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Mormon Wives: OC — Which Cast Members Are Actually LDS?

Mormon Wives: OC — Which Cast Members Are Actually LDS?
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MomTok is leveling up with The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County, where a new cadre of dynamic OC moms collide as faith-as-identity meets the pull of modern life. Expect loyalties tested, traditions challenged, and drama turned all the way up.

Hulu is stretching its MomTok universe down the 405 with The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County. Same premise, sunnier zip codes, and a cast that is going to spark debates in group chats about who is actually Mormon, who left, and who was never in the Church to begin with.

What the OC version is selling

The new spinoff centers on young moms in Orange County whose beliefs aren’t just Sunday things — they’re the brand. Some are holding tight to tradition; others are actively poking the bear and rewriting the rules. Expect secrets, implosions, and alliances shifting as this crew of influencers builds its own answer to #MomTok.

Quick refresher on the OG

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives launched on Hulu in 2024 and has already run four seasons, following a Utah circle navigating early motherhood, social media fame, and faith. It made instant names out of Taylor Frankie Paul, Jessi Draper, Jen Affleck, Whitney Leavitt, Mayci Neeley, Mikayla Matthews, Layla Taylor, and Miranda McWhorter.

Meet the OC cast

  • Aspyn OvardYouTube veteran who built a family channel with ex Parker Ferris. They share daughters Cove, Lola, and Elle; Elle arrived in April 2024 just days after Aspyn filed for divorce. Post-divorce, she came out as queer and is now dating Bri Davis. She popped up briefly in the Utah show at the season 2 Halloween party. She’s no longer LDS and has said on the Girls Camp podcast (March 2025 ) that she was baptized as a kid but didn’t grow up with church as a core part of her life, and later stepped back because she didn’t align with the religion’s more conservative values.
  • Bobbi Althoff — Host of the Really Good podcast. She has two daughters with ex-husband Cory Althoff; their divorce finalized in August 2024, and by 2025 she was dating again. Despite the show’s title, Bobbi is not a member of the LDS Church. On the Soul Boom podcast (December 2024), she said she considered herself Christian for a time and genuinely believed in God.
  • Avery Woods — Married to police officer David Woods; they share two kids, and David has two more from a prior relationship. On her Cheers podcast (January 2024), Avery said she has never been religious.
  • Salome Andrea — Married photographer Aaron Brimhall in 2012; they welcomed twins Luca and Rue in 2018. She grew up practicing Mormonism but has been clear she isn’t a stereotypical 'Utah Mormon.' On Avery’s podcast in 2023, Salome said she and Aaron don’t attend church, they drink, they have tattoos — and while she doesn’t love declaring 'I am not Mormon,' her personal relationship with God matters more. Her mom sometimes takes the twins to church so they have some religious context.
  • McCall Dapron — Older sister of OG cast member Mayci Neeley. McCall grew up in a Mormon family in Southern California, has four kids with her husband, and they are active in the LDS Church.
  • Chandler Higginson — Married to Dylan Higginson; their crew includes Dax, Coco, Kord, and Banks. She hasn’t spelled out her beliefs publicly, but her April 2026 Instagram Easter post — complete with 'He is Risen!' — tells you where her head and heart are at.
  • Ashleigh Pease — Australian-born influencer married to Nathan Pease; they have four kids. They don’t advertise a specific denomination, though the family does share Christmas content pretty regularly.
  • Madison Bontempo — Married to Kyler Steven Fisher; parents of five. They are LDS members, period. On the Pretty Dirty podcast (February 2026), Madison put it this way:

'We’re actually Mormon. I view myself through the same as a lot of my Christian friends, like, we all just believe in Jesus Christ, right?'

Why this lineup is going to get people talking

Yes, the title says 'Mormon Wives.' No, not everyone here is LDS. Some are in, some are out, some are somewhere in between — and a few never joined. That mix is part of the hook: belief as identity, lifestyle, content strategy, and sometimes contradiction. If you followed the Utah seasons, you know that friction is the fuel.

Premiere window

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives: Orange County hits Hulu in 2026.