Web video, which was once relegated to merely uploading footage of Junior’s school play onto YouTube, is now a viable form of entertainment by moms, for moms. Maybe it sounds a little dippy, but, believe me In the MotherHood, which is a branded series sponsored Sprint and Suave (actually the line is “conceived by Suave and Sprint” – get it? – a pregnancy reference. Ha!), is a pretty smart concept. After all, who buys more stuff than mom?
The web series, which had 5.5 million viewers last season, is inspired by real-life stories from moms who upload their ideas to the MSN site (McCarthy hasn’t yet submitted any anecdotes on the happiness or horrors of parenting after being a Playboy Playmate of the Year, but we still got a whole season ahead of us). The ideas are voted upon by other members of the MotherHood community and the best are polished up by fancy Hollywood writers and shot for the series. As a reward for submitting a winning idea, the “moms” are flown to attend a taping.
Erika Nardini, MSN’s Senior Director of Branded Entertainment and Experiences, says the thing that makes this concept so compelling is that “these are every-day stories from real-life moms turned into content with very high production values.”
And what’s more, In the MotherHood takes the banality of the mommy stories and turns them into entertainment. For example, it makes the obnoxiously “perfect” mom, Kelly, seem like the most odious of creatures (in the trailer, she mistakes Remini’s character for “the help” and expresses gratitude when she learns that the help, in fact, speaks English), and shows how the run-of-the-millplaydate with the Spawn of Satan can actually have really annoying real-life consequences.
The most notable thing about In the MotherHood is its multi-platform approach to building the show and its community. MSN has created a web community that is far more slick and robust than your average “Mommy Message Board.” In addition to the forum where moms can chat and vote, the site has polls, games, recipes and activities, plus destinations for the three stars where you can read blogs, watch interviews and ask questions. And truth be told, based on the number of posts in the message boards and the whopping amount of viewers last season, the ladies seem to be eating this stuff up.
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