Nara Smith and Ballerina Farm’s collaboration sparks online debate with tradwife conspiracy theories

By Abby Amoakuh

Updated Sep 19, 2024 at 04:53 PM

Reading time: 3 minutes

61578

Nara Smith, the TikTok creator famous for making sunscreen and cough drops from scratch, has been making headlines once again for taking a little trip to rural Utah—aka, Mormon country. On a farm that was quaint, idyllic and far removed from the troubles of city life, Smith linked up with Hannah Neeleman, also known as Ballerina Farm or ‘The Queen of Trad Wives,’ according to a controversial feature in The Times. The two spent an afternoon milking cows and enjoying a gorgeous, all-homemade brunch spread, which naturally stirred up some controversy on TikTok within hours…

In a TikTok video uploaded on 12 September, Smith shared: “After a crazy work week in New York we finally made it to Utah for a few days to hang out with some family and friends and we obviously had to stop by Hannah’s house for some brunch. We had a whole spread going on with some croissants, crepes, fruits, homemade Nutella, and jams. Daniel also made us some yoghurt the night before, which I couldn’t get enough of.”

A montage of clips showed Smith and Neeleman enjoying lunch, playing with each other’s children, visiting the farm’s new dairy, and posing for pictures together, of course.

“It was nice for all of us to sit down and catch up and talk about everything that’s been going on. Rumble and Slim needed to see how a cow was milked, so I gave it a try, and it’s a lot harder than Hannah makes it look. We were all so sad to leave but we know we’re gonna be back very soon,” Smith continued.

The video caused quite a stir online, with many netizens expressing their excitement over this unexpected crossover. Every 16 to 24-year-old with a phone will likely have watched at least Nara Smith, or Ballerina Farm video at this point. They serve as a portal to immerse oneself into a wholesome and familiar world of domesticity and tranquillity.

Of course, producing and curating this carefully constructed content is part of a full-time influencer job, which has made the ‘tradwife’ moniker both women have been bestowed with quite controversial.

Smith and Neelman have both previously clarified that they do not identify as tradwives, considering that Smith is also a model when she is not creating her content. In contrast, Neeleman also runs a farming business with her husband.

“I wasn’t aware that finding joy in cooking for my husband and kids would automatically mean that I just slave away in the kitchen. I don’t have a job and I have a whole production team at my house making that happen. To clarify, none of that is true. I’m a working mom juggling all kinds of hats and responsibilities,” the model and influencer stated in one of her recent videos.

@naraazizasmith

🤍 #traveling #dayinmylife #fypツ #momtok #toddlersoftiktok #marriage

♬ Backsound Puisi - Audiolist Productions

Yet, the controversy didn’t stop at contestation of whether the two should be classed as tradwives—spoiler alert, they shouldn’t.

Their Mormon religion and the fear that Smith was becoming increasingly engulfed in it also drew some negative attention.

Ex-mormon Alyssa Grenfell, who openly talked about her decision to exit the faith and coined the term ‘mormon face’, responded to the controversial videos in one of her TikToks.

“If you guys haven’t seen it yet, Nora Smith went to Utah and collaborated on some content with Ballerina Farm. Now if you’re not familiar, Ballerina Farm, very Mormon. Traditionally Mormon, generational Mormon. Nara was introduced to Mormonism by her model husband Lucky Blue Smith. Nara has said in the past that she’s just kind of learning about Mormonism. They’re not super strict.”

@alyssadgrenfell

The Mormon church is business in the front, cult in the back 🫢 #exmormon #lds #utah #mormoninfluencer

♬ original sound - Alyssa Grenfell

“Honestly, seeing her collaborate with Ballerina Farm made me a bit nervous that she’s getting more sucked into this religion. And keep in mind, this is a religion that has historically taught that Black people shouldn’t be full members of the church. Also historically taught that having Black skin is literally a curse from god. I really love Nara Smith’s content. I think her relationship with Lucky Blue Smith is really beautiful and their whole vibe is amazing. Seeing her do this collaboration and seemingly get more swept up into traditional Mormonism just honestly makes me nervous.”

“Someone did a video about Nara Smith’s tea drawer [and] how it was all the Mormon approved drinks and that felt convincing to me she’s more bought in than she says,” one TikTok user commented under the video.

Someone else commented: “I think they have a lot more in common than Mormonism. They both have experience in the creative industry, enjoy making food from scratch, enjoy being mothers, and both do TikTok.”

Whatever the reason for their meeting and new friendship is, it would be reductive and patronising to assume that it was entirely based on the two most “controversial” things about them. Maybe Nara just really wanted to take some pictures at the farm she has admired in so many TikTok videos. Maybe this was all just an elaborate PR stunt because they knew the internet would have a meltdown the second they posted the footage. Or maybe they just milked some cows and talked about things completely unrelated to their jobs and online time, like keeping chickens.

Keep On Reading

By Charlie Sawyer

Nara Smith’s partnership with Marc Jacobs is everything you would expect it to be

By Abby Amoakuh

Ballerina, beauty queen and Mormon: Who is Ballerina Farm owner, Hannah Neeleman?

By Abby Amoakuh

Shocking recording reveals bias in controversial Times profile on Ballerina Farm Hannah Neeleman

By Charlie Sawyer

First look at $1 billion UK mini city where controversial HBO Harry Potter series will be filmed

By Eliza Frost

Black cat boyfriends are in to replace golden retriever boyfriends, but are they just emotionally unavailable men in disguise?

By Eliza Frost

Couples who meet online are less happy in love, new research finds

By Charlie Sawyer

Trump administration announces plan to offer US immigrants $1,000 to self-deport

By Charlie Sawyer

How rediscovering Nintendogs as an adult has helped my anxiety

By Eliza Frost

It now takes 20 hours of work a week to survive as a UK university student

By Eliza Frost

The swag gap relationship: Does it work when one partner is cooler than the other?

By Charlie Sawyer

Meghan Trainor is not responsible for eradicating fatphobia. But her fans also have a right to be upset

By Eliza Frost

Hailey Bieber just listed all the beauty treatments she swears by

By Charlie Sawyer

Will Greta Thunberg reach Gaza safely amid Israel’s aid blockade?

By Eliza Frost

Everything you need to know about Trump’s state visit, including that Epstein projection

By Abby Amoakuh

Campaigners call for gamers who carry out virtual rape in the metaverse to be charged as real-life sex offenders

By Eliza Frost

Controversial American Apparel owner just opened LA Apparel in NYC and TikTok girlies are flocking to shop

By Charlie Sawyer

Chris Brown is facing over 10 years in prison. Here’s how his violent past has led him here

By Charlie Sawyer

Sabrina Carpenter accused of centering men on controversial album cover

By Eliza Frost

Glen Powell’s GQ photoshoot is a satiric look at modern day males—and he’s in on the joke 

By Eliza Frost

How exactly is the UK government’s Online Safety Act keeping young people safe?