. Growing up she attended Jewish day care, Catholic preschool and Loyola Marymount University. Her father is Mahmoud Gharachedaghi, architect and principal at GA Architecture and Planning, who appears on the show starting in season one. Over the second season, she launches "GG's Extensions", a brand of hair extensions, with her sister Leila. In December 2012 she told Andy Cohen that she was engaged to Omid Kalantari, who has a recurring role in season 2. The two broke off their engagement the following month. She has compared the show's cast's effect on the entertainment industry to the struggles of civil rights icon Rosa Parks.
Asa Soltan Rahmati
Rahmati is an entrepreneuse and artist from Venice, California artist. Her paintings were published in the art book Imagining Ourselves, published by the International Museum of Women in San Francisco. Over the second season she developed and launched "Diamond Water", a bottled water which is alkaline water put in contact with diamonds before being bottled. She is from a Persian family; her parents and her brother, Arta, all appear on the show. Soltan Rahmati has been together with Jermaine Jackson Jr, the eldest child of Jermaine Jackson, since 2010 and he has appeared in the second season. She graduated from UCLA with a double major in Psychology and Philosophy. She claims her family left Iran as political refugees when she was as a young girl; she grew up in Europe before moving to Los Angeles as a teenager. She lives in Venice; previously with entrepreneur Shaahin Cheyene.
Mike Shouhed
Shouhed is real estate agent in Los Angeles. He is a graduate of UCLA. After losing some money in the Las Vegas commercial real estate market, he has moved back home to rebuild. He and his family are Persian Jews. Two of his brothers are dentists. In January 2013, Shouhed announced he was going to be featured in a photo shoot for Playgirl. On June 4, 2014, he proposed to Jessica Parido while skydiving; the proposal was featured on the show. The two were married on March 29, 2015, at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. On November 20, 2015, Jessica Parido filed for divorce from Shouhed, stating: “Barely six months after our wedding, I found endless texts with different girls that he would meet up with and have sex with. There were graphic text messages about sex and his penis size. It was disgusting." Shouhed's representative spoke out about the divorce, denying that he had repeatedly cheated on Jessica: "Two years ago, before they were married, Mike made a terrible mistake and cheated on Jessica," his rep told Us at the time. "She recently discovered a text message and he came completely clean to her. He feels so terrible. Jessica is the most amazing woman in the world. He's begged for her back on hands and knees. He's offered his heartfelt apology to her. He loves Jessica and always will."
Mercedes "MJ" Javid
Javid is a real estate agent living in the Hollywood Hills. She was born in 1972. With a voluptuous figure, MJ grew up conscious of her weight and was put on diet pills by a physician at age 14 in order to try to lose extra pounds, though she later quit them. MJ and her mother have a very difficult relationship and argue frequently on the show. MJ and her father however, are very close. She works with Reza at Keller Williams Realty. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature from California State University, Northridge in 2002. During the Season 2 reunion, Javid admitted she is a felon, having been convicted of bank fraud in 1994.
Shervin Roohparvar
New addition to the Shahs of Sunset. Shervin is a bachelor looking for the right lady. But has been unsuccessful in his search.
Former Shahs
Sammy Younai
Younai is a residential developer in Beverly Hills specializing in building multi-million dollar homes. Sammy comes from a Persian Jewish family. His family left Iran and moved to Florida when he was a young child, later moving to Beverly Hills when Sammy was a teenager. During Season 1 he works with celebrity developer Mohamed Hadid on his latest mansion: a 48,000-square foot, $58 million house in Bel Air called "The Crescent Palace".
Neelufar Seyed "Lilly" Ghalichi
Ghalichi is an entrepreneuse and blogger that other characters describe as a "Persian Barbie". She founded a lingerie-inspired line of swimwear known as "Swimgerie" that later merged with another swim line to become Have Faith Swimgerie. She also founded her own line of eyelashes known as Lilly Lashes. Raised in Houston, Texas, she comes from a Persian Muslim family. Her sister, Yassamin, has appeared on the show and her brother, Mohammed, is a cardiologist. She attended the McCombs School of Business at The University of Texas at Austin and Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, graduating in 2008. Ghalichi has had a decade long on-again, off-again relationship with a Houston-based lawyer named Ali; after she graduated from law school in Los Angeles they became engaged and she moved back to Texas to live with him. They later broke up due what she described as bad habits, notably cheating on her. She also struggles with her conservative family due to her decision to leave law and pursue a career in fashion and beauty. She was the subject of controversy after joking during an episode that HIV/AIDS can be spread from a used pair of bikini bottoms and issued an apology. Ghalichi's involvement with the show was discontinued at the end of season three, having separated herself from the cast in season 3.
