Evelyn
Rupert
Tahnee and Ollie
Cam
Lyndall
looks
Bronte
Alyssa
MAFS
Layton
Melinda
MAFS dinner party
MAFS
experts and producers convince people to stay. At this rate, we’re going to have no one left for final vows.
In the lead-up to the CC, and are being cute. So are . and ? Well Lyndall cute, but their burning relationship? Not so much.
They’re still assessing their future after Cam said he would move for love, but he wouldn’t make compromises on his career for Lyndall. The math ain’t mathing.
is teasing some kind of mental clarity, which she likely had all along but just pretended she didn’t for maximum effect.
thinks she gets grilled every week by the experts and if it’s continuously happening, maybe you’re continuously making questionable actions, sis? Just a thought.
and are also in deep shit. Last we saw, Melinda stormed off at the and these two just keep going around circles, don’t they? I’m tired.
Melinda says if she was watching a friend in a relationship like the one she’s in, she’d tell ’em to GTFO. Oh dear. That’s a harsh reality, isn’t it?
They’re up first to the Ouch Couch. Show some vulnerability, Layton, please.
Melinda explains that they’re up shit cheek because of the couple swap challenge.
Melinda explains that she felt judged by Layton for wanting to take part in the couple swap. She is getting upset and says that she feels doubt, worry and judgement in this relationship.
When he didn’t return back to their SKYE Suites apartment, she felt that her feelings were unconsidered. She also felt many other things, including but not limited to:
expert tells Layton to let go or whatever it is that he is holding onto — likely a manila folder and several investment properties — and say sorry. Layton follows our king’s orders and then chooses to stay “with two exes”. BAHAHA.
Look when you say “two exes” out loud it sounds bad, doesn’t it? He put stay with two — is that better? An upgrade from an underline last week and I can’t believe this is a sentence that I am writing.
Melinda is saying a speech to make us second-guess her decision, but chooses to stay with XOXO.
Layton thinks she chucked in some hugs to one-up him and then proceeds to smell her cheek.
Tahnee and Ollie are up and this will take three seconds, no doubt.
Wait, what’s happening? Ollie was weird after spending time with Lyndall? Apparently he was acting really passive after the couple swap.
Ollie says the challenge made him feel insecure about whether or not he is good enough for Tahnee, and whether or not he has been good enough as a partner. And then he says he feels like that a lot in life. Two thoughts: a) my heart and b) SAME.
They stay.
expert tells Tahnee that she was shit at pretending she was going to do anything other than stay.
Before they leave, John gives the best speech of the entire season thus far.
“Hey Ollie,” John starts.
“You said you felt insecure and that you didn’t feel good enough.”
“Everybody can feel that way at times. But not everyone has the ability to say it,” John continues.
“It’s brought you closer and everyone can learn from that. So well done. If you feel that way in the future, tell her those words and she’ll come closer, rather than stepping away. But well done, that was courageous.”
Could not have said it better myself. Love that from Ollie, love that from King John.
Tahnee, our sweet angel, tells Ollie that he is more than good enough for her and she doesn’t want him to feel that way. I AM OBSESSED WITH THESE TWO. Look at them communicating! Look at them expressing affection and deep insecurities! More relationships like this, please.
He thinks Tahnee is “absolute tops” and the experts are chuffed with themselves for this creation. Remember when Tahnee said she was “chuffed” with the night her and Ollie consummated? What a journey we’ve been on.
Evelyn the Powerpuff fembot is in the house with her inaudible mumbler, Rupert.
She tells the experts she would like to make a statement before turning to… Bunnings Douche ()?
“Yes, Evelyn?” he responds.
“I think everyone can agree that you’ve made comments about everyone on this couch in regards to their relationship,” she tells him.
“Everyone on this couch has made comments about us. That’s what you signed up for, love,” he responds in the most condescending fashion.
“You’re a grown man, talking like that to females,” Melinda says.
