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She Wanted To Capture The Truth About Motherhood; Hundreds Of Millions Of Views Later, I Think People Can Agree This TikToker Nailed It
She Wanted To Capture The Truth About Motherhood; Hundreds Of Millions Of Views Later, I Think People Can Agree This TikToker Nailed It

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

She Wanted To Capture The Truth About Motherhood; Hundreds Of Millions Of Views Later, I Think People Can Agree This TikToker Nailed It

"[After my son's birth], I felt so incredibly powerful and creative and in love and connected to the very fabric of I was also leaking and overstimulated and bone tired and dealing with my shifting identity in the hardest season of my life while also caring for a newborn," Shawna Lander (aka shawnathemom) shared with me as the inspiration behind her super viral TikTok series. For the uninitiated, let me back up: Shawna Lander is the creator, writer, director, editor, and solo performer in her multi-part TikTok series that follows the ins and outs of the extended McAllister family and their friends in the community. The characters and situations often relate to the dramas and pratfalls of everyday life, from an overbearing mother-in-law to the anxieties of hosting a child's birthday party. If you want to get a quick sense, here's a video from Max's 5th birthday, during which a snafu with the guest list and an overstepping in-law situation ultimately lead to chaos (I won't say more so as to not spoil it!). Shawna Lander via TikTok / Via Shawna's skits include so many characters (again, all played by Shawna herself) that pinned on the top of her TikTok page is an explainer video of "Who's Who In The Shawnaverse?" The slide-show-style explainer video has over seven million views. In the caption of that explainer video, Shawna describes the titular character of Shawna accordingly: "This is Shawna. She's not me, she just has my name. Slightly neurotic, sometimes awkward, very sincere, and means well. She's sort of the 'everymom.'" "Everymom" is kind of key here, as many of Shawna's skits explore the familial and community-based dynamics experienced by mothers in particular. As mentioned earlier, motherhood was a large part of Shawna's inspiration behind creating the Shawnaverse. In Shawna's words, "I made my very first slice-of-life mom skits when my firstborn was 10 months old, about 9 years ago. I didn't post very often, and I shot them like actual short films, in landscape with mis-en-scène, acting across from my real-life husband, John." (Note that "John" is also the name of Shawna's husband in the Shawnaverse.) The overlap of names made me wonder how much Shawna draws on her real life for content and inspiration, to which Shawna clarified, "My own journey into motherhood was the catalyst for me to start creating, so my content is rooted in authentic experience, but I don't recreate my life in skit form." Shawna Lander via TikTok / Via "I do have a John, but he's not skit John, and I do have a Max and a Piper, but those aren't my children's names, and I don't put anything they're really going through on the internet. I know some Barbs, but my mother-in-law is not a Barb. So I've been inspired by real life, definitely, but the story has a life of its own." For context, Barb is Shawna's mother-in-law (in the skits, not in real life). And if Shawna is the "everymom," then Barb is the "every-mother-in-law" (presuming your mother-in-law doesn't respect boundaries and is very badly behaved, which I recognize isn't every mother-in-law, but you know what I mean). Barb oversteps. She's difficult. At her worst, she's manipulative and narcissistic. But also, she's human. She desperately wants to feel included and