Moms - Season 1 [work] - Workin-
Kate joins a new mom’s group, "The Mommune," led by a smug, gluten-free, organic-everything guru (played perfectly by Mimi Kuzyk). The takedown of sanctimommy culture is vicious and satisfying. When Kate admits she fed her baby formula, the room gasps in horror.
While later seasons introduce new characters and more polished plots, Workin’ Moms - Season 1 is the syllabus. You need to see Kate wearing a diaper because of bladder weakness. You need to see Anne threaten a teenager with a hammer. You need to see Frankie cry in a supply closet.
, created by Catherine Reitman , burst onto the television scene in 2017 (originally on CBC in Canada before finding a massive global audience on Netflix), providing a necessary, unfiltered, and deeply comedic counter-narrative to the romanticized image of motherhood. Season 1 acts as a chaotic, high-stakes introduction to four women trying to have it all—a career, a marriage, and a newborn—only to realize that "having it all" often feels like losing everything. Workin- Moms - Season 1
Frankie, an eccentric real estate agent, provides the emotional heartbeat of the first season. She suffers from severe postpartum depression (PPD) and postpartum anxiety. While television historically sweeps PPD under the rug or treats it with extreme melodrama, Workin' Moms utilizes Frankie's character to portray the condition with painful accuracy, showing how it strains her relationship with her wife, Giselle, and detached her from her newborn. 4. Jenny Matthews (Jessalyn Wanlim)
The series centers around an unlikely friendship formed in a judgmental "Mommy and Me" group: Kate joins a new mom’s group, "The Mommune,"
The first season introduces us to four very different women navigating a judgmental "Mommy and Me" group in Toronto. Kate Foster, a high-flying PR executive, struggles to balance her competitive nature at work with the guilt of leaving her son. Her best friend Anne, a psychiatrist, deals with the unexpected news of a second pregnancy while trying to manage her defiant daughter. Meanwhile, Jenny faces a disconnect with her husband and her new role as a mother, and Frankie battles severe postpartum depression while trying to keep her real estate career afloat.
Workin' Moms wasn't just another comedy; it was an intimate look at the chaos of modern womanhood. While later seasons introduce new characters and more
The transition from maternity leave back to the corporate world is a turbulent period that television historically glossed over. In 2017, the Canadian sitcom Workin’ Moms changed that narrative. Created by and starring Catherine Reitman, the series premiered on CBC before finding a massive global audience on Netflix. Season 1 establishes the show’s signature blend of razor-sharp humor, raw vulnerability, and unapologetic honesty about modern motherhood.
Creator Catherine Reitman drew directly from her own experiences of returning to work six weeks after giving birth, channeling her own postpartum depression into the storyline 0.5.3. This provided an authenticity that many viewers felt was missing from mainstream media.
Created by Catherine Reitman and based largely on her personal experiences, Workin' Moms (Season 1)
A psychologist working from home who faces challenges with her rebellious daughter and an unplanned pregnancy. Frankie Coyne (Juno Rinaldi):