“Don’t play the sex card, grow up,” he bites back.
I imagine he meant to say sexist? I’ve listened back three times and it sounds more like sex, though.
Queen Evelyn is quite upset now and says that she finds it hurtful how much of a kick Bunnings Douche gets out of the other couples’ issues. She feels like this week he was taking aim at Rupert and her.
expert tells them to wrap it up. But I also think she wants to do the chicken dance?
OK, back to their actual relationship. Evelyn wants to be “courted” by Rupert. She says if someone didn’t take her on dates and showcase chivalry on the outside she would’ve called it quits by now.
“Quite frankly, I just feel under-appreciated by Rupert and undervalued.”
OOFT.
Rupert says that typically he would take someone out to drinks if he liked them, but he’s been scared he would be rejected in this experiment. Is taking someone out to drinks, courting? Tinder dates that you’ve never met before get that?
Mel says home stays will be good for this courting issue? Um, how? He can take her for a stroll in his backyard? Mel also thinks the word “courted” is a bit old for someone as young as Evelyn to be using.
Something very weird is happening right now where Mel is roleplaying both Evelyn and Rupert and their use of the word “court”.
She wants them to use “vibing” instead of “court”, but wants to know if that’s how “the kids say it”.
They stay.
Evelyn thanks Mel and Layton for sticking up for her during the Bunnings Douche debacle.
She then mouths “and fuck you” to the tradie himself and it’s truly beautiful areas.
Cam and Lyndall are up and it’s nice and awkward, isn’t it? I’m glad his hair is up, though. Cam tells the experts about his upcoming time “out bush”.
Oh, he wants to compromise and come up with solutions! And he’s saying he can “sneak a week off” and that his career isn’t a “forever thing”.
Lyndall lists the many things their relationship struggles with, including the elements needed for a long-distance relationship.
Alessandra asks the obvious question of why they haven’t talked about this until now. Cam says Lyndall doesn’t speak up. Lyndall says she doesn’t do that because she’s “scared” of his reaction. He doesn’t know where this Shiela got that idea from, hey! She doesn’t feel like a priority. And he feels like he’s opened up!
Lyndall “thinks yes” but his approach is weird and a bit black and white. Why don’t they look at each other when they talk? Cam wants to show off his way of life so he’ll stick around another week, it seems. She thinks they might not end up together but she still wants to stay this week??
Alyssa and Prince Eric () are up and I’m already stressed.
Duncan says he’s had his hardest day here this last week where he felt rejected and broken. He also says he cried over the situation.
Alyssa didn’t know this and of course she has feelings about it.
“Alyssa, if I may interject, he’s telling you now,” Alessandra points out.
“He’s telling ” Alyssa responds.
Alessandra tells Alyssa she should rethink how she responds to new information like this.
“If he’s met with questions as to why he did or didn’t, my sense is next time he might just not tell you,” Alessandra warns.
Mum’s crying.
She says that when she left to see her son, it had nothing to do with Prince Eric. She also says she wasn’t in the right headspace to give him her full attention and compassion.
Prince Eric says he doesn’t have an issue with this, he just wanted to let her know how he was feeling.
Decision time. They both stay but Alessandra says their decisions don’t match their energy. She lets them go regardless.
They’ve saved the worst for last: Bronte and Bunnings Douche.
Mel jumps right in with a lie and says she missed Bronte at the dinner party last night.
Bronte lies right back. “I know I was very sad that I wasn’t there,” Bronte replies. While literally smiling.
Mel wants to know where the relationship’s at right now. Bunnings Douche doesn’t know BUT he know that a lot of work would need to be done for this to survive. Oh, he’s going to take some responsibility, apparently. This should be interesting.
“I’ve held Bronte accountable for dealbreakers and boundaries that I didn’t put in place,” he says. Interesting way to be accountable but sure.
His boundary? If a partner leaves in a moment of anger, it’s a dealbreaker.
