MAFS’ unaired sexual mishap between Alissa and David shattered their relationship
In the high-stakes pressure cooker of Married at First Sight, where every glance, argument, and intimate moment is captured for maximum drama, some turning points are deemed too revealing — or too uncomfortable — for the final edit. That’s exactly what happened with Alissa Fay and David Momoh, the couple who appeared to many viewers as one of the more stable pairings in the experiment.
Behind the scenes, however, a private, awkward incident during intimacy quietly derailed their connection — and producers chose to leave it on the cutting room floor.
According to a well-placed source speaking to Daily Mail, the mishap occurred amid what had been a previously active and seemingly effortless sex life. “The incident involved an awkward mishap during intimacy,” the insider revealed. While specific details remain tightly guarded, the fallout was immediate and profound: “Everything changed, and what was once effortless became strained.”
Intimacy nosedived, cracks widened, and the relationship that once felt complementary — Alissa’s high-energy intensity balanced by David’s calm grounding — began to fracture under the weight of unresolved tension.
The moment was significant enough that it surfaced during a Commitment Ceremony, where the couple raised it directly in front of the experts on the couch. Yet, despite its potential to provide crucial context for their ongoing struggles, it never made it to air.
Viewers saw surface-level drama — group conflicts, leaked messages, and Alissa’s central role in some of the brides’ tensions — but missed this pivotal intimate setback that insiders say marked a genuine turning point.
This isn’t the first sign of underlying friction for Alissa and David. Early in the experiment, Alissa famously refused to proceed with the wedding vows until David dropped to one knee and proposed properly — a demand that left him visibly uncomfortable and sparked whispers of a power imbalance from the start.
David accommodated, but the moment hinted at dynamics that would resurface later. As the season intensified, the couple found themselves repeatedly in the crossfire of relentless group drama, making it “nearly impossible” to focus solely on their bond.
Alissa herself has hinted at the gaps in the broadcast narrative. “There are things missing, there are storylines missed,” she has said. “We’re dealing with other things in our relationship… things that haven’t made it to air.”
She admitted the couple seriously considered walking away multiple times amid the “drama after drama after drama.” Even the external chaos — vile text exchanges, mean-girl takedowns, and leaked screenshots labeling them “Christian influencer wannabes” — amplified the pressure. Yet, Alissa noted a telling contrast: when they escaped the experiment’s noise temporarily, their relationship felt “really, really lovely.”
The decision to omit the intimacy mishap raises familiar questions about MAFS editing: What viewers see is often only a fraction of the full story. Multiple cast members have echoed that sentiment, complaining that key context is sacrificed to heighten other conflicts or protect certain narratives.
In this case, withholding the incident leaves audiences without insight into why a once-promising match teetered on the edge — and whether the show’s format exacerbated natural mismatches rather than revealing true compatibility.
For Alissa and David, the unaired moment represents more than just a private embarrassment; it’s a reminder of how fragile intimacy can be under the relentless spotlight. The experiment’s “pressure-cooker environment” turned small cracks into chasms, and now, with sources speaking out, that hidden turning point is finally coming to light.
Whether it fully reshapes perceptions of their journey remains to be seen — but one thing is clear: what happens behind closed doors on MAFS doesn’t always make it to the screen, even when it changes everything.
BANNED' - Clinton Judge Reads Her Verdict - President Donald Trump Has Been Informed That He Just Beat Gavin Newsom...

JUDICIAL RECKONING
The return of national sovereignty and administrative lethality reached a new milestone this Thursday, April 9, 2026. A blockbuster ruling in Los Angeles has left the DNC establishment and globalist elite reeling.
A federal judge issued a preliminary injunction against California’s controversial "No Secret Police Act," blocking the state from prohibiting ICE agents from wearing masks. Judge Christina Snyder ruled the law unconstitutional, marking a decisive victory for President Donald J. Trump and the Department of Justice.
The court affirmed the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause, stating California cannot discriminate against federal officers while exempting its own law enforcement. Attorney General Pamela Bondi praised the ruling, emphasizing the administration’s zero-tolerance stance on harassment of federal agents.
This decision reflects the 2026 mandate: a legal framework prioritizing the safety of American officers over the sanctuary policies pushed by Governor Gavin Newsom. It signals a sweeping rollback of state overreach in immigration enforcement.
Meanwhile, in Texas, a federal jury delivered historic terrorism convictions against nine members of a radical antifa cell. The group was found guilty for a violent 2025 attack on an ICE detention facility that left a police officer shot in the neck.
Ringleader Benjamin Song faces potential life imprisonment after evidence proved the attack was a coordinated assault using explosives and rifles—not the “noise demonstration” the defense claimed. Prosecutors called the verdict a landmark affirmation of Trump’s domestic terror designation.
With Kash Patel at the FBI and Todd Blanche at the DOJ, the dismantling of extremist cells has accelerated. Federal agencies continue to secure detention centers like Prairieland against those attempting to destabilize the republic.
Governor Gavin Newsom attempted to spin the court ruling as a “win,” citing the upheld “No Vigilantes Act.” But the truth remains: the centerpiece of his anti-ICE agenda—the “No Secret Police Act”—has been effectively struck down.
The defeat exposes the weakening foundation of California’s sanctuary policies. While Sacramento prioritizes the “civil rights” of illegal aliens, the Trump administration is defending the constitutional rights of federal officers.

