‘Bad Moms’ let loose in raunchy Facebook groups

‘Bad Moms’ let loose in raunchy Facebook groups

There’s no filter on this social media platform.

Women are spilling all in new “Bad Moms” Facebook groups, where the conversations sound more like locker-room talk than school drop-off chatter.

“My husband and I just played life without children this morning … it was so quiet and full of sex,” a member posted on the “Bad Moms of Long Island” page, which has racked up 8,000-plus members since August.

It’s one of at least five local groups to form in the last year, inspired by the 2016 Mila Kunis comedy “Bad Moms,” in which mothers form a hard-partying clique to escape side-eye from pretentious, type-A stroller-pushers.

In “Bad Moms (uncensored),” a New Jersey woman told 6,800 fellow members: “My husband LOVES my boobs … BUT I’m breastfeeding still and I think it’s super weird if he plays with them or licks them. Am I just overthinking it?”

The comments poured in.

“My man is a weirdo,” another Bad Mom replied. “He wasn’t bothered by them leaking at all. He thought it was sexy.”

Bad moms dish on their sex lives — some even confess to two-timing their husbands — despite Facebook’s privacy issues. Many use their own Facebook profiles, with their real names and photos.

“Just got my husband to spend $100 on cheese, cured meats and olives for sex,” a Long Island mom bragged.

Tara Johnson of “Bad Moms of Long Island” said her group requires prospective members to fill out a questionnaire about where they live and if they have kids.

There’s also a strict rule: What happens in Bad Moms stays in Bad Moms. She once tossed a member for sharing a photo of another mom with a separate group.

Johnson, 46, founded her group with Jesse Curatolo, 29, because they were sick of bullying in other mommy spaces.

“Every other moms group has been a bad experience,” Johnson said. “Someone corrected my spelling once.”

In Queens, Gavriella Navarez founded “Bad Moms of Rockaway” last week.

“I wanted mothers to know that it’s OK not to be a cookie-cutter mom because motherhood is hard,” the parent of two said.

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