Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay: Peeling Back the Polished Façade of a Powerful Faith

Bravo’s newest limited series, Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay, premieres Tuesday, Nov. 11 at 9:45/8:45c, promising a raw and riveting look at the unspoken realities behind the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay: Peeling Back the Polished Façade of a Powerful Faith

Where to Watch Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay

If you’ve cut the cable cord but crave Bravo’s signature blend of glamour and grit, you’ve got options.

Live Stream Options

You can catch the premiere live on Fubo, DIRECTV, or Sling all of which offer free trials or short-term passes.

Fubo starts at $84.99/month after a free trial and includes over 100 live channels with unlimited DVR.

DIRECTV Stream, beginning at $89.99/month, brings Bravo hits plus curated genre packs that trim out the fluff.

Sling, the budget-friendly pick at $45.99/month, is now offering new day and weekend passes starting at just $4.99, making it ideal for casual viewers.

Next-Day Streaming

If patience is your virtue, Surviving Mormonism will also be available to stream on Peacock the following day Wednesday, Nov. 12.

Peacock’s plans start at $7.99/month, giving subscribers access to not just Bravo favorites but also blockbuster films and originals like The Traitors, Poker Face, and Twisted Metal.

What Awaits in the First Episode

The premiere episode doesn’t waste time easing in. Heather Gay steps directly into the heart of her story exploring the spiritual unraveling that led her away from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Like Gay's, his story emphasizes the price of quiet and the bravery needed to break it.

What the Series Promises

Across its three episodes, Surviving Mormonism isn’t just about Heather Gay it’s about the people whose lives have been quietly reshaped by doctrine, secrecy, and shame. Gay meets with former members across America, creating space for voices long overlooked or silenced.

According to Bravo’s press release, the series “fractures the church’s seemingly perfect veneer to expose the secrets kept behind closed doors.” It dives into controversial and outdated practices, amplifying the stories of those who were harmed and empowering them to seek both healing and change.

For Gay, this is more than a TV project, it's a reckoning. A spiritual postscript. A way to turn pain into purpose while inviting others to question what lies beneath appearances that once felt unshakable.

The Takeaway

Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay is equal parts confessional, exposé, and cultural study, a brave unmasking of a faith system that shaped her, wounded her, and ultimately propelled her toward self-liberation.

Whether you’re tuning in for the drama, the truth-telling, or the deeply human unraveling at its center, Bravo’s new series might just become one of the year’s most talked-about deep dives into faith, identity, and the cost of belonging.