As always, fun, excitement and gossip permeate the rarified air of Beverly Hills. Lisa Vanderpump has been tapped to throw out a first pitch at Dodger Stadium, while Kyle buys $75,000 sunglasses for her store. Unfortunately, real life always has a way of rearing its ugly head. Kyle wonders how to deal with her troubled sister Kim, currently in rehab, and Eileen suffers a loss in her family. In the midst of her Lyme disease struggle, Yolanda shows up for Lisa Rinna's birthday dinner, but her appearance draws mixed reactions.
The glittering ladies of Bravo Media’s The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills are back for season seven on Tuesday, December 6 at 9:00pm ET/PT with extravagant trips, outlandish fun and unimaginable indiscretions as Erika Girardi, Lisa Vanderpump, Kyle Richards, Lisa Rinna, and Eileen Davidson are joined by new housewife Dorit Kemsley and friend Eden Sassoon.
Lisa Vanderpump’s friend Dorit is the glamorous and charming wife of Paul “PK” Kemsley, a wealthy English businessman turned high powered talent manager representing the likes of '80s icon Boy George and soccer superstar Pelé. A mother of two young children, Dorit balances the demands of overseeing her husband’s company while parenting alongside her many nannies.
Eden Sassoon, a friend of Lisa Rinna and the daughter of late style icon Vidal Sassoon, is expanding her own salon and Pilates business in an effort to continue her father’s legacy. Having overcome a battle with alcoholism, the free-spirited and outspoken Eden is committed to having fun and looking for love when she is not fulfilling her parenting duties as a single mother.
Erika is excited when Lisa Rinna introduces her friend, famous actress Denise Richards, to the group. Lisa Vanderpump struggles to come to terms with her grief after a personal tragedy. Qiwan.cc At Kyle's pool party, Dorit is concerned that Teddi will twist information about her family's dog and use it against her.
Criminal lawyer Cleaver Greene defends the indefensible - from bigamists to cannibals and everything in between. He is champion of the lost cause, both in the court room and in the bedroom.
Ancient Worlds is about people and places, politics and economics, art and war, trade and technology, but above all it’s the story of the painful birth and difficult growth of a radical idea first tried and tested some six thousand years ago, and which we are still struggling with today; civilisation. Civilisation has not come easily; it’s something we’ve had to fight hard to achieve, and even harder to maintain, and the greatest threats to it have come from our own talents for destruction. But when we’ve managed to get it right, the benefits have been enormous.
When we talk about the ancient world we tend to think of rare and exotic artefacts or the monumental remains of epic architecture; but these are just the empty shells that got left behind when the tide of history turned! The living creatures, the civilisations, that once inhabited these shells were rarely if ever static or stately; they were dynamic, chaotic, and always threatening to spin out of control, because civilisation is based on an improbable idea; that strangers can live and work together in dense urban settings, forging new allegiances that replace the natural ties of family, clan or tribe. It’s an idea we’re still coming to terms with today, but one of the best ways to understand the challenges that are involved is to look at how our ancestors tackled them the first time around.
From ancient Iraq to Imperial Rome, Ancient Worlds examines how our ancestors struggled with the levers of religion and politics, art and culture, war and diplomacy, technology and trade in order to keep the complex machinery of their civilisations turning over. Their insights and blind-spots, their breakthroughs and dead ends, their triumphs and disasters are the milestones on the long and winding road that leads directly from their ancient to our modern world.