Octomom puts herself -- and her kids -- back in the spotlight

photo credit: AP Photo/Nick Ut
photo credit: AP Photo/Nick Ut

The ink is barely dry on the multi-year reality TV deal Nadya Suleman inked with U.K. company Eyeworks last month. Now, Fox TV has announced that it will air a two-hour special on the single mom of 14 as soon as next week.

Why do we keep extending her 15 minutes of fame?

The program will use footage originally shot by Radar Online, which was reportedly cited by the California Labor Commission recently for having violated child labor laws by failing to get the proper permits and by videotaping Suleman's infant octuplets for too long. Fox says its Aug. 19 special will be made up of "never-before-seen" footage, some from as far back as the octuplet's birth in January.

I'm no fan of reality TV shows -- especially ones involving kids -- but this seems even worse to me, somehow. At least there's some kind of scripting, some sort of lesson, no matter how flimsy, when it comes to most so-called reality TV. This is just a clips reel of outtakes that weren't fit for consumption when they were shot by a website months ago. Aside from the train-wreck curious, voyeuristic aspect of it, what's the point?

When news broke of her reality deal in July, I felt sorry for her. Of course she needs to earn money to take care of her kids, and how many ways are there, really, for a single mom of 14 kids to do that? Her kids will earn about $250,000 altogether from the Eyeworks agreement (no word on how much Suleman herself will get from the deal) and Fox says they will "set aside a six-figure sum for Suleman's children" for this two-hour production, even though they're not legally obligated to pay them. That's better than using food stamps and state aid, or providing for her children with money from her student loans, right? Her kids will earn about $250,000 altogether from the Eyeworks agreement (no word on how much Suleman herself will get from the deal) and Fox says they will "set aside a six-figure sum for Suleman's children" for this two-hour production, even though they're not legally obligated to pay them.

Still... I get the feeling that this isn't just about the money, anymore. It's about celebrity. And I'm not sure who's most to blame. Suleman, for selling out her kids? Fox TV, for ordering the special? The media, for writing about and promoting it? Or the rest of us, for wanting to watch?

Lylah M. Alphonse writes about juggling career and parenthood at
The 36-Hour DayandWork It, Mom!,is the Child Caring columnist for Boston.com/Moms, and blogs atWrite. Edit. Repeat.