Sometimes the best relationships are the ones you never saw coming. Just ask Aspyn Ovard, the 30-year-old influencer and star of the upcoming Hulu series Mormon Wives: OC, who found herself in a polyamorous relationship with married couple Briana and Billy Davis—despite having sworn off men entirely after her 2024 divorce from Parker Ferris.
On her appearance on Becca Moore’s For the Girls podcast on Wednesday, July 1, Ovard walked through how her unconventional romance unfolded. It started casually, she explained, when Briana—who was exploring her sexuality within her open marriage—introduced Ovard to Billy. The connection was immediate and genuine, but nobody was shopping for a throuple situation.“It didn’t start off like that,”Ovard said.“They weren’t looking for a third person.”What began as a low-pressure dynamic between the three of them gradually evolved into something deeper, something Ovard describes as having“just fallen into my lap.”
What makes her story genuinely compelling isn’t the polyamory angle itself—it’s the honesty about how it happened. Ovard isn’t evangelizing the lifestyle or pretending it’s for everyone.“I wouldn’t go around [telling others],‘Oh my God, you definitely need to do this,'”she said.“You can’t seek it out.”That kind of grounded, matter-of-fact approach stands in sharp contrast to how these conversations often play out in media. She’s also clear-eyed about Billy’s role in her shift:“He literally is the best. I didn’t know guys like him could exist. He just literally changed my life.”For someone who’d closed the door on dating men, that’s saying something.
The relationship sparked dating rumors between Ovard and Briana back in October 2025, but she didn’t publicly confirm the throuple until March 2026. What’s notable is how she frames it now—not as a labels-and-rules arrangement, but as a partnership with a“pretty equal dynamic”and no“weird rules.”She’s moved past terminology:“I have referred to Bri as my girlfriend, obviously, if I was referencing her online in the past. It’s not that word doesn’t fit, but I definitely think of them as partners. Labels are just, like, such an internet thing.”
The relationship will play out on screen when Mormon Wives: OC premieres on Hulu later this year, alongside her co-parenting dynamic with Ferris and his own feelings about her new partnership. Ovard’s already defended her casting on the show despite not being married or currently practicing—she grew up in Utah, spent nearly nine years in a young Mormon marriage, and carries those cultural fingerprints. She’s not claiming credentials she doesn’t have. She’s just living her life, publicly, and letting people draw their own conclusions about what that means.

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Ava Hart
Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.





