MAFS is fake? Harrison is caught talking to the producers through a hidden microphone

Viewers of Married At First Sight have once again seen an awkward detail indicating that the popular Channel Nine show is scripted.

Eagle-eyed fans noticed that Harrison Boon grabbed his shirt collar and spoke to producers through his lavalier microphone during dinner on Wednesday.

A slow motion video of the moment was shared by the MAFS fan account. @mafs.bachie.reality Thursday.

Harrison speaking into his microphone. He’s probably saying, “Get me out of here,” the caption reads.

Former MAFS contestant Jackson Lonie, who appeared in the ninth season, said it was more likely that Harrison was telling the producers that he needed to go to the bathroom.

Eagle-eyed MAFS fans noticed that Harrison Boon grabbed his shirt collar and spoke to producers through his lavalier microphone during dinner on Wednesday.

The moment happened while Jesse Burford, who was sitting next to Harrison, was talking to Adam Seed, who had previously kissed his wife Claire Nomarhas.

Several editing flaws have been noted this year, more so than previous seasons.

During Tuesday’s episode, viewers noticed a continuity error when Tayla Winter’s dessert kept disappearing and reappearing during her fight with Hugo Armstrong.

At one point, the half-eaten food completely disappeared from the table, as if the images shown were from a different conversation before their meals arrived.

The MAFS fan account @mafs.bachie.reality shared a slow-motion video of the moment on Thursday. “She’s probably saying, ‘Get me out of here,'” the photo’s caption read.

Several editing flaws have been noted this year, more so than previous seasons.

In the next moment, her dessert reappeared fully intact, again using a drink from much earlier in the conversation.

And during the couple’s wedding on Monday night, fans noticed that the guest walking Tayla down the aisle was wearing a headset in his left ear.

Other editing errors include scenes being oversaturated in post-production to the point that the colors of the outfits have changed and the contestants look “blushing” on screen.

Other editing errors include scenes being oversaturated in post-production to the point that the colors of the outfits have changed and the contestants look “blushing” on screen.

Saturation is used presumably to make colors ‘pop’ on TV, which is great for backgrounds and scenery, but makes the contestants look awful.

“The editors turned up the color saturation VERY WELL when they moved to color correction,” observed one viewer in a Facebook group for MAFS fans.

During the season premiere of MAFS, at Bronte and Harrison’s wedding, the bridesmaids’ dresses completely changed colors from the ceremony to the reception.

When the bridesmaids watched Bronte and Harrison exchange vows, their dresses appeared to be a shade of teal.

Cut to the front desk and the women seemed to have changed into gray-blue toned dresses of the same design.

Daily Mail Australia confirmed that there was no outfit change for the bridesmaids, and that the difference in color was perhaps due to the time of day affecting the lighting, or a color correction failure in post-production.

During the season premiere of MAFS, at Bronte and Harrison’s wedding, the bridesmaids’ dresses completely changed colors from the ceremony to the reception.

At the reception, the women seemed to have changed into dresses of a shade of blue-gray.

Fans started noticing these bugs before the season even started.

Weeks before the premiere, viewers suspected the reality show was filmed on a shoestring budget after noticing a small detail in publicity photos of the cast.

The trailers and promotional images of the cast members dropped last month, and some eagle-eyed fans couldn’t help but notice that the images of the brides and grooms looked ‘washed out’ and hadn’t been color corrected. .

A user on the Tea Time Facebook group shared a series of images of brides Tahnee Cook and Bronte Schofield, as well as groom Harrison Boon.

Perhaps the difference in color was due to the time of day that affected the lighting, or a color correction error in post-production.

The images on the left showed the MAFS participants with a gray-blue appearance and were the raw photos from the official press release.

The images on the right were the result of a “quick two-second temperature change” to demonstrate how a simple editing tool can make skin tone appear warmer.

“So, the new cast of MAFS was announced and I predict that major budget cuts have been made for the show,” the woman wrote.

MAFS viewers are convinced this season was filmed on a shoestring budget after noticing a small detail in the publicity photos of the cast. Eagle-eyed fans pointed out last month that images of the brides and grooms looked ‘washed out’ and had not been color corrected. (Pictured: Tahnee Cook)

“All of her photos have not been color corrected and appear frozen,” she added, noting that the photos gave the contestants a “blue cast” rather than simply appearing pale.

The woman did not alter the features of the participants, she only added more yellow tones.

‘Wow, yeah, I’m a little surprised they’re posting those pictures. Your color corrections look so much better,” one Facebook user commented on the post.

The audacity of Channel Nine! another wrote, adding a palm emoji.

“They just uploaded the raw images. Oh! said one fan.

Married at First Sight continues Sunday at 7pm on Channel Nine and 9Now

The images on the left showed the MAFS participants with a gray-blue appearance and were the raw photos from the official press release. The images on the right were the result of a “quick two-second temperature change” to demonstrate how a simple editing tool can make skin tone appear warmer. (Pictured: Bronte Schofield)

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