Watch Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Full Video

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives" is a vile TV show. Why am I obsessed?

It’s a slippery reality show with the thirstiest cast I’ve ever seen. I hate it. And yet... I can’t stop watching it. Help!

Watch Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Full Video

Everything I know about the Mormon religion, I’ve learned from reality TV. So, in my understanding, it’s an organization full of sex-obsessed boozehounds and partiers, all with the same hairstyle, who are single-handedly keeping the soda industry alive.

If you’re someone who devours episodes of Bravo’s The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City like Lisa Barlow’s Big Gulp-sized Diet Coke, and one of the many people who spent the week enraptured by Hulu’s latest zoological series, The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, you might relate.

Being among those who are involuntarily held captive by the latest attempt to exploit a specific demographic of a community in a television freak show, I too have become suspicious that there are more secrets behind these various Mormon wives. For instance, are they all trained in hypnosis? Do they know magic?

I don’t know how to justify my evolution from feeling like I was undergoing a waking lobotomy while watching the first episode, to promising myself I wouldn’t waste another second on it, to now being fully hooked: an obsession where I’m watching every episode as quickly as possible and then diving headfirst into an endless rabbit hole of information and commentary I can find online.

Watch Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Full Video

My morbid curiosity in sampling the series immediately led to disgust. The cast's thirst for reality-TV fame was so radioactive that I couldn’t decide whether to turn off my TV or search for the nearest fallout shelter. Unable to choose, I kept watching, equally fascinated and appalled every time a character became so jittery over launching a producer-fed storyline that they’d giggle, laugh, and embarrass themselves on camera.

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No behavior made sense. There was no point to any logic. No drama felt deep enough to warrant serious exploration beyond the next AI-sounding pop music cue, which transitioned into the following scene. This was an entirely new experience for me, someone who’s clocked in more hours of so-called “trashy” or “guilty pleasure” reality series viewing than I’d like to admit: completely disorienting as entertainment.

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Forget whether MomTok survives this or not. Me?

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives follows a group of women from Salt Lake City, ranging from devout practitioners of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to lapsed followers who grew up with its strict values. More specifically, they are social media influencers who are part of a group called MomTok, which turns the public’s fascination with their lifestyle into highly popular videos and lucrative brand deals.

There’s a corner of digital celebrity culture where these women are like The Beatles—though they’re probably too young to even get the reference—so when the group was hit with a scandal, their lives suddenly escalated to TV-show-level drama.

Mormonism is known for its moral code, which members are expected to adhere to, and MomTok had often been transparent about this. So when it came to light that some members participated in swingers' parties with other Mormon couples, it was a bombshell that rocked the community and the influencer empire. Followers blasted MomTok for being hypocrites. Sponsorship deals dried up. Rifts formed between members.

The Hulu series forces both the benevolent and the morally righteous of MomTok to deal with the aftermath and attempt to (profitably) rebuild the community. So the series offers, many times in jest, the refrain: “I don’t know if MomTok will survive this.”

The tone of the series is an absolute mess. The storytelling is so incompetent that it swings back around to being, somehow, riveting.

The catalyst of the series is the Mormon swinger parties, yet the specifics of what happened scatter like branches on a highway. How every scene in every episode manages to avoid getting to the bottom of these parties’ details is beyond me.

A similar surface-level treatment was given to the MomTokker who moved to Hawaii to escape the swinger-triggered tabloid drama, only to return to Salt Lake City when people online discovered that her husband, who frequently appeared in many of her videos, had been sending sexually charged messages and photos on Tinder.

For added intrigue: she was the most outraged about the swinger scandal and its trivialization. She was also the mom behind the controversial TikTok that went viral for negative reasons when her son was battling RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus).

In the same episode, there's discussion about an eight-month-pregnant woman whose boyfriend may be potentially abusive, and another woman hesitating over whether to do a sponsored content video about a vibrator with the same seriousness.

One scene in a given episode shows the cast partying with giant cups of Mountain Dew and Diet Pepsi, as if they were at a middle school sleepover. Another features the group downing shots and chugging champagne at a male strip club.

Two women talk about undergoing ketamine therapy. Another is mocked for a sexual act involving her husband that included Fruity Pebbles. Battle lines are drawn between the "sinners" and the "saints" in the group, depending on how strictly they adhere to Mormonism. But in the end, it’s impossible to understand exactly what modern Mormonism is—whether because the moral code is so vague or the storytelling so scattered.

The confusion may also be responsible for an unsettling occurrence where these women, by their own admission, all look alike, but they change their hair color so frequently that you’re never sure who’s speaking on screen at any given moment. And, after spending a week deep in The Secret Lives, I’ve arrived at the most astounding realization: after all this time spent with these women, whose entire “thing” is that they’re influential mavens, not once did I feel inspired to follow any of them on social media.

I could write a litany of reasons why this show has failed. Yet I’ve become a fan. It’s terrible, but I want more. I don’t know if MomTok will survive this scandal. But Secret Lives definitely will. 

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