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Returning: Married at First Sight

10 more couples are getting committed in Nine's returning reality series.

Nine has confirmed season six of Married at First Sight returns the day after the Australian Open Men’s Final in late January.

The reality series (with commitment ceremonies) produced by Endemol Shine Australia will feature 10 new couples plus psychologists experts John Aiken, Mel Schilling and neuropsychotherapist Dr Trisha Stratford.

The first two weeks of episodes will once again screen ahead of official ratings.

This season you’ll bear witness to more love than ever before, with the infamous dinner parties more passionate, the commitment ceremonies more intense, and the relationships more tumultuous. If that wasn’t enough, the experts have introduced some surprising new elements that will rock the experiment and challenge not only the couples but the group as a whole.

Each couple will meet for the first time as they walk down the aisle on their wedding day, and from the moment they say “I do” their relationship is under the microscope as they experience the highs and lows of marriage at full speed.

Ten brides and ten grooms from across Australia, each with their own remarkable stories, will face more challenges and romantic hurdles than ever before.

Every couple will live together under the same roof, compare their experiences at explosive dinner parties, and bare all at the most confronting commitment ceremonies yet.

Some will flounder as the pressure mounts, others will flourish as they find the joy of love at first sight.

So it’s 20 strangers and 10 weddings. Who will be the ones to find true love?

7:30pm Monday January 28 on Nine.

9 Responses

  1. reality shows are only about people going on them to become a z list celebrity and people then fall over themselves to be near these so called celebrities

  2. why would people go on a reality tv show , other than to be somehow called a celebrity after it and end on other totally stupid reality shows #endrealitytv

    1. Actually, there was a series of articles on The New Daily about so-called “Reality Television” and just how “real” it is. And the third part of the article talked about these “management agencies” who decides who goes on these shows, including the lawsuit launched by Elyse Knowles from “The Block” in 2017 against her agent demanding he handed her back $60,000 as he apparently did nothing, despite her agent arranging everything, including the contract with Nine.

      I am not sure if I am allowed to publish the links in this thread, but it is an interesting read for those who want to know the truth about this so-called “reality television”.

    2. There are some shows that I would do out of a sense of competition or adventure (things like Survivor or Amazing Race) but I would never do anything where the point of the show is silly over-produced drama (like a MAFS, or Bachelor).

      I wish that more of the competition centric shows get produced but I agree that these silly soap-opera “reality” shows need to stop.

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