Scottish Daily Mail

Strangers who wed on TV split... as he logs on to dating site!

- By Sam Creighton Showbusine­ss Reporter

IT wasn’t exactly a recipe for marital bliss – but even the most sceptical expected their unconventi­onal union to last longer than a few weeks.

Jason Knowles and Kate Stewart wed as complete strangers for controvers­ial Channel 4 series Married at First Sight.

But last night, in the pre-recorded programme’s final episode, it was revealed they had split after about three weeks after the groom signed up to an online dating service.

The couple were put together by programme makers after being subjected to a barrage of personalit­y tests that were meant to find matches most likely to result in lasting marriages.

Fitness instructor Miss Stewart, 31, wore a white dress with lace sleeves for their small civil ceremony in February before they jetted off to Ireland f or a honeymoon.

However, the trip had to be cut short after three days so financial adviser Mr Knowles, 34, could return to work.

He revealed last night the couple never consummate­d the relationsh­ip and said: ‘It’s a very personal question but I’ll be straight with you, nothing happened.’

While it is not possible to get a divorce within a year of marriage, if the union is not consummate­d, it can be annulled at any point after the wedding.

During their time together, the couple lived in a house in Bethnal Green, East London, that was provided by Channel 4, while also keeping their own separate properties in London.

Things went sour for the pair after their honeymoon. Their anti-social working hours meant they rarely saw each other and when they booked an appointmen­t with Jo Coker, the programme’s relationsh­ip therapist, to work through their problems, Mr Knowles failed to turn up. Then, when a friend of Miss Stewart showed her that her new husband was registered on the Tinder dating app, it spurred her to call off the relationsh­ip.

Mr Knowles, who works for Morrinson Wealth Management, told the Mail he only signed up to the dating service once he knew the relationsh­ip would not work.

He says he was caught out when his bride’s friend noticed his picture on Tinder. ‘It was probably more from my side than hers that it didn’t work,’ he said.

‘She had a rant at me’

‘It’s not that I didn’t want to give it a go but I just definitely wasn’t feeling the feelings you should feel at the start of the relationsh­ip. I made a decision after the honeymoon to end things.

‘One of my good friends said: “Jason, are you back in the dating scene?” I said it was a bit too soon but he suggested I should re-download Tinder.

‘I handed my phone over to his girlfriend who was happily swiping left and right and having a laugh about it. Anyway, the next morning I woke up and packed my bags because I already knew I was going to leave.

‘We sat in the lounge but Kate wouldn’t let me talk. She had a rant at me. At the end of the conversati­on she said: “By the way, you swiped right on one of my friends and I’m leaving” at which point she saw my bag at the door and said, “Apparently you are too”.’

It will be a disappoint­ment for programme makers who now only have one couple still married out of the 1,500 people who applied to take part in the experiment. This initial intake was whittled down to three couples through genetic, psychologi­cal and physical tests.

It was claimed these couples left would have a greater chance than average to have a successful marriage.

One pair pulled out before the weddings, which took place in February. Aside from Miss Stewart and Mr Knowles, the other couple to wed was Emma Rathbone, 32, and James Ord-Hume, 33. They are still happily together after five months.

 ??  ?? Wedding day: Jason Knowles and Kate Stewart meet for the first time
Wedding day: Jason Knowles and Kate Stewart meet for the first time

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