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Shocking video shows groom playing bride’s SEX TAPE to expose affair at their WEDDING!

The clip originally went viral in 2019 but was recently shared again on TikTok where it has garnered almost six million views and thousands of comments from outraged viewers
UPDATED AUG 10, 2022
Internet is shocked as footage of groom exposing his bride’s affair on their wedding has resurfaced (Photo: DrCast/Youtube)
Internet is shocked as footage of groom exposing his bride’s affair on their wedding has resurfaced (Photo: DrCast/Youtube)

FUJIAN, CHINA: A video from 2019 has resurfaced showing a groom exposing his bride's affair on their wedding day by playing an explicit video of her in bed with another man has gone viral in China, shocking the internet. The couple can be seen walking down the aisle at their wedding reception in Fujian, China's south-eastern province.

According to local media, the video plays for five minutes on a huge projector screen when they finally make it to the center of the stage. Online accounts claim that after the unfaithful fiancée's affair with the husband of her pregnant sister was discovered, the video was shown to the unfaithful fiancée in front of family and friends to humiliate her.

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Thousands of comments and nearly six million views have been generated by the resurfaced video. The video is titled 'Cheating Bride,' and the caption reads, "In front of everyone, the groom played a video of his wife cheating on him with her pregnant sister-in-law's husband."



 

The unverified video that appears to have been captured by a guest at the wedding has sparked outrage among internet users. While some claim the incident actually happened, others claim the videos were fabricated as a marketing ploy by a video app.

Major Chinese-language media outlets, such as mainland China's Sina, Hong Kong's Apple Daily, and Taiwan's ET Today, have extensively covered the trending topic, which consists of three clips.

As the couple can be seen in one of the clips walking down the aisle and then standing on a stage at their wedding reception the emcee announces: "Now we are going to show you the videos of how the newlyweds grew up." However, the projector starts playing an explicit video a short while later. The groom is then seen accusing the bride on stage while saying, "Did you think I didn’t know about this?" The bride then hurls her bouquet at her groom. Soon after, their family members and friends separate them.

The two other clips, worth a total of five minutes, are said to be explicit films of the bride and her brother-in-law.

According to Apple Daily, the couple has been dating for two years and got engaged six months ago, citing insider accounts. The groom allegedly discovered his bride's affair after installing a security camera in their future home during a renovation project.

According to the report, the bride's sister was six months pregnant. The clips first appeared on a short-video app called 'Aubergine Video,' according to an influential Chinese entertainment blogger, so the incident was dubbed the 'aubergine brother-in-law gate.'

The blogger also claimed that the bride cheated on her fiancé after experiencing domestic violence from him. She allegedly agreed to marry him after he promised to pay for a flat and a car for their union.

The bride, according to the blogger, admitted to the affair. It is said that she and her brother-in-law fell in love after the latter began mediating between her and her fiancé during their domestic violence dispute.

According to the post, the bride demanded that her partner remove all video clips from the internet.

Mr Zha, another gossip columnist, believes the whole thing was a publicity stunt. The author was perplexed as to how the video app had obtained the footage 'exclusively.'

'Who is going to air their dirty laundry on a video website?' Mr Zha contended. He also pointed out that the clip shown at the wedding featured the video app's logo. 'To summarize, there is only one explanation, and that is that this is a malicious marketing stunt,' he said.

Clips from the incident have been removed from the Chinese social media platform Weibo, but are still circulating on Twitter and the messaging app WeChat.

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