Asifa Mirza
Casting Timeline
Shahs | Seasons | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
Current main shahs | |||||
Reza Farahan | Main | ||||
Golnesa Gharachedaghi | Main | ||||
Asa Soltan Rahmati | Main | ||||
Mike Shouhed | Main | ||||
Mercedeh Javid | Main | ||||
Shervin Roohparvar | Friend | Main | |||
Former main shahs | |||||
Sammy Younai | Main | Friend | Guest | ||
Lilly Ghalichi | Main | ||||
Asifa Mirza | Main | Friend | |||
Friends of the shahs | |||||
Leila Gharachedaghi | Friend | ||||
Anita Gohari | Friend | Guest | |||
Omid Kalantari | Friend | ||||
Jessica Parido | Friend | ||||
Sasha Salehi | Friend | ||||
Bobby Panahi | Friend | Guest |
Episodes
Main article: List of Shahs of Sunset episodesSeason | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Season premiere | Season finale | |||
1 | 6 | March 11, 2012 (2012-03-11) | April 15, 2012 (2012-04-15) | |
2 | 13 | December 2, 2012 (2012-12-02) | February 10, 2013 (2013-02-10) | |
3 | 16 | November 5, 2013 (2013-11-05) | February 25, 2014 (2014-02-25) | |
4 | 16 | March 2, 2015 (2015-03-02) | June 15, 2015 (2015-06-15) | |
5 | TBA | April 10, 2016 (2016-04-10) | TBA |
Reception
Community reaction
Before the show debuted, there was concern among the Persian-American diaspora that Shahs of Sunset would promote an unwelcome image at a particularly tense historical moment. Firoozeh Dumas, author of Funny in Farsi, worried that "Americans have a chance to see a slice of materialistic, shallow and downright embarrassing Iranian culture. I just want to shout, 'We are not all like that!'" Two-time Mayor of Beverly Hills, Jimmy Delshad, voiced concerns that instead of showcasing the professional class of doctors, lawyers and business executives, the show would "take us back and make us look like undesirable people." Iranian American Novelist Porochista Khakpour took issue with the cast's self-description as "Persian" rather than "Iranian", but otherwise found the show to be just another reality television show in the "been-there-done-that Kardashian-Real-Housewives-Jersey Shore mash-up" with characters that reminded her of elements in those she grew up with in the diaspora. West Hollywood's City Council passed a resolution on March 22, 2012 condemning the show. Professor Gina B. Nahai lamented that the cast was "unattractive, unsophisticated, unproductive" and "consists entirely of every negative stereotype floating around this city about the community". Author and scholar Reza Aslan felt the concerns of the Persian community was overstated, commenting "Only the most moronic viewers would watch 'Shahs of Sunset' and extract an opinion about Iranians and Iran."
In response to criticism producer Ryan Seacrest dismissed the notion the series would cast the community in a bad light, describing the show as simply "escapism" that is "meant to be entertaining and fun." The president of Bravo described the cast members as representative of what the channel deems "affluencers:" 30-something, upscale, highly educated and influential."
The members of the cast have stated that they portray a more Americanized and modern version of Persians than those depicted in such films as 2012's Argo, where Iranians are depicted in ways they felt made them "savages" or "homeless people." Mike Shouhed has commented that the show's producers sometimes add to the confusion by using Arabic music on the show; Reza Farahan has received mistaken feedback complimenting Arab American culture.
Critical reaction
The show holds a 45 out of 100 score from Metacritic. Mike Hale's review in The New York Times commented that the show's characters "are a more diverting bunch than the high school football coaches and community activists of the well-meaning, admirable but prosaic All-American Muslim on TLC", but the "one really unfortunate thing about Shahs of Sunset is the way it exploits, and will in turn amplify, a previously localized phenomenon: the longstanding stereotyping of Los Angeles's Iranian-Americans as vulgar, materialistic show-offs who don't fit in among the city's supposedly more cultured elites." Tom Conroy of Media Life Magazine mentions that the show sparks some interest due to the cultural backgrounds of the cast, "but that is nearly outweighed by their dislikability." Verne Gay of Newsday described the show as "Another insufferable nose-pressed-against-the-glass reality romp that says the rich are just like you and me -- only rich, and exceedingly, tiresomely narcissistic." Linda Stasi of the New York Post wrote: "If the goal of Bravo's newest stereotyping gang bang, Shahs of Sunset, is to make Persians in LA look like egomaniacs, soulless bores whom you wouldn't want to spend five minutes with, let alone an hour, then they've succeeded."
Labor dispute
On September 10, 2014, after receiving no response from Ryan Seacrest Productions (RSP) in reference to their pursuit of a union contract, the 16 post-production crew members of the series walked off of the job site. The Motion Picture Editors Guild (MPEG) called a strike against the show until it met the demands of its editors and assistant editors. On September 26, Bravo took control of the production away from RSP and fired the entire editorial staff. Firing employees who are engaged in "protected union activity" is illegal, which is why Bravo took control away from RSP and act as though the strikers were not employees of Bravo. In response, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (I.A.T.S.E) "filed unfair labor practice charges against Bravo Media" and issued a press release saying, "Federal law protects employees' right to organize, including their right to strike. It is a violation of the National Labor Relations Act for an employer to retaliate in any way against employees for their exercising their rights under the law." "This is no longer just a fight about whether this crew gets health and retirement benefits," MPEG President Alan Heim said, "It's an unabashed attack on the right to organize." Picketing was called off on October 10 when RSP ratified a union agreement.