“We are co-parents, co-CEOs, co-diaper changers, kitchen cleaners and decision makers.” Does anyone for a millisecond believe he changes diapers or cleans the kitchen? LOL c'mon girl, we aren't that dumb. |
I’m sorry, I am all for reproductive choice, but having 8+ closely spaced kids is indefensible. |
It's a Mormon mom influencer thing. They are all incredibly reckless. I don't even pretend to get it but it's a "thing." Goes along with filming injured kids for sympathy. |
What happened to “believe the women”? She says she is happy. She says she likes her life. I believe her. |
She also previously posted a picture of one of her babies covered in blood because I think a rooster attacked the baby while it was crawling around on the ground outside. Apparently it also wasn’t the first time this rooster had attacked someone. It truly boggles the mind. |
Also very young kids operating heavy and dangerous farm equipment. Barefoot. |
Depends on the Influencer, but yea, a lot of it is like an MLM. I've known people with 300,000 followers who couldn't get anyone to buy their stuff. Most end up selling courses on how to get 100,000 followers - example, I know a woman who got 250,000 followers doing travel content but could never make money off of it, so she sells classes on how to make travel videos, promising that you can make $5000 per brand-sponsored post even with a small following (you can't). The smart ones do some combination of the following: 1. Money from ads (some of my clients pull in $30k-40k per month from that alone) 2. Brand deals 3. Selling courses, events, etc 4. Doing social media for other wannabe Influencers I'll fully admit most of those are rip-offs. Most courses suck, most brand deals don't actually make the brand money, and most can't replicate their same results for other Influencers. |
That video made me think that they’re actually PR geniuses and the controversy was all set up. I mean, I’d never even seen one of their social media posts before the article, and now I know the most miniscule details about their lives. Either that or he’s a total narcissist. |
Yes! they are getting a reality show |
I follow an ex-Mormon influencer who said that the Mormon church buys a lot of online ads on her videos, presumably to convert people. She said it wouldn't be surprising if the church has ads on most Mormon tradwife content creators in an effort to drive up recruitment. They do have a multi-billion endowment! |
Source? |
It's not shocking to me. It's smart. Like other Christian groups and Islam, Mormonism seeks converts. Can't blame them for being excellent at marketing. |
Former PP who works in social media. The Mormon influence online goes deeeeeeep. I did a bunch of digging a few months back and TONS of parenting, conservative, and marriage brands are funded by companies owned by the Mormon church. They'll also invest in entrepreneurs. The creepiest is the children's books they publish and get put in libraries that aren't labeled as LDS. It's very sneaky. |
Yes! That video was my first introduction to them. He couldn’t be bothered to take the gift out of its shipping box and wrap it and then as she’s taking in the gift and trying it on he’s like, “You’re welcome,” before she said thank you - like a parent would do to prompt a kid. And if they were comfortable putting that on video and posting it I can only imagine how he condescends to her and puts her in her place when the cameras aren’t rolling. |
I'm ex-LDS and agree although I think the angle is just as much to keep current members in the church. There are a lot of prominent bloggers who started out as faithful LDS and publicly broke up with the church, for example Amber Fillerup Clark of Barefoot Blonde and C Jane Kendrick, sister of NieNie. The church is bleeding out young American members and trying desperately to staunch the flow. This is an easy way that requires less manpower than having their (dwindling) missionary base knock on doors and try to badger inactive members in their early 20s and 30s to come back to church. |