Brandi Rhodes Is Getting Her Own Reality Show — And It's a Long Time Coming
Brandi Rhodes has spent years being one of the most visible people in professional wrestling — not because of who she's married to, but because of what she's built. She's been an executive, an in-ring performer, a brand builder, a TV host, and an entrepreneur. Now, she's getting a platform that puts all of that front and center. On April 17, 2026, The Hollywood Reporter broke the news that Brandi Rhodes is developing a new reality docuseries titled All Rhodes, produced by Magilla Entertainment. The show will follow her life at "the center of family, fame and a rapidly expanding business empire."
For anyone who's followed Brandi's career, this isn't a celebrity-spouse vanity project. This is the next logical step for someone who has consistently outgrown whatever box people tried to put her in.
Who Is Brandi Rhodes? The Full Picture Beyond the WWE Spotlight
Brandi Rhodes is most frequently introduced as the wife of Cody Rhodes — currently the three-time Undisputed WWE Champion — but that framing undersells her by a significant margin. Before she was a wrestling executive or a business owner, she was Brandi Reed, a model and ring announcer who first joined WWE in 2011, working as a ring announcer and backstage correspondent on both Raw and SmackDown. That's where she met Cody Rhodes, and the two married in 2013.
When Cody departed WWE in 2016, Brandi followed, and together they became central figures in the independent wrestling circuit. When All Elite Wrestling launched in 2019, Brandi wasn't just along for the ride. She was appointed Chief Brand Officer — making her the first Black woman to hold an executive position in a major professional wrestling promotion. That's not a footnote. That's a milestone that belongs in the broader history of both sports entertainment and corporate diversity.
During her AEW tenure, she also competed as an in-ring performer, hosted segments, and co-starred with Cody in the TNT reality series Rhodes to the Top, which followed their lives during the whirlwind of AEW's early years. When the Rhodes family returned to WWE in 2022, Brandi stepped back from the executive and performer roles but didn't disappear. She currently hosts A Shot of Brandi on WWE's official YouTube channel, maintaining her media presence while building her business interests off-screen.
'All Rhodes': What We Know About the New Docuseries
According to reporting from Yahoo Entertainment, All Rhodes will be produced by Magilla Entertainment, and both Magilla and Brandi will be shopping the show to networks imminently. The working premise is straightforward but genuinely compelling: the series will chronicle Brandi's life managing the intersection of family, fame, and a business empire that's still actively growing.
Brandi is represented by AKA Talent Agency and Prototype Talent Agency — a dual representation setup that signals this is being pursued as a serious entertainment development, not a one-off side project. The involvement of two agencies typically means there's already infrastructure around pitching and deal-making, which suggests All Rhodes is closer to ready than a typical early-stage announcement.
Fightful's coverage of the announcement confirmed the title and production company details, noting the show's timing amid Brandi's growing entrepreneurial profile. No network home has been announced yet, but the "shopping imminently" language suggests that announcement could follow quickly.
Cody Rhodes' prominence as WWE Champion gives the show built-in awareness, but Brandi has been careful throughout her career to ensure her identity isn't entirely tethered to his. The title All Rhodes is clever precisely because it works on two levels — it's a family name, and it's also a declaration about Brandi's ambition. All roads lead to her, not just to the championship belt her husband carries.
Magilla Entertainment: Why This Production Partnership Matters
Magilla Entertainment is not a boutique vanity producer. They have a proven track record in the unscripted space, with credits including Moonshiners, Diesel Brothers, and Beachfront Bargain Hunt — all shows that found significant cable audiences and demonstrated staying power beyond their debut seasons. The company knows how to build reality franchises around strong personalities in specific lifestyle niches.
That expertise is directly relevant to what All Rhodes is trying to accomplish. Brandi isn't just a celebrity — she's a brand builder operating in multiple lifestyle verticals. Magilla's background in crafting personality-driven, aspirational lifestyle content makes them a natural fit for a show that needs to translate business ambition into watchable television.
It's worth noting that Magilla recently inked a deal with Adam Scherr — better known to wrestling fans as Braun Strowman — to launch a joint venture called Meat Castle Media. The company is clearly developing a strategy around professional wrestling personalities as lifestyle content creators, and Brandi Rhodes represents the most credentialed and multidimensional figure in that emerging niche. She brings executive experience, entrepreneurial activity, family narrative, and crossover recognition that Magilla can build a franchise around.
Brandi's Business Empire: Yoga Studios, Baby Boutiques, and Beyond
The "rapidly expanding business empire" language in the show's pitch isn't hyperbole. Brandi has built two distinct lifestyle brands that operate in genuinely different markets.
Naked Mind Yoga & Pilates is her fitness brand, positioned in the premium wellness space. Yoga and Pilates have both seen sustained growth in recent years as consumers prioritize mental and physical wellness, and a brand anchored by someone with Brandi's visibility and credibility has real market potential beyond its regional footprint.
Pinkerton's Baby & Kids is her children's boutique, a category that tends to skew heavily toward social media discovery and word-of-mouth. For a family with the public profile of the Rhodes household — including their daughter Liberty — a baby and kids retail brand has built-in storytelling that a docuseries can amplify enormously. Reality TV has a well-documented history of accelerating boutique brand growth; the genre functions as continuous advertising for the personalities at its center.
