Z Group
DifferentiationNovember 24, 20254 min read

Host of American Dream TV in Miami: what changes for the Z Group practice

In November 2025, Fernanda Zomignani debuted as host of the Miami segment of American Dream TV. The show, its distribution, and why the editorial format matters to how the market is narrated.

By Fernanda Zomignani

Host of American Dream TV in Miami: what changes for the Z Group practice

In November 2025, Fernanda Zomignani debuted as host of the Miami segment of American Dream TV, a television and streaming program distributed via Roku, Amazon Prime, Apple TV, and Samsung TV Plus. The segment runs forty-five minutes per episode, publishes monthly, and covers the Miami luxury real estate market in editorial format.

For Z Group, the debut signals more than media exposure. It is a natural extension of the work the practice has been doing for twenty-five years, in a format that reaches a different audience than the traditional brokerage circuit reaches. This essay covers that format, and why it matters.

What American Dream TV is

American Dream TV is a real estate editorial platform founded in 2017, with coverage in more than one hundred U.S. markets. Each city has its own local host, operating as the editorial authority of the market covered. The hosts are not platform employees, they are established realtors whose local practice sustains the credibility of the content.

Distribution is by streaming, with presence on the four major U.S. residential streaming providers: Roku, Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, and Samsung TV Plus. Each provider has a distinct audience. Roku concentrates more domestic American audience. Amazon Prime has international distribution. Apple TV concentrates demographically on a younger and more economically qualified segment. Samsung TV Plus, the most recent of the list, operates as a free-with-ads layer on the Samsung device.

The editorial format differs from typical real estate programming. There is no focus on entertainment-style "house tours." The focus is the story of the property, the neighborhood, and the buyer's decision. Episodes can cover a single building, a single neighborhood, or a market thesis.

The first episode

The premiere episode, recorded in October 2025 and published in November, covers three themes: the broader thesis of the Miami market in 2025, the Nobu/Foster operation in Brickell (with a visit to the sales gallery), and a market-read analysis on the 2026-2030 supply pipeline.

A forty-second excerpt of the episode circulates as a YouTube Short:

Watch the excerpt on YouTube

The full episode is available on the American Dream TV platform across all the streamers listed.

Why the format matters

The Miami luxury real estate market operates primarily through three information channels: the private brokerage circuit (release sheets, private presentations), the specialized press (The Real Deal, Bisnow, Florida YIMBY), and developer direct marketing. Each channel serves a specific function, but none covers the market story in a sustained way.

The editorial video format, distributed via streaming, occupies a fourth channel. It is not direct marketing (the content is editorial, not commercial), it is not specialized journalism (the depth is of an operator, not a reporter), and it is not the private brokerage circuit (distribution is public). It is the closest channel to what cities like London or New York have in quality editorial real estate magazines, Country Life, The Modern House, the Sotheby's International Real Estate Magazine, but in video format, distributed across the four most-reached streaming providers in the American market.

For Z Group, this channel serves three specific functions.

First, it reaches potential buyers before the brokerage circuit. The client who watches an episode at home, on a Wednesday evening, is in a moment of editorial exposure, not commercial. The decision to start a conversation with the realtor happens next, in a different pattern from the lead generated by direct marketing.

Second, it documents the practice's accumulated knowledge. Z Group has operated for twenty-five years in Miami, and most of that knowledge (which developer delivers on time, which hotel operation ages well, which neighborhood absorbs faster) lives internally. The editorial video format is a way of articulating that knowledge publicly, with the depth a social-media post does not allow.

Third, it raises the quality of the public discussion about the market. Much of the public coverage of the Miami luxury real estate market simplifies toward clickbait, hype, or pure advertising. An editorial format with operator depth, distributed through qualified channels, contributes to the potential buyer arriving at the market with a sharper reading.

Continuity with the Journal

The television segment runs in parallel with this written journal. The video format covers themes that benefit from the visual (buildings, neighborhoods, floor plans, views). The written format covers themes that benefit from structural detail (contracts, laws, fiscal structures, return math).

Together they form the Z Group editorial set: monthly video and monthly text, covering the same market, in two formats that complement each other. The potential buyer can enter through the video and deepen through the text, or vice versa.

The ADTV debut is the beginning of this two-channel format. The next twelve months will define the combined publication cadence that makes sense. Welcome home.

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