honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Coming soon on Fox: The ‘Octomom’ special


By Greg Braxton
Los Angeles Times

HOLLYWOOD — The Octomom is finally ready for prime time.

Nadya Suleman, the single mother of 14 children, will be featured in a Fox special “Octomom: The Incredible Unseen Footage” that producers say will offer a “jaw-dropping” look into her chaotic life.
The special, which will air Aug. 19, was compiled from footage shot by RadarOnline.com, which has had full access to Suleman since March, when she took the first two of her octuplets to her home in La Habra, southeast of Los Angeles..
“The access they got is amazing,” said Mike Darnell, Fox’s head of alternative programming. He said that when he saw a few minutes of raw footage, he instantly ordered the two-hour special.
Said Darnell, “It really shows the surrealness of what she’s experiencing, right from the point of bringing the first two babies home to a 1,400-square-foot home. We’re inside the car with her. It shows what her relationship is like with her parents, where there’s an enormous amount of conflict. It’s truly surreal. We see eight screaming children on a bed while six others are running around.”
Executive producer Craig Piligian of Pilgrim Films & Television, which produced the project, said the special is more like a “documentary.”
“There’s no host, no narration,” he said. “It’s really from Nadya’s point of view. It’s her inner monologue. It’s not like a reality show; it’s a lot more inside her head.”
Both executives said they anticipated that the special would be controversial and draw criticism from many who have criticized Suleman, accusing her of being ill-equipped for motherhood and obsessed with publicity.
“There will be public debate before, during and after the special,” said Darnell. “But that’s the history of Fox. Once in a while, we embrace edgy material, and Nadya is certainly compelling.”
The agreement between Suleman and the filmmakers stipulates that she has no input or control over the footage. Said Darnell: “We can say she signed away the rights to whatever was shot.”
Suleman could not be reached for comment.
Darnell added that “though we are not legally obligated,” Fox and Pilgrim established a financial account for Suleman’s kids “in the six figures.”
Suleman is scheduled to participate in a BBC-produced reality show that will start filming next month.