In a culture moment that’s less about tea and more about how modern blended families actually operate, Abby De La Rosa opened up about what life looks like co-parenting with Nick Cannon — and how the other mothers of his children fit (or don’t fit) into the day-to-day.
On a recent podcast appearance, Abby — who shares three kids with Cannon — revealed that while the children know their half-siblings and have spent time together, the grown-ups themselves don’t communicate with one another. There aren’t group chats, Sunday dinners, or “baby mama meet-ups.” Instead, she said, everyone lives separate lives and handles things on their own terms.
According to Abby, that dynamic might feel unusual to outsiders, but it actually creates a sense of structure for her: because she’s not interacting with the other mothers directly, it almost feels monogamous. Cannon, she explained, is the one who coordinates playdates and sibling time by asking the parents or sending nannies — not by having everyone in constant contact.
She also shared how she explains their unconventional family setup to the kids: instead of labels, she tells them something simple and honest — “Daddy loves many people. Daddy has a lot of love to give.” That approach reflects a shift in how some families are defining love, parenting, and connection outside traditional norms.
This isn’t just celebrity gossip — it’s a peek into how relationships, communication, and family structures are evolving in real life, especially when fame, blended families, and social media intersect. And that type of cultural shift — where people rethink what family means and how they make it work — is exactly the kind of story that feels like NEXT.

