Ashley Tisdale is going back to school, but not for a High School Musicalreboot. In a revealing new essay for The Cut, the actress and founder of Frenshe detailed her painful exit from a “toxic” circle of famous mothers, sparking a massive online debate about whether her move was a brave stand for boundaries or a “messy” case of life imitating art.
The actress described a post-pandemic craving for community that led her to a group of high-powered women—entrepreneurs and brand-builders who seemed like the perfect “village.” However, the dream quickly soured as the star found herself “frozen out,” relegated to the end of dinner tables and left off the guest list for group hangs that she only discovered through Instagram Stories.
While Tisdale’s essay touched on the emotional “echoes of high school” that come with new motherhood, one specific sentence sent the internet into a tailspin. While discussing the group members, she noted, “To be clear, I have never considered the moms to be bad people. (Maybe one.)”
That tiny parenthetical sparked an immediate digital manhunt. “WHICH ONE OF THE GROUP DOES SHE THINK IS A BAD PERSON THATS ALL I WANT TO KNOW,” one Reddit commenter shouted into the digital void. The investigation moved quickly to social media platforms, with fans cross-referencing Tisdale’s “following” list. “The only one she unfollowed was Mandy Moore, so my money is on her,” a Reddit user theorized. Tisdale, however, anticipated the drama, warning “wannabe online sleuths” that “whatever you think is true isn’t even close.”
The reaction to the piece has split the internet into two distinct camps. On one side, moms are praising the actress for giving voice to a specific kind of adult loneliness. Tisdale noted that her phone has been “blowing up” with women sharing emotional stories of being brought to tears by the very groups meant to lift them up.
“You deserve to go through motherhood with people who actually, you know, like you,” Tisdale wrote, a sentiment that resonated with fans who have felt the sting of the “mom-group” cold shoulder. On the other side, some readers are questioning the actress’s methods. “If you are ever wondering why you are being excluded from a group and then decide that an appropriate way to handle it is by doing a photo shoot and then write and publish an article about it then the good news is that you may have answered your own question,” one critic noted.
Others suggested that a private conversation might have been more “adult” than a public essay. “There’s nothing more high school than feeling left out, announcing to the group that you’re leaving, and then passive aggressively writing about your hurt feelings for them to read elsewhere,” another commenter added.
As the story continues to trend, fans are calling for the other side of the story. “We need a series of dueling articles,” one reader suggested, hoping for a 30 for 30 style breakdown of the friendship fallout.
The drama has even inspired calls for a new musical genre. “I’m calling it first, Meghan will release a cringey diss track about Ashley in the near future,” a fan joked, while another agreed that the world needs more songs about “mom group breakups” because “man I could use [one] when I’m annoyed at mom drama.”
Whether it’s a “messy” public exit or a necessary boundary, Tisdale’s final text to the group remains the quote of the week: “This is too high school for me and I don’t want to take part in it anymore.”
This story was originally published by Parade on Jan 6, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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