Airing to more than 94 million subscribers in the United States alone, Bravo has made a name for itself as a successful cable network. With popular programs such as The Real Housewives and Top Chef, Bravo has attracted a predominantly female, upscale audience that has garnered much media attention. Using Bravo as a case study in popular culture, this article utilizes feminist political economy to explore how Bravo connects with-and commodifies-its female audience. In so doing, it is argued that through Bravo's Affluencer campaign and online initiatives, as well as through Women@NBCU, Bravo and parent company NBC-Comcast turn the audience into a product unto itself, and invite females to participate in their own commodification and the commodification of others.In 2010, Bravo's The Real Housewives was the seventh most searched TV franchise on the Internet search engine, Google (Google Trends, as cited in Bravo Media, 2011a). While audiences, fans, and presumably critics tapped away at The Real Housewives online, the network was simultaneously experiencing astonishing growth and success on-screen. As an integral component of Bravo's programming lineup, The Real Housewives-alongside other successful series such as Top Chef , Million Dollar Listing, Shahs of Sunset, Don't Be Tardy for the Wedding, and Vanderpump Rules-have made Bravo a formidable force in the cable arena. Reaching more than 94 million subscribers in the United States alone (Bravo Media, 2013a), Bravo specializes in original programming and reality fare, and has made a name for itself with its upscale, educated audience (e.g., Copple Smith, 2012).But beyond the network's reach, popularity, and audience makeup, part of what makes Bravo so noteworthy is its success in attracting audiences and getting them involved in the process. As Walsh (2012) suggests, "Bravo has proven itself Banking on Females to be a leader in both cultivating and growing an engaged audience through savvy social-media strategies, promoting interactivity between audience and talent, and developing multi-platform brand extensions that actually make good on the promise of transmedia" (para. 4). As a media outlet that prides itself on being innovative and technologically savvy, this article interrogates two key ways in which Bravo succeeds in commodifying its predominantly female audience (Cox & Proffitt, 2012): by increasing audience's engagement and interaction online, and in the development of Women@NBCU. In both of these ways, Bravo and parent company, NBC Universal, strategically imbricate women in their own consumption patterns and commodification. And while Bravo's use of social media, audience analysis, and original programming has brought the network much attention in mainstream press, female-oriented programming on Bravo has also emerged as a hot topic of debate in the academic realm (e.g.its role in the changing patterns of television ownership and control (e.g., Chris, 2006). But in all of this, a valuable question that has been overlooked by media and communication schola...