This is the core commercial logic of All Rhodes: the show isn't just entertainment, it's a platform that can drive real business outcomes for brands Brandi already owns. That makes it an unusually strong pitch to both networks (who get compelling content) and potential brand partners (who get access to an audience that's already bought into Brandi's lifestyle aesthetic).
From 'Rhodes to the Top' to 'All Rhodes': A Reality TV Evolution
Brandi and Cody's previous reality project, Rhodes to the Top, aired on TNT during their AEW years and offered a behind-the-scenes look at their lives while building the promotion. The show had genuine access — viewers saw real moments from their personal and professional lives, including the early days of their family and the pressures of co-running a wrestling organization. It was well-received by wrestling fans and demonstrated that the Rhodes family has real documentary charisma, not just promotional appeal.
All Rhodes represents a meaningful evolution from that format. Where Rhodes to the Top was built around wrestling as the central context, the new show appears to be positioning Brandi's broader life — her businesses, her identity, her ambitions independent of the wrestling world — as the primary subject matter. That's a deliberate creative choice, and it's the right one if the goal is to establish Brandi as a mainstream lifestyle figure rather than a wrestling-adjacent celebrity.
For context on how the WWE landscape looks right now, the Rhodes family is operating at the peak of Cody's career — and the broader WWE championship picture is as competitive as it's ever been. Brandi's show launching during this period gives it maximum visibility from the wrestling audience while also reaching general entertainment viewers who may only vaguely recognize the family name.
What This Announcement Really Means for Women in Wrestling Media
Brandi Rhodes becoming the first Black woman to hold an executive role in a major wrestling promotion was significant in 2019. A docuseries in 2026 that chronicles her post-executive entrepreneurial life is significant in a different way: it documents what happens after the glass ceiling gets broken.
The wrestling industry has historically done a poor job of leveraging the mainstream crossover potential of its women. The exceptions — personalities who successfully transitioned from ring to broader entertainment — have typically done it through acting (The Rock, John Cena, Batista) or through sheer persistent self-promotion. Brandi's path is different. She's not trying to become an actress. She's building businesses and a media presence around who she actually is, which is a more durable and authentic model.
Women like Becky Lynch have similarly carved out media identities beyond wrestling itself, and the appetite for that kind of crossover content is clearly there. All Rhodes, if it finds a network home, would add another significant data point to the argument that wrestling's female personalities are underserved by the entertainment industry's existing infrastructure.
The show is also a test case for whether lifestyle content built around wrestling personalities can travel beyond the hardcore fan base. Magilla's production history suggests they believe it can. Brandi's existing brand portfolio suggests she's already done the groundwork to make it possible.
FAQ: Brandi Rhodes and the 'All Rhodes' Reality Show
What is 'All Rhodes' about?
All Rhodes is a reality docuseries currently in development that will follow Brandi Rhodes' life as she navigates family, celebrity, and her growing portfolio of lifestyle businesses. Produced by Magilla Entertainment, the show is expected to be shopped to networks imminently as of April 2026. No premiere date or network home has been confirmed yet.
Who is Brandi Rhodes married to?
Brandi Rhodes is married to Cody Rhodes, the current three-time Undisputed WWE Champion. The two met when Brandi was working as a WWE ring announcer and Cody was an active WWE roster member. They married in 2013 and have a daughter, Liberty Iris Runnels Rhodes.
What businesses does Brandi Rhodes own?
Brandi operates two lifestyle brands: Naked Mind Yoga & Pilates, a wellness and fitness brand, and Pinkerton's Baby & Kids, a children's boutique. Both businesses are expected to be featured prominently in the All Rhodes docuseries.
What was Brandi Rhodes' role at AEW?
Brandi Rhodes served as Chief Brand Officer at All Elite Wrestling from its launch in 2019 until the Rhodes family's return to WWE in 2022. In that role, she was recognized as the first Black woman to hold an executive position in a major professional wrestling promotion. She also competed as an in-ring performer during her AEW tenure.
Has Brandi Rhodes done reality TV before?
Yes. Brandi and Cody Rhodes previously starred together in Rhodes to the Top, which aired on TNT during their AEW years. The show offered a documentary look at their lives and careers. All Rhodes would be Brandi's first solo-focused reality project, with a broader lifestyle and entrepreneurship framing rather than a wrestling-centric narrative.
Who is producing 'All Rhodes'?
The show is being produced by Magilla Entertainment, the production company behind Moonshiners, Diesel Brothers, and Beachfront Bargain Hunt. Magilla has been expanding into wrestling-adjacent content, having also recently partnered with Adam Scherr (Braun Strowman) for a joint venture called Meat Castle Media.
The Bottom Line: Brandi Rhodes Is Playing a Long Game
The announcement of All Rhodes is generating buzz because of the Cody Rhodes name recognition, and that's fine — name recognition is a legitimate asset in the entertainment industry. But the more interesting story is what Brandi has quietly constructed while that name was making headlines elsewhere.
She's built two businesses. She's maintained a media presence through her WWE YouTube show. She's parlayed executive experience from a historic role into something that looks increasingly like a standalone media career. And now she's attached herself to a production company with a real track record and two talent agencies who presumably believe there's a deal to be made.
The wrestling world produces celebrities constantly, but most of them fade when the spotlight moves. Brandi Rhodes has spent the last several years doing the unglamorous work of building something that doesn't depend on the spotlight to survive. All Rhodes is the moment where that work gets its own platform — and based on the infrastructure already in place, it's a project worth watching closely when it finds its network home.