Zohran Mamdani was right: Snow storm in New York City or rains in Dubai is perfect for reality TV binge

With rain around corner, we come up with round-up of guilty pleasures made for the weather

Last updated:
4 MIN READ
KUWK, Dubai Bling, Love Island and Fabulous Lives Of Bollywood Wives make the cut
KUWK, Dubai Bling, Love Island and Fabulous Lives Of Bollywood Wives make the cut

Dubai: There’s something about bad weather that puts you in the mood for questionable TV content! Grey skies, pounding rain, or sudden hailstorms have a way of slowing life down and nudging people indoors, where comfort food, screens, and low-stakes entertainment reign supreme. 

It’s a sentiment New York mayor Zohran Mamdani recently captured perfectly in a conversation with The Weather Channel, when he joked that gloomy days are the “perfect time to watch bad reality TV at home with family.”

While his comment was rooted in New York’s cold winter moods, the same logic applies much closer to home this week in the UAE.

The country has experienced a surprising bout of winter weather, with hailstorms reported in parts of Ras Al Khaimah and rainfall sweeping across several regions. For residents used to blue skies and steady warmth, the sudden shift has felt dramatic. 

In fact, the UAE recorded its lowest temperature of the day this morning at a striking 4.7°C on Jais Mountain in Ras Al Khaimah at 6:30am local time. 

Which brings us back to Mamdani’s quote. When the weather traps you indoors, whether in a Brooklyn apartment or a villa in Dubai, there’s something comforting about surrendering to television. With that in mind, here’s a no-particular-order list of “so-bad-it’s-good” reality shows that feel especially appropriate when you’re cooped up at home.

The Real Housewives of Dubai

Real Housewives of Dubai (OSN)

This one is pure personality clashes wrapped in designer labels. You’ve got Caroline Stanbury doing what she does best, being effortlessly icy and posh alongside Chanel Ayan, who steals scenes with her one-liners, fashion, and chaotic honesty. The arguments are dramatic, the accents are international, and half the fun is watching people argue over things that don’t actually matter.

“Selling Sunset”: This Netflix gem revolves around the real estate agents at a West Hollywood brokerage firm that deals in swanky properties across Los Angeles. Come for the luxe listings, stay for the petty drama: Last season’s story lines included a fallout between two fan-favourite agents and Chrishell Stause’s unexpected divorce from “This Is Us” star Justin Hartley. (Streaming on Netflix)

Selling Sunset (Netflix)

Yes, it’s technically about real estate, but really it’s about office politics in heels. Chrishell Stause, and the rest of the Oppenheim Group turn open houses into battlegrounds. Impossibly glamorous real estate agents, designer outfits, and office feuds turn multimillion-dollar homes into soap operas..: i

‘The Kardashians’: If you missed seeing the antics of the first family of reality TV then here’s your lucky chance. Kris, Kourtney, Kim, Khloé, Kendall and Kylie are back to tell their stories of love and life in the spotlight, from the pressures of running billion-dollar businesses to the joys of playtime and school drop-offs.

Keeping Up with the Kardashians (Disney+)

The original blueprint for modern reality TV indulgence. It’s familiar, oddly soothing, and endlessly rewatchable. You don’t even need to follow the storyline; you already know the family dynamics by heart.

And life isn't quite Dubai Bling either, the reality show---not all the drama, yachts; most of us are just struggling at the metro station.

Dubai Bling (Netflix)

Equal parts spectacle and satire, Dubai Bling thrives on lavish parties, dramatic fallouts. Safa Siddiqui’s outfits alone could carry an episode, while Ebraheem Al Samadi brings unpredictable energy that turns small disagreements into full-blown showdowns. Overall the perfect background drama when you’re stuck indoors.

JaNa Craig attends the "Love Island USA: The Reunion" photo call at Chelsea Studios on August 14, 2024 in New York City.

Love Island (UK, US, Australia — take your pick - Netflix)

Sun, strategic romance and questionable decisions. Whether it’s iconic contestants like Ekin-Su, Maura Higgins, or Molly-Mae, the formula never changes and that’s the point. It’s light, dramatic, and perfect for zoning out while pretending you’re somewhere sunnier.

Bollywood Wives

Fabulous Lives of Bollywood Wives (Netflix)

The ultimate comfort-watch mess. Maheep Kapoor’s unfiltered mouth, Neelam Kothari’s return to the spotlight, and Seema Sajdeh’s very public divorce arc make this feel more personal than expected. Add Karan Johar popping in to stir the pot, and it’s basically rich aunty drama with Mumbai glamour.

Thais Ramone, Kalani Faagata, Georgi Rusev, Elise Benson, Josh Weinstein, Darcey Silva, Rob Warne, Ed Brown, Jenny Slatten, Jamal Menzies, Kolini Faagata, Emily Bieberly, Kobe Blaise, Stacey Silva, and Florian Sukaj attend TLC's 90 Day Fiancé Holiday Event at Tavern On The Green on December 09, 2025 in New York City.

90 Day Fiancé (OSN)

This show is chaotic in a very specific way. Long-distance couples, culture shocks, awkward family dinners, and arguments that escalate way too fast. Big personalities like Big Ed, Angela Deem, and Danielle & Mohamed turned this franchise into must-watch mess. You’ll cringe, complain, and still hit “next episode.”

Indian Matchmaking

Indian Matchmaking (Netflix)

It pretends to be about love, but it’s really about families, expectations, and very specific dealbreakers. Sima Taparia became a cultural figure overnight. Equal parts uncomfortable and addictive.

Layla Taylor, Miranda McWhorter, Jessi Ngatikaura, Mikayla Matthews, Mayci Neeley, Taylor Frankie Paul, Jennifer Affleck, Whitney Leavitt and Demi Engemann attend the Los Angeles Premiere and FYC Event of Hulu's "The Secret Lives Of Mormon Wives" Season 2 at Paramount Studios on May 09, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives (Hulu/Disney+)

A newer entry into the “so-bad-it’s-good” family, blending faith, scandal, and reality-TV shenanigans into a surprisingly compelling watch that thrives on shock value and conversation-starting moments.

For many, the weather has been a reminder that even in desert climates, nature enjoys the occasional plot twist like an actual reality TV 

As the UAE continues to experience fluctuating weather from mountain chills to scattered rainfall, Mamdani’s offhand comment feels unexpectedly universal. Whether it’s snowstorms in New York or hail in Ras Al Khaimah, sometimes the smartest idea is to stay in, press play, and embrace television that doesn’t ask too much, except maybe one more episode.

Article contributed by Saarangi Aji

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