California Governor Gavin Newsom and his wife, filmmaker Jennifer Siebel Newsom, are facing mounting scrutiny after critics revealed how her politically themed documentaries were promoted inside California classrooms — with help from the very government her husband leads.
Siebel Newsom, founder of the nonprofit The Representation Project and the for-profit production company Girls Club Entertainment, has built a national audience for her films focused on gender politics, “toxic masculinity,” and economic inequality. But critics say the reach of those documentaries did not come solely from public demand. Instead, they argue, it came from a powerful political boost inside California’s education system.
The controversy centers on how Newsom’s state education apparatus repeatedly recommended Siebel Newsom’s films to schools.
According to tax filings and state documents, The Representation Project claimed as early as 2014 that its films and related curriculum were already being used in roughly 1,000 California public schools. The situation escalated after Newsom became governor in 2019, when California’s Board of Education promoted the films as recommended material in state health education guidelines.
Those guidelines, which later sparked fierce debate over lessons on gender identity and sexuality, specifically referenced Siebel Newsom’s projects.
The promotion continued in 2020 when the California Department of Education partnered with organizations including the governor’s Office of the First Partner — run by Siebel Newsom herself — to push “social-emotional learning” programs in struggling schools. Once again, her documentaries were recommended classroom content.
Gavin Newsom’s wife has some explaining to do.
Newsom’s wife pushed weird gender films into California classrooms
While paying herself a fortune, up to $300,000 annually.https://t.co/QQiXGab55m— EMPIntelligenceNet© (@Megavolts001) March 10, 2026
Critics say the arrangement created an obvious conflict of interest.
Assemblymember David Tangipa blasted the effort as ideological indoctrination at a time when California’s education system is already struggling academically.
“We’ve seen literacy rates at the lowest that we’ve ever had in the state. And we’ve seen math rates at the lowest we’ve ever had in the state,” Tangipa said.
“This is a very clear attempt to indoctrinate the next generation of Californians,” he added. “It’s a lot easier to control an uneducated group.”
State data paints a troubling academic picture. According to the California Assessment of Student Performance and Progress, 44 percent of California’s 11th graders failed to meet reading standards in 2024, while nearly 70 percent fell below proficiency in math.
Meanwhile, Siebel Newsom’s organizations were generating significant revenue from the same films entering schools. Her nonprofit licenses documentaries such as Miss Representation, The Mask You Live In, The Great American Lie, and Fair Play to schools, universities, and corporations. Licensing fees range from $49 to $1,500 depending on the screening arrangement.
Financial records show The Representation Project has earned more than $3 million through film sales and screenings. IRS filings indicate Siebel Newsom receives a salary of about $150,000 from the nonprofit, along with reimbursements that can push her annual compensation close to $300,000.
The films themselves frequently feature Gavin Newsom as a prominent voice. In Miss Representation and The Great American Lie, the governor appears alongside activists, academics, and Democratic politicians discussing gender inequality and economic policy.
In one moment from The Great American Lie, Newsom delivers a statement that critics say resembles a campaign speech more than neutral commentary.
“We have the ability to step up and solve big problems,” Newsom says in the film. “It’s just a question of prioritization, of political will.”
Gavin Newsom’s wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, is reportedly making up to $300K a year through a nonprofit pushing gender ideology in California schools.
Meanwhile, 44% of 11th graders can’t meet reading standards and nearly 70% fail math.pic.twitter.com/Vl1LlKR4Qs
— Brandon Straka #WalkAway (@BrandonStraka) March 10, 2026
Even the New York Times raised concerns about the project, describing The Great American Lie as “disingenuous” because the documentary never discloses that the director is married to a powerful Democratic governor who appears in the film.
The Representation Project’s teaching materials have also drawn criticism from parents. Some classroom exercises include a “Privilege Walk” activity that groups students based on identity characteristics such as race, gender, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status. Other lessons introduce middle school students to sexual orientation concepts using a chart known as the “Genderbread Person.”
Parents in several districts have also raised alarms about content. In one California district, an uncensored version of The Mask You Live In — containing profanity and references to pornography — was reportedly shown to middle school students by mistake.
Despite the backlash, Siebel Newsom’s films continue expanding their reach. According to a 2021 report from The Representation Project, the documentaries have been screened in more than 5,000 schools across all 50 states, reaching an estimated 2.8 million students.
Siebel Newsom is also working on another project. In a 2024 interview, she revealed she is preparing a new film centered on climate issues, describing it as a story about “Mother Earth and the feminine.”
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