NFL

How these NFL wives adjusted to life in the spotlight, surrounded by cameras

Rams starters Kenny Britt, Rodger Saffold and Lance Kendricks may be used to the limelight, but it took their wives some time to adjust to their glitzy Los Angeles zip code — especially with the cameras rolling.

“I don’t want to say it’s weird, but interesting to just have the cameras all around you,” Britt’s wife, Sabrina, told The Post of her experience shooting E!’s new docu-series, “Hollywood & Football.”

“But the beautiful thing about it is when you’re doing it with your family, your spouse, your kids, your friends, you forget the cameras are still there.”

Premiering Wednesday at 9 p.m., the series follows Britt and several members of the “Ram-ily,” including Danielle Kendricks, Asia Saffold, Bianca Harkey, Kila Reynolds and Melissa Hernandez, as they adapt to the Los Angeles lifestyle after the Rams relocated from St. Louis in the offseason. And given the team’s last-place finish at 7-9 in the NFC West last year, a change of scenery was welcome.

“‘New beginnings’ was kind of the motto of the whole move,” Britt said. “It’s a fresh start for the team, a fresh start for all of us in our personal lives.”

While wives Kendricks and Saffold viewed the move as a golden opportunity, Reynolds, the spouse of backup running back Chase Reynolds, didn’t know if the city of angels could be heavenly.

“Having older kids, I was nervous about how they would adjust to school and making new friends and all that,” Reynolds shared. “And so after the move, I was pleasantly surprised that they did really well.”

As for welcoming a camera crew into their home, Reynolds wasn’t sure what to expect.

“It was a little nerve-wracking for us because we are so private. Being filmed and opening your home, it’s always nerve-wracking,” she said. “We’re not perfect, so I guess I was a little bit nervous.”

Though Reynolds was “pleasantly surprised” in the end, Kendricks, the wife of tight end Lance, wanted the show to document an honest experience about life in the NFL.

“When we signed on to do the show, we sat down with the producers and said, ‘This will only work if it’s real.’ Our guys are not going to want to do anything that they wouldn’t do in real life,” Kendricks revealed. “They really did work with us and it was really cool to see it come to fruition.”

With WAG stardom in their near futures, don’t expect this “Hollywood” crew to go on social media tirades — a la Miko Grimes — anytime soon.

“I don’t have Twitter, but it’s probably a good thing I don’t because I’m very opinionated,” Kendricks said. “I think we’re smart enough to know what to say and know what not to say. And if we do say something, our husbands have to defend us or else.”