TikTok IT-girl Alix Earle is set to have a reality show released later this year about her life, including her “modern family” and friends, such as her sister and fellow creator, Ashtin Earle.
The docu-series was first announced on Jan. 21 via a shared post on both Netflix and Earle’s Instagram accounts, featuring a short promotional video of her standing outside the Netflix building, talking to her dad, who is also her manager.
The video ends with Earle saying, “What’s the worst that can happen?”
Netflix stated that this show documents the “real-time messiness of a young woman in transition.”
“My relationship with my followers has always felt really personal because I’ve been sharing my life the same way I would with my best friends,” Earle said. “With this show, I want it to feel like you’re even more in it with me, in a way that’s real and not curated. The goal is not to be someone different on camera. It’s to show more of who I already am, and who my family really is. The fun, the messy, the growth, while capturing the way we help each other through it all.”
Earle shot to fame during her junior year at the University of Miami with her popular and authentic Get Ready with Me TikTok videos. She now has 8.3 million followers on the platform. Her success has led to her appearance as a contestant and finalist on Dancing with the Stars, and she doesn’t plan on leaving TV anytime soon with this new reality show.
Fans and fellow creators are buzzing, leaving comments on her TikTok announcement and Instagram post, with many jokingly dubbing her family “the next Kardashians.”
Interestingly, the same production company behind The Kardashians, Fulwell Entertainment, is also producing Earle’s reality show.
Although Earle and her family are excited about this new chapter and letting fans see their dynamic in a longer format, Earle admits she’s also nervous.
“I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t a little scary,” Earle said. “I’m so used to being in control of what I share and what I keep private, so having cameras around in moments I normally wouldn’t post is definitely an adjustment. But the real, human moments are what connected me to my audience in the first place. If letting people in even more makes someone feel less alone, or even just makes them laugh, then it’s worth it.”

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