Ashley Tisdale has created a comedy known as Poisonous Mothers – six months after her now-viral Breaking Up with My Poisonous Mother Group essay was revealed.
Actress Ashley Tisdale
The 41-year-old star’s undertaking, impressed by her expertise of being a mother to daughters Jupiter, 5, and Emerson, 20 months, is in improvement at Netflix, with actresses-and-comediennes Ali Wong, 44, and Sabrina Jalees, 41, connected to the present, in accordance with Deadline.
Poisonous Mothers, penned by Sabrina, is described as a 30-minute comedy a few mother who meets a wealthy group of mothers.
However when their darkish facet begins to be revealed, the present will take a look at how far the primary character will go to expertise group.
Deadline additionally reviews that Excessive Faculty Musical alum Ashley – who has Jupiter and Emerson along with her 44-year-old husband, composer Christopher French – Mating Season’s Sabrina, and Beef forged member Ali will executive-produce Poisonous Mothers, with the latter directing if it goes to a collection.
On Thursday (02.07.26), Ashley took to Instagram and posted a screenshot of Deadline’s article about Poisonous Mothers, with the caption: “I suppose all of us is usually a little poisonous.”
Poisonous Mothers comes six months after Ashley known as out “mean-girl behaviour” from her “poisonous mother group” in an essay for The Minimize, which sparked hypothesis that she was referring to actress Hilary Duff, 38, and singers Mandy Moore, 42, and 32-year-old Meghan Trainor.
Ashley’s consultant had shut down hypothesis that the Scary Film 1 actress had been speaking about Hilary and their well-known buddies, telling TMZ it’s “unlucky” that Ashley’s phrases had been “twisted” and there was “zero fact” to recommendations different celebrities had been concerned.
The singer first opened up about her experiences with the mother group in a publish on her weblog by which she declared: “Right here’s the factor no person ready me for: Mother teams can flip poisonous.
“Not as a result of the mothers themselves are poisonous folks, however as a result of the dynamic shifts into an unpleasant place with mean-girl behaviour. I do know this from private expertise.”
Ashley defined there have been group textual content chains that “did not embrace everybody” and there have been “hangouts” she did not get invited to.
In her essay for The Minimize, she went on to open up about how she began to really feel “excluded”, writing: “I used to be sure that I’d discovered my village.
“However over time, I started to wonder if that was actually true. I bear in mind being disregarded of a few group hangs, and I knew about them as a result of Instagram made certain it fed me each single picture and Instagram Story.
“One other time, at one of many mother’s dinner events, I realised the place I sat along with her – which was on the finish of the desk, removed from the remainder of the ladies. I used to be beginning to really feel frozen out of the group, noticing each means that they appeared to exclude me.”
The blonde magnificence addressed hypothesis about her authentic weblog publish within the essay, calling out “on-line sleuths” for trying to determine the identities of the ladies concerned.
She wrote: “It’s one [topic] that has additionally made wannabe on-line sleuths attempt to do some investigating like they’re on CSI (please, don’t even strive – no matter you assume is true isn’t even shut).”

