Married at First Sight Season 3: Doubts over the Next Season, Panel Experts Blamed For Negative Result, And More

Coelen claimed that the experts go through each of the dating sites like Tinder, OkCupid, Match.com as well as visit pubs and clubs to get an idea about what clicks when it comes to the dating scene.

He went on to say that the selection process is very transparent and they even make the selection criteria and procedures very clear to the candidates. Coelen also said that Married at First Sight is a show and it is not possible for them to guarantee a positive outcome.

All things said, there is still no clear evidence about what is going to happen to Married at First Sight Season 3. There is a rumor that the producers at FYI are contemplating to replace the show with a new social experimental series called Seven Year Switch.

The show will see two married couples exchanging their partners for two weeks. They will live with their new partners and then the viewers will see if the set up has a positive or a detrimental impact on their regular relationship.

6 thoughts on “Married at First Sight Season 3: Doubts over the Next Season, Panel Experts Blamed For Negative Result, And More”

  1. So you hit a bump in the road and you are going to give up? I thought it was a great show. Like everything else, media gets a Hold of it and poisons it. Hang in there and re think the weeding out of the right people!!!

  2. I loved season 1! I couldn’t get enough; even watched reruns… Aside from Jacyln Methuen, season 2 didn’t have the engaging personalities that made it interesting. The men were horrible choices. That’s what’s frustrating. I can’t believe the experts collectively thought these boys were marriage material. I have to question their entire screening process.
    Still, I hope to see another season where the whole production redeems itself, because the subject is fascinating.

  3. It’s the journey – the rise and fall in relationships we all go through! That’s what’s so great about this show. I feel like I am learning along with them – the do’s and don’ts – and how to manage relationships. So even in the end if they chose not to continue the relationships, it’s the interaction in between that I love!

    FURTHERMORE, there’s something to be said about NOT sticking out a relationship, be it arranged or not, when there’s abuse involved. (Way to go, Jess!)

    I’ll be really disappointed if they cancel the show based on a “failed” preconceived outcome, because they will truly be missing the value gained through the entire process!

  4. Love the show. Hope it is not canceled. Love the experts advise – I learned a lot about relationships!

  5. What is wrong with you people? The show’s “experts” successfully matched two out of six couples or 33%, which is lower than America’s divorce rate (67% vs. around 44% respectively). It was painfully obvious that Davina and Sean weren’t good matches but the “experts” thought they were because both had been picked on in their childhood–as if such similarities necessarily make a good match. Rather, both manifested opposite ways of coping with perceived transgressions, which damned the relationship from the beginning. Although the show itself isn’t necessarily a failure, they need to find relationship experts who actually know what they’re doing.

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