Spoiler alert: these reality weddings are not real. Not even a little.
Channel Nine is trying to promote its new reality TV show as a genuine social experiment, as opposed to a freakshow train-wreck that it hopes people can’t take their eyes off.
There’s a problem, though: the entire promotional strategy of Married at First Sight – and even its name – is based on a lie.
The premise is this: Four heterosexual couples meet for the very first time at the alter as they are pronounced husband and wife. They’ve been expertly matched by psychologists and psychotherapists who dug through more than 1,000 applications to match the couples. They’ll live together for a month before deciding whether to divorce or stay together.
There’s really nothing much different about this show than any other dating show, though. To comply with the Australian Marriage Act (1961), documents stating an intention to marry must be lodged at least one month and one day before the marriage can take place.
So the weddings on the show? Not actual marriages. The contestants aren’t ‘married at first sight’ – they’re not married at all.
For the six-part “documentary”, the wedding ceremonies, complete with floral arrangements, fancy dresses and vows, are staged. They’re no more binding than two dogs getting married.
After the ceremonies, couples live together for 30 days, after which time they can choose to sign the papers and stay married, or go their separate ways.