Ashley Tisdale is cashing in on with a scripted TV series.
Ashley Tisdale lands scripted Netflix series based on her 'toxic mom group' scandal
Ashley Tisdale is cashing in on her viral 'toxic mom group' scandal with a scripted TV series. According to Deadline, a comedy series inspired by Tisdale's expe...
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According to Deadline, a comedy series inspired by Tisdale's experience titled Toxic Moms has landed at .
Tisdale, who will also star, is working with Beef's Ali Wong and Canadian comedian Sabrina Jalees, who is on board as a writer.
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A synopsis describes Toxic Moms as a 'dark half-hour comedy following a sleep-deprived new mom who’s drawn into a clique of cool, wealthy mothers.
'But when the group reveals its darker side, the series asks: in the isolation of motherhood, how far would you go to taste community?'
The scripted series is another career win for Tisdale, who just hit a major milestone with her hair care and fragrance brand, Being Frenshe.
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Ashley Tisdale is cashing in on her viral 'toxic mom group' scandal with a scripted TV series on Netflix
The actress is pictured with husband Christopher French and their children Jupiter and Emerson in September
According to Women's Wear Daily, the brand officially exceeded $250 million in sales and reached $100 million in point-of-sale annual sales at retailer Target.
The company was launched in 2022 by beauty brand incubator Maesa, who pitched Tisdale on the idea of creating a product line off the back of her popular wellness blog, Frenshe.
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The company currently focuses on scented hair care products, as well as body mists and fragrances.
It comes after Tisdale's now-viral essay for The Cut, in which she blasted a 'toxic' Hollywood mom group that she had dramatically exited.
The essay, titled 'Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group,' detailed Tisdale's feelings of being frozen out by her friends during her postpartum period after welcoming her second daughter Emerson with husband Christopher French.
Making things even more salacious were the whispers that the mystery mom group had been created by , and that it also contained celebrity members like and .
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Tisdale claimed that she wasn't invited to certain social gatherings, which she would later see posted on social media.
'It took me back to an unpleasant but familiar feeling I thought I'd left behind years ago,' she wrote.
The series is based off the viral essay Tisdale published in The Cut about leaving a 'toxic' Hollywood mom group
The celebrity mom group included stars like Hilary Duff and Meghan Trainor
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'Here I was sitting alone one night after getting my daughter to bed thinking, "Maybe I'm not cool enough?" All of a sudden I was in high school again, feeling totally lost as to what I was doing wrong to be left out.'
She said she ultimately texted the group after being excluded at yet another gathering, telling the other moms that things had become 'too high school' for her.
'To be clear, I have never considered the moms to be bad people (maybe one),' Tisdale added.
Trainor also broke her silence on the situation in an interview with Us Weekly.
'I think it was just a lot of miscommunication and confusion,' said Trainor, who stressed that she was not involved in the group's drama.
'I don’t really know what happened, but I wish them all the best. I texted all of them. Ashley texted me, "I’m sorry, your name got dragged in".'
Reflecting on the firestorm that the viral essay sparked, Tisdale indicated to WWD that she had no regrets about speaking her truth.
'I think that in the audience it was for, the response I got was pretty amazing. It reached who it needed to reach,' she said.
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