accepted in a moment when she fears she's being pushed out of the family. Also, at her best, she's goofy and funny and shows up for her kids when they're in need of her motherly love and support. In other words, she's a genuinely complicated character, which is what makes her so relatable for so many viewers. Also, when I asked Shawna who her favorite character was to play, she told me, "I'll say Barb, but just know that she's A favorite, not THE favorite, because I love them all and it's too hard to choose! But yeah, Barb is pretty fun to play!" I was curious about how the Shawnaverse came to be, and Shawna shared that while she's a full-time creator now, when she first started, she "was a stay-at-home mom trying to figure out how [she] could have a baby and still pursue acting." Shawna told me she started posting to TikTok in late 2020, on a friend's recommendation. Shawna continued, "I started making [the videos] because I wanted to act, but also because I wanted to capture the truth about creates an unexpected evolution of identity and of relationship dynamics in the lives of so many women. I wanted to create a show that captured our shared truths." You might assume that, due to the focus on parenthood, this is a series that would appeal primarily to parents. But I'm not a mother, and I'm a huge fan (and my friends with whom I regularly text about the Shawnaverse aren't parents, either). While many of the skits are about parenthood, the stories focus on a variety of topics, including trying to make new friends, introducing your family to a new partner, and the difficulties around holidays and anniversaries and other life events (and so much more that doesn't require parenthood as a prerequisite to reliability). I asked Shawna why she felt audiences resonate with her content, and she said, "I think it's because the story is specific but the themes are universal... Everyone has an upbringing. Everyone has ideas for how life will go. Everyone has experienced their carefully laid plans veering wildly off path and the emotional fallout that occurs when that happens. It's all relatable." And on that, the Shawnaverse fan community is really strong, as well. Not only are there a ton of positive comments on the videos, but there are also countless fan-theory videos that aim to predict what's next for our favorite characters. u/rachleahx via TikTok / Via u/thedelightfulclinician via TikTok / Via I asked Shawna about the response to her series and if anyone has ever reached out to her, to which she shared, "I post and I have instant feedback in the comments and in my DMs. People from all over the world tell me about the Barb in their family, or their Jennifer [Shawna's sister-in-law], or their Frank [Shawna's father-in-law]...Honestly, the community is an integral part of the McAllister world at this point because people share so vulnerably, respectfully, and hilariously in the comments." As a fan, I had to ask Shawna what she hoped for the future of the characters that make up the Shawnaverse, to which she said, "I would love for everyone in the family to have their lovely healing arc, I would love for rifts to be mended, and for everyone to feel heard. I'd love to end the series in a really wholesome, uplifting place! But I also know what I have planned for the rest of the year soo... We'll see!" But here's my recommendation: don't take my word for it. Check out the Shawnaverse for yourself! You can find her videos on TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. Let us know in the comments if this is the first you're hearing of the Shawnaverse, and definitely let us know if you decide to check it out. Also, if you have any other favorite social-media storytellers, let us know in the comments, as well.

