Watch Groom Exposes Bride At Wedding For Having An Affair With Her Brother-In-Law, Video Goes Viral On TikTok And Twitter

Watch Groom Exposes Bride At Wedding For Having An Affair With Her Brother-In-Law, Video Goes Viral On TikTok And Twitter

Video of a groom in which he exposes his bride at their wedding has gone viral on TikTok

The internet was shocked when a video from 2019 that was resurrected in China went viral, depicting a groom disclosing his bride’s affair on their wedding day by playing an explicit video of her in bed with another guy. The bride and groom can be seen making their way down the aisle at their wedding celebration in Fujian, a province in southeast China.

Groom Exposes Bride At Wedding For Having An Affair With Her Brother-In-Law, Video Goes Viral On TikTok And Twitter

The Video First Went Popular In 2019, But It Was Recently Uploaded Again On Tiktok, Where It Has Almost Six Million Views And Hundreds Of Angry Comments

 

When they eventually reach the center of the stage, the film reportedly plays for five minutes on a massive projector screen, according to local media. The film was displayed to the unfaithful fiancée in front of family and friends to shame her after her romance with the husband of her pregnant sister was uncovered.

The video has gained over six million views and thousands of comments since it was resurrected. “In front of everyone, the groom aired a film of his wife cheating on him with her pregnant sister-in-husband,” law’s the caption for the video, “Cheating Bride,” says.

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Outrage From Internet Users

Internet users are outraged by the unconfirmed footage that seems to have been recorded by a guest at the wedding. While some believe the event genuinely occurred, others contend the films were created as part of a video app’s marketing strategy.

The hot subject, which comprises three videos, has been heavily covered by major Chinese-language media sites, including Taiwan’s ET Today, Hong Kong’s Apple Daily, and Sina in mainland of China.

The emcee says, “Now we are going to show you the movies of how the newlyweds grew up,” as the pair can be seen in one of the clips walking down the aisle and later standing on a stage at their wedding reception. 

However, a little while later, the projector starts showing a graphic video. The bride is then heard being accused by the husband while he says, “Did you think I didn’t know about this?” on stage. Next, the bride throws her bouquet at her husband-to-be. Soon after, their friends and family start to separate them.

The two further recordings, totaling five minutes, are allegedly pornographic videos of the bride and her brother-in-law.

Citing insider claims, reports suggest that the pair have been dating for two years and became engaged six months ago. Following the installation of a security camera in their future house during a remodelling project, the groom allegedly learned of his bride’s affair.

The bride’s sister was six months pregnant, according to the article. A well-known Chinese entertainment blogger, the videos originally emerged on the short-video app “Aubergine Video,” which is why the episode became known as the “aubergine brother-in-law gate.”

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The blogger also said that the bride strayed on her fiancé as a result of his abuse of her at home. He allegedly offered to pay for a flat and a car for their union before she consented to marry him.

The bride reportedly acknowledged the affair, according to the blogger. It is claimed that after starting to mediate between her and her fiancé during their domestic violence conflict, she and her brother-in-law fell in love.

The bride allegedly ordered that her spouse take down all online videos, per the post.

Is It Internets New PR Gimmick?

Mr. Zha, a different gossip journalist, thinks the entire incident was a PR gimmick. How the video app had acquired the material “exclusively” baffled the author. 

Who will post their personal business on a video website? Mr. Zha argued. He said that the video app’s branding could be seen in the tape played during the wedding. To sum up, he stated, “There is only one possible explanation, and that is that this is an evil marketing ploy.”

Videos of the event are still being shared on Twitter and the messaging app WeChat after being taken down from the Chinese social media site Weibo.

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