Kyle Cooke Slams “Fake Wedding” Conspiracy, Affirms Amanda Batula Marriage Is Real
Photo Credit: Bravo
In late May 2026, speculation on social media intensified around whether Kyle Cooke and Amanda Batula had ever legally married, reviving a long‑running fan conspiracy that their 2021 wedding was staged solely for Summer House. The renewed chatter followed months of public interest in the couple’s January 2026 separation and their continued appearances together at Bravo events despite confirming they had parted ways as a couple.
Cooke’s sarcastic but direct denial
Responding on Meta’s Threads platform, Cooke dismissed the conspiracy with a pointedly sarcastic message that underscored his frustration with the narrative. “You got me. I’m an actor and faked a $200k wedding in front of my entire family, friends, and the world,” he wrote, mocking the idea that the ceremony had been fabricated.
In the same post, he joked that he was “the only actor with a MBA, a SBA loan, 2 businesses, and an acquired set of skills” that let him remember “scripted lines” while intoxicated, emphasizing the implausibility of orchestrating a fake marriage of that scale. Cooke ended the message by calling himself a “jack of all trades,” leaning into the absurdity of the theory while also making clear that he viewed the accusations as detached from reality.
While the tone of the Threads post was heavily tongue‑in‑cheek, it also functioned as a direct rejection of claims that the wedding lacked legal or emotional legitimacy. Cosmopolitan summarized his response with the blunt clarification that the couple “are” married, while noting that they remain separated as of spring 2026.
Separation, support, and the “fake” narrative
The renewed focus on whether the marriage was genuine comes against the backdrop of Cooke and Batula’s joint announcement in January 2026 that they had decided to separate after four years of marriage. In a shared Instagram statement, they described the decision as mutual and amicable, asking for kindness and privacy as they worked on personal growth and healing, while acknowledging the irony of that request given how publicly their relationship had unfolded on television.
Attention intensified again in May 2026 when Cooke and Batula were photographed together at the New York premiere of Bravo’s new spin‑off series In the City, prompting some fans to question whether their separation was itself staged. Commentators on social platforms suggested that posing together on the red carpet undermined their earlier announcement, and some alleged the split might have been orchestrated as a publicity storyline.
In an Instagram Stories video, Cooke responded sharply to those claims, saying he had simply been “happy that she showed up” at an event for a show in which she appears. He stressed that he had personally convinced Batula to attend despite her reluctance, then criticized detractors: “Don’t call my life, my relationship, my marriage and my implosion of a marriage ‘fake’,” adding, “Grow the f**k up.”
Legal and emotional stakes behind a televised wedding
Cooke and Batula’s wedding was filmed for the Season 6 finale of Summer House and took place in September 2021 in the backyard of Batula’s parents in Hillsborough, New Jersey, after prior postponements related to COVID‑19. Coverage at the time and subsequent wedding‑focused features emphasized the presence of their families and friends, as well as the hybrid reality‑TV and private‑event nature of the ceremony.
Although legal documents related to the marriage are not publicly cited in recent reporting, multiple outlets continue to refer to Cooke and Batula as having been married for four years at the time they announced their separation in 2026. That consistent framing, combined with Cooke’s on‑record frustration at suggestions the union was fabricated, underpins the mainstream media characterization of the marriage as real rather than a purely scripted device.
The couple’s financial entanglements have also kept questions about the seriousness of their marriage in the public eye, particularly around Loverboy, the beverage company Cooke founded and in which Batula has a stake. In a March 2026 interview on the Trading Secrets podcast, Batula explained that they did not sign a prenuptial agreement before their 2021 wedding and addressed speculation that she would “take half” of Loverboy in a potential divorce, pushing back on online narratives about her financial motives.
Social‑media conspiracies and reality‑TV scrutiny
The “fake wedding” theory is part of a broader pattern in reality‑TV fandom, where viewers sometimes question whether televised relationships and life events are authentic or exaggerated for drama. In Summer House, Cooke and Batula’s relationship has been extensively documented, including conflicts over finances, party culture, and trust, which has made their marriage a recurring point of debate among fans and commentators.
Cooke has acknowledged that public scrutiny can compound the strain on a relationship already under pressure, telling Bravo’s The Daily Dish in January that navigating a split while filming and managing shared business interests was “very unfortunate” but something he was trying to approach without grudges. That dynamic has only intensified as online theories have shifted from questioning fidelity and finances to questioning whether the marriage itself was ever real, a leap Cooke has repeatedly labeled as disrespectful to both their history and their ongoing emotional process.
Recent reporting also outlines how overlapping narratives—such as Batula’s emerging relationship with fellow Bravo personality West Wilson—have added fuel to fan speculation. Wilson has stated that he waited until Batula was separated from Cooke before they began exploring a romantic connection and emphasized there was “no overlap,” directly challenging theories that their timelines undermined the sincerity of her marriage.
A reality‑TV couple asking for real‑world grace
As Cooke rebuts claims of a staged wedding, both he and Batula continue to present their separation as a difficult but genuine life transition rather than a calculated storyline. Their January statement expressed gratitude for the support they have received while underscoring that, despite years of sharing their relationship publicly, they still hope for privacy and respect as they navigate what they described as their “next chapter.”
Cooke’s recent social‑media replies echo that message but with a sharper edge, making clear that debates about editing or story arcs cross a line for him when they turn into accusations that his marriage and its breakdown were manufactured. As the Summer House franchise continues to evolve, the couple’s experience illustrates the tension between the public’s appetite for behind‑the‑scenes insight and the desire of reality‑TV figures—queer or straight, cisgender or transgender, and across all identities—to have their intimate relationships treated as more than just content.
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