Ever since Channel Nine announced that a same-sex couple would be walking down the aisle on the upcoming season of Married at First Sight, the network and the contestants have – perhaps unsurprisingly – been blasted by backlash.
But the biggest blows aren’t coming from the corner you might expect; they’re coming from within the LGBTQI community itself, many of whom are outraged that the couple would go on a ‘reality’ to show to experience something that is actually anything but for same-sex couples.
This week on the Binge, Mamamia’s TV podcast, we ask ‘Is having a gay couple on MAFS a Good Thing?’
Now one half of that couple has hit back at the critics, telling The Today Show that it seems “you’re damned if you do, damned if you don’t”.
“There’s been a lot of backlash from Series One and Two for not having a same sex couple, and now that there is one in Series Three nobody’s happy about that as well,” he said.
Unlike the heterosexual couples, Andy and his new partner actually had the option to have a genuine wedding, as their nuptials were staged in New Zealand. Not only is same-sex marriage legal there, but applications for marriage licenses only need to be filed three days in advance, rather than the 30 required here.
He decided against it.
“For me, the marriage bit wasn’t important,” said Andy. “But it is really an experiment to pull two people together. And I’m lucky to have been chosen to go through the experience, to have three or four experts in Australia match me to the guy that I’m going to spend the rest of my life with.”