Your Next Internet Obsession: Shawna The Mom
Your Next Internet Obsession: Shawna The Mom

Buzz Feed

time10 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Buzz Feed

Your Next Internet Obsession: Shawna The Mom

"[After my son's birth], I felt so incredibly powerful and creative and in love and connected to the very fabric of I was also leaking and overstimulated and bone tired and dealing with my shifting identity in the hardest season of my life while also caring for a newborn," Shawna Lander (aka shawnathemom) shared with me as the inspiration behind her super viral TikTok series. For the uninitiated, let me back up: Shawna Lander is the creator, writer, director, editor, and solo performer in her multi-part TikTok series that follows the ins and outs of the extended McAllister family and their friends in the community. The characters and situations often relate to the dramas and pratfalls of everyday life, from an overbearing mother-in-law to the anxieties of hosting a child's birthday party. Shawna's skits include so many characters (again, all played by Shawna herself) that pinned on the top of her TikTok page is an explainer video of "Who's Who In The Shawnaverse?" The slide-show-style explainer video has over seven million views. In the caption of that explainer video, Shawna describes the titular character of Shawna accordingly: "This is Shawna. She's not me, she just has my name. Slightly neurotic, sometimes awkward, very sincere, and means well. She's sort of the 'everymom.'" "Everymom" is kind of key here, as many of Shawna's skits explore the familial and community-based dynamics experienced by mothers in particular. As mentioned earlier, motherhood was a large part of Shawna's inspiration behind creating the Shawnaverse. In Shawna's words, "I made my very first slice-of-life mom skits when my firstborn was 10 months old, about 9 years ago. I didn't post very often, and I shot them like actual short films, in landscape with mis-en-scène, acting across from my real-life husband, John." (Note that "John" is also the name of Shawna's husband in the Shawnaverse.) The overlap of names made me wonder how much Shawna draws on her real life for content and inspiration, to which Shawna clarified, "My own journey into motherhood was the catalyst for me to start creating, so my content is rooted in authentic experience, but I don't recreate my life in skit form." "I do have a John, but he's not skit John, and I do have a Max and a Piper, but those aren't my children's names, and I don't put anything they're really going through on the internet. I know some Barbs, but my mother-in-law is not a Barb. So I've been inspired by real life, definitely, but the story has a life of its own." For context, Barb is Shawna's mother-in-law (in the skits, not in real life). And if Shawna is the "everymom," then Barb is the "every-mother-in-law" (presuming your mother-in-law doesn't respect boundaries and is very badly behaved, which I recognize isn't every mother-in-law, but you know what I mean). Barb oversteps. She's difficult. At her worst, she's manipulative and narcissistic. But also, she's human. She desperately wants to feel included and accepted in a moment when she fears she's being pushed out of the family. Also, at her best, she's goofy and funny and shows up for her kids when they're in need of her motherly love and support. In other words, she's a genuinely complicated character, which is what makes her so relatable for so many when I asked Shawna who her favorite character was to play, she told me, "I'll say Barb, but just know that she's A favorite, not THE favorite, because I love them all and it's too hard to choose! But yeah, Barb is pretty fun to play!" I was curious about how the Shawnaverse came to be, and Shawna shared that while she's a full-time creator now, when she first started, she "was a stay-at-home mom trying to figure out how [she] could have a baby and still pursue acting." Shawna told me she started posting to TikTok in late 2020, on a friend's recommendation. Shawna continued, "I started making [the videos] because I wanted to act, but also because I wanted to capture the truth about creates an unexpected evolution of identity and of relationship dynamics in the lives of so many women. I wanted to create a show that captured our shared truths." You might assume that, due to the focus on parenthood, this is a series that would appeal primarily to parents. But I'm not a mother, and I'm a huge fan (and my friends with whom I regularly text about the Shawnaverse aren't parents, either). While many of the skits are about parenthood, the stories focus on a variety of topics, including trying to make new friends, introducing your family to a new partner, and the difficulties around holidays and anniversaries and other life events (and so much more that doesn't require parenthood as a prerequisite to reliability). I asked Shawna why she felt audiences resonate with her content, and she said, "I think it's because the story is specific but the themes are universal... Everyone has an upbringing. Everyone has ideas for how life will go. Everyone has experienced their carefully laid plans veering wildly off path and the emotional fallout that occurs when that happens. It's all relatable." And on that, the Shawnaverse fan community is really strong, as well. Not only are there a ton of positive comments on the videos, but there are also countless fan-theory videos that aim to predict what's next for our favorite characters. I asked Shawna about the response to her series and if anyone has ever reached out to her, to which she shared, "I post and I have instant feedback in the comments and in my DMs. People from all over the world tell me about the Barb in their family, or their Jennifer [Shawna's sister-in-law], or their Frank [Shawna's father-in-law]...Honestly, the community is an integral part of the McAllister world at this point because people share so vulnerably, respectfully, and hilariously in the comments." As a fan, I had to ask Shawna what she hoped for the future of the characters that make up the Shawnaverse, to which she said, "I would love for everyone in the family to have their lovely healing arc, I would love for rifts to be mended, and for everyone to feel heard. I'd love to end the series in a really wholesome, uplifting place! But I also know what I have planned for the rest of the year soo... We'll see!" But here's my recommendation: don't take my word for it. Check out the Shawnaverse for yourself! You can find her videos on TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. Let us know in the comments if this is the first you're hearing of the Shawnaverse, and definitely let us know if you decide to check it out. Also, if you have any other favorite social-media storytellers, let us know in the comments, as well.

