Some are calling it the worst dinner party in MAFS history.
And now I know why.
What aired on Wednesday night wasnât just dramatic television. It was a cruel and calculated bid for ratings â and according to the bride at the centre of it all, Brook Crompton, it should never have been broadcast at all.
Behind insults about bad hair extensions and cheap Target boots lies a far bigger story â one involving formal complaints, legal letters, and a bitter dispute over duty of care.
This wasnât just messy. It was disturbing.
After Dinner Party 2, Brook sent several written complaints to the production team, raising concerns about their duty of care.

What aired on Wednesday night wasnât just dramatic television. It was a cruel and calculated bid for ratings â and according to the bride at the centre of it all, Brook Crompton, it should never have been broadcast at all (Pictured with her MAFS husband Chris Nield)

Some viewers are describing Wednesday nightâs dinner party as the worst in Married At First Sight history â and now I understand why (pictured: Brook Crompton at the dinner party in question)

Behind insults about bad hair extensions and cheap Target boots lies a far bigger story â one involving formal complaints, legal letters, and a bitter dispute over duty of care. (Bride Stella Mickunaite pictured at the dinner party)
In an email dated November 4, she wrote:Â âI was in no state to be filmed while intoxicated.â
She argued that production failed to properly assess her fitness to participate in filming after consuming alcohol prior to entering the dinner party.
âIf a participant arrives having consumed alcohol prior to filming, it is the responsibility of production to ensure theyâre fit to appear on camera,â the email continued.
She described âa lack of appropriate assessment or interventionâ and called the situation âdeeply concerning.â
When her complaint was rejected, Brook escalated the issue by sending a cease-and-desist, requesting that all footage from Dinner Party 2 be completely removed rather than just softened or edited.
The production team responded, stating they have âsystems and processesâ in place, including staff holding Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA)Â certification and careful monitoring of alcohol consumption.
They admitted they were aware Brook had brought a bottle of champagne right before the dinner party and referenced written communication advising she should only consume two glasses within a two-and-a-half-hour period.

In an email dated November 4, Brook wrote: âI was in no state to be filmed while intoxicated.â She argued that production failed to properly assess her fitness to participate in filming after consuming alcohol prior to entering the dinner party

The production team responded, stating they have âsystems and processesâ in place, including staff holding Responsible Service of Alcohol (RSA) certification and careful monitoring of alcohol consumption

Alissa (pictured) was left in tears on the night
Production further stated that when Brook entered the dinner party, she showed âno clear signs of intoxication physically or verballyâ and showed no signs of impairment in her pre-dinner interview.
Therefore âno exception to standard post-production proceduresâ was warranted. In other words, the episode was going to air.
âI understand that you and the production team have a duty to protect yourself and the show. But I also have a duty to protect myself and my wellbeing,â Brook responded in a further email.
âI take this matter very seriously and expect the same level of accountability and duty of care on production going forward.â
Perhaps production should have heeded Brookâs warnings, because what aired on Wednesday night will go down in MAFS history â and raises serious questions about Channel Nineâs duty of care for contestants.
I reached out to Channel Nine for comment but at the time of publication, hadnât heard back.
Right before the dinner party began, Brookâs husband Chris Nield and the rest of the cast believed she had exited the experiment permanently. Instead, she turned up unexpectedly, declaring she had âunfinished businessâ.
âIâm not gonna let my b***hes fight some other b***hes by themselves,â she announced as she took her seat.
From there, things spiralled.

