A Courageous, Culture-Shaking Triumph
Surviving Mormonism and exposing Faith isn’t just a docuseries — it’s a seismic cultural moment. Heather Gay has delivered one of the most fearless, unflinching, and emotionally devastating reality-driven investigations in recent memory.
From the very first episode, it’s clear this series is operating on an entirely different wavelength. Gay steps into territory most public figures avoid, amplifying voices that have spent years—sometimes decades—feeling unheard, dismissed, or pressured into silence. The credibility of this series rests not on sensationalism, but on the raw honesty and emotional clarity of the people who share their stories. Their accounts are delivered with a level of vulnerability that hits like a punch to the chest.
Heather Gay proves herself to be an extraordinary guide: fearless in the questions she asks, empathetic in the way she listens, relentless in her pursuit of truth
Her insider perspective gives the series a depth that outsiders could never achieve. She understands the culture, the expectations, the pressures — and that makes her willingness to confront these issues feel not just brave, but revolutionary.
The series tackles heavy, controversial subjects — including allegations of abuse, ignored reports, conversion therapy, and the rigid demands of influencer-style perfection — with precision and moral clarity. It never exploits. It illuminates. It gives language to experiences many have struggled to articulate.
By the end of the third episode, one thing becomes unmistakably clear: This is a powerful, necessary piece of storytelling that challenges the silence surrounding institutional harm and cultural conformity. It doesn’t attack faith. It calls for accountability, compassion, and change. And it does so with profound humanity.
In a media landscape saturated with empty noise, Exposing Faith stands out as a courageous, culture-shifting triumph — the kind of series that doesn’t just spark conversation, but demands it. This three part series although compulsive watching, gave me a deep feeling of the pain the people abused by the very place they sought trust in. And after watching this series, I’m left with one overwhelming question that I can’t shake:
How do so many intelligent, good-hearted people continue to buy into a system that, for some, has caused such deep harm?
It’s hard for me to understand how an institution can hear these stories and still choose silence — especially when that silence is offered in the name of God. The contrast between the faith people are searching for and the responses they receive is heartbreaking.
This series makes it impossible to ignore that tension. It forces us to confront not just the stories themselves, but the painful quiet that often follows them. And for me, that silence is the most difficult part to comprehend.