The week closes as a sweeping administrative triumph for the Trump-GOP platform. From Los Angeles courtrooms to Texas jury boxes, real results—not rhetoric—are forging the 2026 midterm shield.
With 5% GDP growth and a secure border, the nation is reclaiming its stability and sovereignty. America moves forward with vigilance, resolve, and a renewed commitment to law and order.
God bless the USA—and the leaders who refuse to bow to the swamp or the radical mob.
oFar Left 'Squad' Member Learns Her Fate As Her Primary Election is Called

Washington D.C. — The far-left “Squad” took another massive hit Tuesday night as Missouri Democrat Rep. Cori Bush was soundly defeated in her primary by challenger Wesley Bell, who led by double digits with 54.9% to Bush’s 41.8%.
Bush, one of the most extreme voices in Congress, joins Rep. Jamaal Bowman as the second Squad member to lose her seat this cycle. Her defeat is a clear rejection of the radical socialist, anti-police, pro-Hamas agenda she has pushed since entering Congress in 2021.
Bush rose to prominence after participating in the Ferguson riots and has spent years promoting false narratives about Michael Brown while calling for defunding the police — even as violent crime soared in her St. Louis district. She has repeatedly aligned herself with pro-Hamas protesters, blamed Israel for the October 7 massacre, and faced controversy over allegedly funneling thousands of campaign dollars to her husband for “security services” while demanding less police protection for her constituents.
Republicans celebrated the win with well-deserved mockery. Pro-Trump comedian Terrance K. Williams posted:
“A ‘BLACK JOB’ IS SOMETHING CORI BUSH DOES NOT HAVE. OH HAPPY DAY! She is the second Squad member to lose her seat! I can’t wait until they are all gone.”

Florida GOP Rep. Matt Gaetz, who served with Bush on the House Judiciary Committee, sarcastically noted:
“I will miss Cori Bush missing every committee meeting.”
Students for Trump co-founder Ryan Fournier added:
“The Squad’s Cori Bush has LOST her primary. Join me in saying GOOD RIDDANCE! Hamas might be hiring, Cori!”
Even actor Michael Rapaport, a vocal Israel supporter, celebrated:
“Tonight at the rally they said let’s bring back ‘JOY’ to politics and boom CORI BUSH is done with Politics…. I feel JOY all of a sudden.”
This is the second straight blow to the radical Squad. Jamaal Bowman lost his primary earlier after endorsing pro-Hamas demonstrators on college campuses. Both Bush and Bowman blamed their defeats on pro-Israel funding from AIPAC rather than admitting the truth: their extreme, anti-American, and anti-Israel positions have become toxic to voters.
The radical left’s Squad is crumbling because the American people are rejecting their agenda of defunding police, embracing socialism, supporting radical Islamists, and putting foreign interests above American citizens. Voters want secure borders, safe streets, strong economy, and leaders who put America First — not performative radicals who miss committee meetings and push policies that hurt their own districts.
Under President Donald J. Trump’s leadership, the Republican Party is becoming the party of working Americans, law and order, and common sense. Meanwhile, the Democrat Party continues its death spiral — hemorrhaging voters, losing favorability, and watching its most extreme members get rejected at the ballot box.
Cori Bush’s defeat is not just a loss for one radical congresswoman. It is a rejection of the entire Squad’s toxic ideology. The American people are waking up and choosing sanity over socialism, strength over weakness, and America First over America Last.
More Squad members are on the ballot soon. The trend is clear: radicalism is losing, and the America First movement is winning.