Angel Massie didn’t just host a cast trip on The Real Housewives of Potomac. According to NBCUniversal, she owned it.

What played out on screen as a chaotic Colorado getaway is now being reframed by production as a trip that was largely in Angel’s hands from the start. And that includes the lodging situation that caught several of her castmates completely off guard.
Potomac has long been considered an underrated gem in the Housewives franchise. It may not have the flash of Beverly Hills or the scale of Atlanta, but it consistently delivers when it comes to cast dynamics and unpredictable moments.
“Obviously, Potomac, [Maryland,] is not a huge city. It’s not a metropolis. It’s a very well-to-do suburb,” said Joshua Brown, vice president of unscripted production at NBCUniversal told The Hollywood Reporter. “We like to, as people have certain expectations, surprise them with how entertaining and fun the show is. … It’s hard to compare when you just say the words Potomac versus New York or Atlanta. Those are gigantic cities, and we were sneaking up.”
This time, the surprise wasn’t just for viewers.
When Angel invited the women to her award-winning Colorado home, expectations were clear among the group. Or at least they thought they were.
“I know that the women, or at least some of the women, genuinely thought they were going to all be staying at Angel’s house going into the trip,” Brown said. “They were genuinely surprised.”

Instead of staying together, most of the cast was placed in a separate property located about an hour away. Only Tia and Keiarna stayed at Angel’s home. For a franchise where cast trips are typically built around shared spaces and forced proximity, the split setup immediately shifted the tone.
Then came the added chaos. The guest home’s running water stopped working. The hour-long commute to meet up with Angel became a daily frustration. What was supposed to feel like a luxury escape started to feel disjointed.
The bigger question quickly became: who was actually responsible for how the trip unfolded?
Brown declined to comment on specific payment details but made it clear that when a Housewife is labeled the host, expectations come with it.
“Every year, not just on Potomac but Housewives in general, if someone is hosting the trip and ‘owning’ the trip, it’s really on them to take the lead in planning. We love when our cast members take ownership of a trip and really put their heart into it,” he explained. “Angel is from the area. She lives there. She has a house there. I know the team really looked to her to help guide, in terms of activities and lodging. She really took the lead on this trip, very much so particularly because she and her husband own a luxury travel company as well. The team really did organically rely on them for taking the lead.”
That last detail adds another layer. Angel and her husband own a luxury travel company, which makes production’s reliance on her expertise feel intentional rather than incidental.
Former cast member Monique echoed the sentiment about hosting responsibility.
“While the network covers certain expenses, it is our job as a host to be in line with production every step of the way,” Monique said in the interview clip while the cast was critiquing Angel’s accommodations. “I gave a list of activities, because why? My name’s on it,” she adding.
Brown stops short of criticizing Angel directly. But by emphasizing that the host is expected to “take the lead in planning” and confirming the cast believed they were staying at her home, the network’s position is clear.
In Housewives terms, if you own the trip, you own what happens on it.