Perhaps production should have heeded Brookâs warnings, because what aired on Wednesday night will go down in MAFS history â and raises serious questions about Channel Nineâs duty of care for contestants (Bride Rebecca Zukowski is pictured)

The irony was difficult to ignore. This is the same bride who previously expressed outrage at comments made about womenâs physical appearance during casting footage â a contradiction relationship expert John Aiken himself labelled âironicâ
The feud that began during the Red Flag/Green Flag challenge â where accusations of being âfakeâ and participating in a âshow-manceâ were first thrown around â reignited with force.
Gia Fleur escalated first, throwing insults at Stella Mickunaite. âBarking babe, thatâs lovely,â she said. âWhy donât you go back in your kennel, babe?â
The wording struck a nerve, echoing last yearâs controversial âmuzzle your womanâ comment.
Then Brook joined in.
âHey babe, while youâre at it, get the stripper boots off babe! Get the stripper boots off. If youâre gonna buy stripper boots, buy 100 per cent lamb, donât buy faux-leather⊠Seriously, whereâd you get them from? Tar-Jay?â
It wasnât playful shade â it was deliberate humiliation.
The irony was difficult to ignore. This is the same bride who previously expressed outrage at comments made about womenâs physical appearance during casting footage â a contradiction relationship expert John Aiken himself labelled âironic.â
Alissa Fayâs attempt to diffuse things was met with venom, with Brook yelling: âAlissa, shut up! Shut up Alissa, you ratchet idiot!â
The insults escalated â âfake,â âloser,â âf***ing lame b***hâ.
Visibly shaken, Alissa pleaded: âIâm done with your bullying. Iâm done. This is enough⊠Iâm not everyoneâs cup of tea, leave me alone.â
But nothing could silence Brook and her cronies. It was deeply uncomfortable to watch.
After years covering this franchise, Iâve seen dinner parties implode â wine flying, secrets detonating, marriages combusting on air. This one wasnât explosive entertainment; it was simply ugly.
What makes this backlash especially notable is its reach beyond the current cast. Former bride Awhina Rutene posted bluntly:â This is not an edit, this is them. You canât blame production when the words are coming directly out of your mouth, this is your character.â
Ankita Karungalekar, who exited the experiment after scandal-related allegations with her groom, Micah Lomu, admitted she tuned in after receiving âso many DMs.â
âWhat I saw was incredibly disrespectful and hurtful⊠Honestly, the episode shouldnât have been aired.â
Former bride Rhi Disljenkovic called the behaviour âvile.â
âNever seen anything like it. How can anyone be backing this? Why is no one speaking up?â
And Ashleigh, perhaps most ominously, posted: âGia and Brookeâs unaired footage is so much worse. Watch them blame the âeditâ.â
That comment takes on new meaning given Brookâs formal claim that she was intoxicated and her demand to have the footage pulled. While Brook insists she should never have been allowed to enter the room in that state, former brides argue the behaviour speaks for itself, regardless of editing.
Production maintains protocols were followed; Brook says they were not. Viewers are now calling it the worst dinner party in the showâs history. This is no longer just a feud between brides â itâs a dispute over duty of care.
And once a participant claims they were too intoxicated to be filmed â and raises that concern before broadcast â airing the footage anyway stops being just dramatic television and crosses a line.
Speaking to me this week, Alessandra Rampolla didnât just defend this yearâs Married At First Sight edit â she all but suggested some contestants should be thanking their lucky stars.
âI think what weâre seeing is absolutely accurate,â she told me matter-of-factly.
âI think everything has been absolutely fair and oftentimes very kind to everybody involved.â
Kind? Let that sink in.
Because if youâve been watching this season unfold â the tears, the tantrums, the tension so thick you could cut it with a knife â youâd be forgiven for thinking certain cast members had already been exposed at their absolute worst.
According to Alessandra, we havenât even scratched the surface.
âOf course thereâs always so much that is missed,â she added, hinting that what ends up on the cutting-room floor might be just as explosive as what makes it to air.
And in a pointed clarification, she insisted: âI would not say itâs been worse than what we actually all lived.â
Translation? What youâre seeing isnât some Frankenstein edit stitched together for shock value. If anything, itâs a polished version.
For a show regularly accused of villain edits and dramatic manipulation, thatâs a bold claim. And coming from someone who sat through every raw, unfiltered moment in the experiment, it carries weight.
If this is the âkindâ version, I wouldnât want to see the uncut one.
Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-15571905/MAFS-INSIDER-leaked-emails-Channel-Nine-dont-want-you-Brook-sent-legal-letter-begging-dinner-party-hell-pull-air-producers-response-shock-you.html