Now don’t come at me, but I have real issues if someone leaves rather than talking things out too. But what he’s saying is insinuating that she hasn’t made an effort in this relationship and has instead decided to just leave. This is not true.
Bunnings Douche has issues with being called things like “manipulator” because it is really “damaging” for him. Having his character badmouthed is also an issue and dealbreaker for him. This sounds like we are in a defamation courtroom hearing.
Apparently Bunnings Douche told Lyndall that Bronte was fake, a gaslighter and many other names that are, in his words, “damaging” and that put her “character” into question.
Mel basically points out the hypocrisy here by asking Bronte if being called these names feels like an attack on her character (it does).
Then Mel asks Bunnings Douche if there’s truth behind Lyndall’s claims.
“I genuinely don’t recall,” he says.
“You can’t play the amnesia card now,” Mel schools him.
“Surely Harrison, if you called your wife fake and a gaslighter, you’d remember that,” Mel presses. Lyndall tries to refreshes his memory.
“I genuinely can’t remember saying those things,” he tells Mel. Again.
“I genuinely can’t remember saying those things,” he says. Again.
“And I genuinely don’t believe you,” Mel replies in the most amazingly condescending fashion.
Mel tells Bunnings Douche that he has patterns — pointing out that she’s not talking about his . It’s a big LOL.
“If I could remember saying it, genuinely, I would take accountability for it,” he claims.
“Are you calling Lyndall a liar?” Tahnee asks. He reckons he’s not saying she’s a liar, but that if he say those things, he takes accountability for it. I feel dumber.
Bronte tells Bunnings Douche that she’s not fake () and that she owns her shit.
Decision time. Please leave.
PLEASE LEAVE.
THEY HAVE TO LEAVE.
If they don’t leave I will flip my keyboard, lid and anything else I can find while still being able to get me rental bond back.
Oh fuck off! She starts rambling some shit about wanting Bunnings Douche to see her life before she makes the decision to leave for the 1,276th time.
SURELY. FUCKING. NOT. I cannot. How many more times does she need to say she’s done before it means anything? Maybe you are fake, sis?
She wrote stay.
The same person who said she was “done” this week. The same person who was just told her husband called her every name under the sun.
Now she’s crying because she feels like she’s tried and put everything in the experiment. He is also staying and fuck me dead. He also said there is no way he’s writing stay and just bablbled some shit about dealbreakers.
Melinda asks if she can say something.
“So because Bronte broke your trust when she said she wanted to leave, two dinner parties in a row you said openly to us, when Bronte was not there, that you were 100 per cent done, you were leaving, there is absolutely no way you were staying,” Melinda says.
Lyndall jumps in to remind everyone on Bunnings Douche’s extensive vocabulary.
He remembers saying this one!
“The problem I have is that leaving this relationship is easy for me to do,” Bunnings Douche says. “Then I wouldn’t have to work on it.”
Bronte thinks she’ll have a better chance to be herself back in Perth and he wants more context as to who she is.
“Did you not say, at the boys night,” Ollie interjects. “That you didn’t want to go to Perth at all?”
“Yes, I did.”
“You didn’t want Bronte to be your tour guide,” Ollie reminds him.
He nods.
Melinda also said that Bunnings Douche reckons Bronte only wants to go to Perth to “hop in a bikini and show off.”
“YEP,” he says under his breatH. Stunning.
Mel tells him off for being a hypocrite for crossing his own boundary and asks why they’re still there.
Bronte uses the oldest line in the book which is that when things are good, they’re really good.
I can’t believe they let them stay. Stop polluting our air!
I’VE HAD IT UP TO BLOODY HERE WITH THIS COUPLE AND THIS SEASON. ANYONE ELSE?
- Resented
- Neglected
- Rejected
- Abandoned
- Guilty
- Judged
- Disliked
The post MAFS Recap: YOU’VE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME appeared first on PEDESTRIAN.TV .