• Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
Sunday, June 1, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About
No Result
View All Result
The Contending
No Result
View All Result
Home Featured Story

‘The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ Feels like a ‘Twilight Zone’ Episode about Feminism, and I Love It

Megan McLachlan by Megan McLachlan
September 18, 2024
in Featured Story, Featured Television, Television
0
the secret lives of mormon wives

(Disney/Fred Hayes)

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Contending’s Megan McLachlan believes The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is as hopeful as it is feminist.

I have a confession: I have never watched a Housewives show. I never felt the need to, and as much as I’d like to start now, it feels too late. I’ve missed too many iconic pop culture moments in real time.

So with Hulu’s launch of The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, I knew I wanted to jump on this train as it was leaving the station. After all, it’s a post-Emmys lull. Time for swinging sex scandals and #MomTok drama. Break out the Poppi soda! (Note: For a brief time, I thought #MomTok was “Montauk” and was confused).

I wasn’t sure what to make of The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives at first. Is it George Cukor’s The Women for Gen Z? (It wasn’t until Taylor’s verbally abusive baby daddy Dakota showed up that I realized this show does have men in it.)

No. It’s more like The Stepford Wives. Rows and rows of houses that look exactly the same. Women that look EXACTLY the same (I thought Taylor and Jen Affleck were the same person for an episode). B-roll footage of Whitney’s neighborhood made me want to crawl up the walls, with snow-covered mountains hugging the community like a creepy religious uncle. There’s nowhere to go. It’s like you’re living in a snow globe. And that’s how women like Taylor feel—or felt—in their marriages. It’s probably what spurred her to cause the major “scandal” of the series: revealing that she and her ex-husband were swingers within the religious community.

The show is reminiscent of a Twilight Zone episode in the way it depicts this “perfect” life (well, “perfect” to J.D. Vance). Like Palm Springs in Don’t Worry Darling, Utah Mormonism plays host to an experiment in traditional gender roles. Women like Layla get married when they’re 17 and crank out kids before they’re able to legally drink (which they don’t do anyway because they don’t believe in it — thus, the soda).

But just as Mentos makes soda explode — and the Stepford Wives discover that one robot wife — the special element that completely alters the chemistry of this community is social media and TikTok. On #MomTok, the women can express themselves in ways they can’t in their religious community. They can be seen as more than mothers. And the money they make from it has made them the muthafuckin’ breadwinners of their families.

In one of the most powerful moments of the series, Whitney visits her mother and sister, seeking permission to market vibrators on her social media account. Whitney recalls reading a verse as a young girl that described sex as comparable to “murder” and reveals she didn’t have the “sex talk” before she got married to her husband.

“My wedding night should have come from a horror movie,” she says. “That was a horrible, horrible night. It was a conversation that we never had.”

She tells her mother that she would like to market the vibrators to empower women and dismantle the shame around needing tools to enjoy intimacy.

“I’m not sure how I feel about that,” says her mother. “I think when you’re seeking pleasure, it can just get out of hand.”

“You should have taught me how to have a baby,” counters Whitney.

“Obviously, you figured it out.”

It’s a chilling, devastating moment in a series that shouldn’t go so deep. Whitney admits this new generation is changing the way they do things and even pities her mother who was raised in a time when Mormon women didn’t talk about sex.

Despite all the unnecessary-but-wholly-necessary drama, The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is an incredibly hopeful and fiercely feminist reality series. It feels like an alternate universe of another Hulu series, The Handmaid’s Tale. It proves that even when you keep women under puritanical thumbs, they’ll still find ways to resist.

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives is streaming on Hulu. 

Spread the Word!

  • More
Tags: Huluthe secret lives of mormon wives
Megan McLachlan

Megan McLachlan

Megan McLachlan is a co-founder of The Contending who lives in Pittsburgh, PA. Her work has appeared in Buzzfeed, Cosmopolitan, The Cut, Paste, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Thrillist, and The Washington Post.

Next Post
‘Agatha All Along:’ Entertaining But Lacking In Visionary Magic

'Agatha All Along:' Entertaining But Lacking In Visionary Magic

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple PodcastsSpotifyAndroidby EmailRSS

Subscribe Now!

Subscribe here to The Contending's newsletter! We will never spam you. We promise!

Looking To Advertise?

Looking to advertise with The Contending? Email Clarence Moye for inquiries!

The Latest Stuff

Diamonds

‘Diamonds:’ Ferzan Özpetek On His 15th Feature Film, Continuous Queer Content [VIDEO]

May 31, 2025
bridget jones played by renee zellweger

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy Screenwriters On Why This Love Story Feels Different for Bridget

May 30, 2025
Donna Lynne Champlin On Nikki Embracing Her Outsider Status for ‘The Perfect Couple’

Donna Lynne Champlin On Nikki Embracing Her Outsider Status for ‘The Perfect Couple’

May 30, 2025
Andor

DP Christophe Nuyens Broadens Visual Palette Of ‘Andor’ Universe

May 30, 2025
Children Will Listen

“Children Will Listen:” Especially If Bree Spanks Them

May 29, 2025

Wise Words From Our Readers

  • terrencemoss on Jerrod Carmichael On Why He Named His Special ‘Don’t Be Gay’
  • Tom85 on 2025 Summer Movie Preview: Marking Our Favs With Mark!
  • Julie on 2025 Summer Movie Preview: Marking Our Favs With Mark!
  • Glen Runciter on Joe Don Baker: Walk Tall & Carry a Big Stick
  • JoeS on The Quiet Legend of Robert Benton
The Contending

© 2025 The Contending

Find All the Things

  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

Dreaded Social Media

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Main
  • Film
  • Television
  • Theater
  • Best Of the Rest
  • Subscribe
  • About

© 2025 The Contending

  • More Networks
Share via
Facebook
X (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Mix
Email
Print
Copy Link
Copy link
CopyCopied