Nannies take on sizable family
Dave Brooks
Television producers for the popular Fox show “Nanny 911” taped their
season finale in Huntington Beach last week.
About 60 crew members, producers and nannies took over a small
cul-de-sac in southeast Huntington Beach to document the life of the
nationally known Silcock family.
The episode is scheduled to air at 8 p.m. May 16 on Fox. Network
executives are planning a robust promotional campaign for the
episode, which will air during TV sweeps week. Entertainment news
shows “Extra!” and “Entertainment Tonight” were granted access to the
tapings and plan to preview the show in coming weeks.
“Nanny 911” normally sends its famous trio of nannies into problem
homes to help rein in poorly behaved children, but the season finale
taped in Huntington Beach will have the nannies attempting to care
for the 24 disabled boys adopted by Ann Belles and her disabled
husband James Silcock, both age 42.
The Silcocks have been featured in dozens of national media
reports, from USA Today to “Good Morning America.” They’re famous for
legally adopting disabled boys and raising them in their suburban
home. All boys adopted by the couple carry the Silcock last name and
most attend public schools and local sports programs.
Their nine-bedroom home is run with pinpoint precision; a staff of
14 paid and volunteer adults coordinate a busy schedule of meals,
baths and medical support. The couple have taken in children from all
over the world including Romania, Estonia and Russia, but many of the
boys were born in California. Money to run and renovate the home,
Silcock said, comes from Social Security, the Adopted Assistance
Program, Medi-Cal and Medicaid.
Belles was inspired to be an adoptive mom after seeing the movie
classic “Oliver” as a child. Belles was unavailable to comment, but
in a 2003 interview with the Independent, she said: “Doing something
like adoption, being a foster parent, really is a lifestyle. For Jim
and I, it is a lifestyle that is very, very rewarding.”
Fox producers are trying to keep the details of the show under
wraps, but the basic premise of the episode differs from the typical
Nanny 911 show. Instead of sending the nannies to a dysfunctional
family, the famous sitters will be charged with a caring for a
relatively healthy family, albeit a very large healthy family.
“All three nannies participated in the taping of the show because
of the extraordinary circumstances of the family,” Fox spokesperson
Jill Hudson said.
During the taping, Belles and Silcock vacationed in an undisclosed
location while the nannies took a stab at caring for the large
family.
“The parents have never been away by themselves,” Hudson said.
Crews were on site taping the show from March 26 to April 5 and
paid the city nearly $4,000 in fees, according to their film permit.
Neighbor Heidi Clements, 24, said the taping seemed to go pretty
smoothly, although “parking was horrible,” she said.
“I actually saw several of the nannies when I was outside,” she
said. “It was pretty cool, because I had just finished watching the
episode on TV, and there they were, sitting in a car. One of them
waved back at me.”
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