Entertainment

Brandi Glanville Says ‘Housewives’ Cast Would Be Exposed by AI, Fuels Speculation

Brandi Glanville, known for her time on The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and her podcast Brandi Glanville Unfiltered, is promoting the new people-search platform Sus.ai alongside co-host James Maas. The service claims it can quickly generate instant people checks, including criminal records, identity verification, social media scans, and other public-data results in under 30 seconds. Glanville and Maas have been using the launch to joke that a tool like this would cause major problems for the Real Housewives franchise, where secrets, accusations, and confrontations are a central part of the show’s appeal.

In a social media post circulating online, the pair leaned into the humor of the platform, imagining how Sus.ai “receipts” could change the way Bravo’s most dramatic cast members interact. Glanville, who spent years inside the RHOBH spotlight, and Maas, who regularly breaks down reality-TV feuds on their podcast, framed the idea as the ultimate reality-check tool. Their commentary suggested that if cast members had easy access to detailed background information on one another, many of the franchise’s most explosive storylines might have unfolded very differently.

Sus.ai says it pulls from more than 600 million court records, registries in all 50 states, and over 120 social networks to build a profile in seconds. The platform claims it can reveal criminal and sex-offender status, verify identity, and uncover hidden social media accounts or other warning signs. According to the company, the service is designed for everyday users rather than investigators, with reports that are easy to read and share. The first week costs $0.95 with a credit card, and results are said to return in roughly 30 seconds.

The timing of Glanville’s promotion also comes shortly after she spoke publicly about the financial fallout from her divorce from ex-husband Eddie Cibrian. On a recent episode of her podcast, Glanville said she spent more than $10,000 in legal fees while trying to regain access to her own retirement savings after the marriage ended. She said the dispute centered on her 401K and claimed she had to hire an attorney because the process became difficult during the divorce.

Glanville divorced Cibrian in 2010 after eight years of marriage. On the podcast, she said the legal fight lasted nearly a year and became much more expensive than she expected. She also hinted that more legal issues could still be ahead, though she did not give specifics. Her comments were presented as a warning to women to stay informed about their finances, especially in relationships where money and shared assets can become complicated.

Drawing a direct line back to The Real Housewives world, Glanville said many cast members are going through divorces and may not fully understand their finances. Her message was blunt: women should know where the money is and stay prepared. For fans, the combination of Glanville’s personal history, her reality-TV reputation, and Sus.ai’s “receipts” pitch makes for a high-drama crossover built for online attention.

Harish Yadav

Editor at PPC Herald, handles news and article writing and proofreading.

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