Miami real estate mogul Todd Nepola ex-husband of Real Housewives of Miami star Alexia Nepola—is suing Bravo, NBCUniversal, and Purveyors of Pop Productions for $11 million, accusing them of defamation and unauthorized use of his name and likeness.

Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida on October 7, 2025, the verified complaint alleges that the producers of RHOM intentionally distorted and manipulated reality to falsely portray Nepola as being in financial distress—despite his status as a well-established multimillionaire real estate investor.
“Mr. Nepola wanted to be Alexia’s husband, not her storyline,” the complaint states bluntly. “Enough is enough.”
According to the lawsuit, Todd Nepola never agreed to be part of the Bravo circus—and certainly didn’t sign up for character assassination.
His legal team, led by Scott J. Weiselberg of Kopelowitz Ostrow Ferguson Weiselberg Gilbert, claims the show’s producers crossed an ethical (and legal) line:
“Bravo and its producers fabricated and amplified false storylines suggesting he was facing financial hardship.”
All this, they allege, was done without Nepola’s consent, and with no concern for the reputational damage it might cause. His name and image were reportedly used repeatedly throughout RHOM Seasons 6 and 7, in ways he never authorized—and in contexts that were, according to the suit, “knowingly false.”

Nepola is seeking $10 million for defamation and $1 million for unauthorized use of name and likeness. But he’s also going further—demanding injunctive relief to block Bravo and NBCUniversal from continuing to profit off his image, storyline, or any future rebroadcasts involving him.
The lawsuit places Nepola’s claims within the growing movement dubbed the “Reality Reckoning”—a groundswell of criticism from former reality TV cast and crew members who are exposing toxic production practices, coercive contracts, and the mental health toll of life on camera.
While fans love the drama, more and more insiders are saying the cost behind the scenes is too high.
This lawsuit, the complaint argues, is not just about Nepola—it’s about holding producers accountable for the damage caused when “reality” is anything but:
“This conduct is part of a larger pattern of exploitative production practices within the reality television industry.”
Bravo has yet to publicly respond to the suit, but the timing couldn’t be worse for the network, which is already facing increasing scrutiny over how it handles cast members’ mental health, compensation, and consent.
If Nepola’s lawsuit gains traction—or even just media heat—it could put Real Housewives of Miami and its network under a microscope just as another season gets underway.
In the meantime, one thing is clear:
The real drama is playing out in federal court—and this time, the cameras aren’t in control.