Mom's viral videos perfectly nail the experience of having a nightmare mother-in-law
Mom's viral videos perfectly nail the experience of having a nightmare mother-in-law

Yahoo

time07-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Mom's viral videos perfectly nail the experience of having a nightmare mother-in-law

Got a nightmare mother-in-law? You're not alone. Social media star Shawna Lander's video series about an overbearing, emotionally manipulative mother-in-law are going viral on TikTok because they just seem so real to so many people. 'I have a lot of fun doing it,' Lander, a mother of two in North Carolina, tells 'My favorite is when I get messages from people who say, 'Oh my gosh, I now understand my mother better.'' Lander, aka "Shawna the Mom," writes funny skits about a family in which she plays all the characters — including 'Shawna,' a fictionalized version of herself and her self-centered mother-in-law 'Barb' — with costumes and wigs. The online series has sparked fan conspiracy theories and a merch line featuring Lander's characters. Lander adds, 'It's really hard to become a mom. It's a tough transition, made that much tougher if you have a difficult family dynamic.' Fans 'feel seen,' she says, when they realize through her skits that they 'can put a boundary down.' In the 'Shawnaverse,' as Lander's fans call it, 'Barb' is the mother of all evil. Barb walks all over her husband Frank, she pressures Shawna to have more kids ('Grammy's ready for another baby!'), she ruins her future son-in-law's Christmas proposal and she competes with Shawna's mother for attention. In Lander's latest viral episodes — in which no one showed up to Shawna's son's 5th birthday party — Barb scolded Shawna and preemptively cut the cake. 'Is that what you're wearing?' Barb asked Shawna in one video, adding, 'It's super cute. I just — I don't know if I would feel comfortable with my tummy poking out like that. Well, of course I lost my baby weight (snap) that quick with all the breastfeeding. But you do formula, so.' Lander's fans have strong reactions to the Barb archetype. Comments include: 'It's just a sketch, it's just a sketch." 'So, do you have a camera actually inside my mother-in-law's house or ...?' 'The way these videos with Barb are triggering but also validating.' 'I used to wear a shirt with 'Read the room' printed on it when my mother-in-law was around. She never got the hint.' 'Why are these skits so accurate to my life?!!?!?!' Many of us know a Barb — if not personally, then tangentially: Effortlessly offended, manipulative and always the victim, even when she is overstepping boundaries. Lander tells that Barb was born accidentally, through one of her older skits about a new mom who complained about parenting hardships to an older female relative. 'That character said to her, like, 'Well, I don't know why you feel like that — I always loved my babies,' the implication being, 'You're doing this wrong and it shouldn't be that hard,'' says Lander. 'Many people identified with that, and I thought, 'OK, there is something here.' People needed to see more about this older character who completely invalidates your experience.' Although Lander impersonates a classically 'heinous' mother-in-law, she has no personal experience with the subject. 'My mother-in-law passed away before we had children,' she explains. 'I do have a stepmother-in-law who is not a mother figure but ... more like a friend or a big sister.' Lander ventures why moms and their mothers-in-law disagree. 'I don't have grandchildren so I don't know what it feels like, but I would imagine that ... you are not there witnessing it,' she says. 'You are once removed and and though you have many of the same really deep-seated feelings and love for the child ... you're not 'important.' You're just 'the grandmother.'' She adds, 'It's probably hard to dedicate your whole life to being a mom and have your babies grow up and leave and ... now what? There is probably some element of that for Barb and for the Barbs of the world.' Lander says people with a mother-in-law like Barb should 'hold the line.' 'Boundaries — absolute boundaries,' Lander tells 'You cannot change someone or reason with them to treat you better or differently. You can have hard conversations and be frank about what you need and what it is that they're doing.' She adds, 'When you have someone who is overstepping, you have to tell them plainly, 'I do not like this behavior and I'm not going to tolerate it.'' Lander says spouses can't sit back, either. 'In many ways, it's your husband's relationship to handle, because it's his mom — not your mom ... the only reason you even know that woman is because it's his mother,' she says. 'If you want to change the relationship,' says Lander, 'You need to have hard conversations.'This article was originally published on

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