Hercy Miller Leads 14 Friends Into Calabasas Confidential May 29
Netflix’s calabasas confidential premieres on May 29 with 14 friends returning to their Calabasas homes for the summer, and Hercy Miller is one of the names pushing the show beyond a simple cast list. The series leans on celebrity-family access rather than a single breakout star, which is exactly the kind of setup that can turn a reality ensemble into a broader pop-culture fixture.
Hercy Miller, 2025
Hercy Miller enters the series after a run that already gave him a public profile outside television. He appeared on Master P’s Family Empire in 2015 with siblings Romeo, Cymphonique, Veno and Mercy, signed a $2 million NIL deal in 2021, and graduated from Southern Utah University in 2025 with a business degree.
He also asked the NCAA for one more year of eligibility after past injuries cost him court time, and that request for reinstatement was granted. Master P said in February that he was coaching his son at the University of New Orleans, so Miller’s arrival on Calabasas Confidential lands after basketball kept reshaping his public path.
Jodie Woods at 19
Jodie Woods is 19 years old, the youngest of the show’s stars, and her presence gives the series one of its clearest crossover hooks. She is the younger sister and roommate of Jordyn Woods, which places her directly inside the celebrity-social circle the show is built around.
Jodie has already framed her own response to public attention in blunt terms: “People will hate just because they weren’t in the same position as you growing up” and “I just don’t listen to people on the Internet. Like, I know who I am in real life.” That kind of line reads less like a soft-launch and more like a cast member who knows the audience will arrive with opinions.
Raine Michaels and Alexie Olivo
Raine Michaels brings another famous last name into the mix, with Bret Michaels advising her to follow her bliss. Her own joke — “So, are you OK with me doing FeetFinder then?” — gives the series a sharper edge than the usual family-adjacent reality setup.
Alexie Olivo adds the show’s cleanest self-description: “I’m the low-drama, vibe curator of the friend group” and “but somehow I always end up involved in the drama anyway.” The line sounds casual, but it also signals where this series gets its engine: 14 young adults, overlapping circles, and enough family recognition to keep every minor conflict legible from the first episode.
Calabasas carries the 91302 association and the Kardashians’ home-base aura, which is why a summer set there still reads like a defined entertainment lane rather than just another group hangout show. If the cast delivers even half the family crossovers implied here, May 29 should be enough to tell whether Netflix has a one-off ensemble or a repeatable reality format on its hands.