
An unhealthy focus on sex - Married at First Sight UK insiders on show's 'toxic' culture
An unhealthy focus on sex - Married at First Sight UK insiders on show's 'toxic' culture37 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleNoor Nanji ,Culture correspondentandGeorgia MacPherson , PanoramaBBCSenior...
Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: An unhealthy focus on sex - Married at First Sight UK insiders on show's 'toxic' culture37 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleNoor Nanji ,Culture correspondentandGeorgia MacPherson , PanoramaBBCSenior staff on Married at First Sight UK had an "unhealthy" focus on whether cast members were having sex, former workers on the show have told News. Producers would deliberately try to make contestants angry or upset for the sake of generating watchable drama, they say. The former workers on the Channel 4 show have spoken to the following a Panorama investigation into Married at First Sight UK (MAFS UK).
Two former cast members say they were raped by their on-screen partners, and a third alleged a non-consensual sex act. Their on-screen partners have denied all the allegations against them. Lawyers for CPL, the production company which makes MAFS UK, say the latest allegations are from a small minority of former workers, and the company's "commitment to welfare...
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is evidenced by the high consecutive return rate of crew across the MAFS series". Channel 4 says contributor welfare is "always our primary concern across all productions". The fresh claims come after a difficult week for the show.
All episodes have been removed from Channel 4's streaming service, a major sponsor has pulled out, and the fate of the latest series - which has been filmed but not broadcast - is uncertain. 'Toxic from the top down'The format of MAFS UK sees single people agree to "marry" total strangers, after meeting for the first time at their mock weddings. But according to several of the workers we spoke to, there was an emphasis on sex from the outset of filming a new series.
Most of those we spoke to have requested to remain anonymous, as they still work in the TV industry. One, who is happy to be named - Soraya Spiers - calls the culture on the show "toxic from the top down". "On the wedding night, there's an expectation, for those of us who were working on the show, that you should get some sort of hint if the couples are going to sleep together," she tells News.
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"Even though they've only known each other for two seconds by that point. "Another former worker, who worked on MAFS UK for several years and attended multiple filmed set-piece events, says she raised concerns that some couples might not want to share a bed on the first night. "They were alone with a stranger, and they're not really married," she says.
She claims a senior member of the production team told her: "Don't you get it? We want them to sleep together. "Crew members made bets on who would sleep together first, says the former worker: "They would high five each other when did.
" The bets were not for money, she adds, but "it was clear to that this was all a joke". CPL's lawyers say the allegation that staff took bets on whether contestants would have sex "is not something which our client recognises at all".
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





