Summer House reunion exposes Amanda Batula and West Wilson relationship fallout
A phone call, a leaked audio scandal and a packed AMC screening turned Amanda Batula and West Wilson’s fallout into Bravo’s latest must-watch mess.

Bravo turned the first part of its Summer House Season 10 reunion into appointment television by putting Amanda Batula and West Wilson’s relationship fallout at the center of a cast-wide confrontation that spilled far beyond the Hamptons. The three-part reunion, hosted by Andy Cohen, aired across three consecutive Tuesdays, May 26, June 2 and June 9, 2026, at 8 p.m. ET/PT, with uncensored versions available the next day on Peacock.
The episode opened with Kyle Cooke telling Lindsay Hubbard to “check your phone,” a cue that led both to a statement confirming that Cooke’s estranged wife, Batula, and Wilson were together after weeks of public denials. The reveal pulled in the entire ensemble: Ciara Miller, Carl Radke, Jesse Solomon, Mia Calabrese, KJ Dillard, Dara Levitan, Levi Sebree, Bailey Taylor and Ben Waddell all sat through the fallout from a season that had already been built around shifting friendships, relationship tensions and new revelations. When multiple cast members began calling, Radke cut through the noise with, “Has anyone checked on Ciara?” The line captured how the Batula-Wilson situation had become more than a private romance dispute and instead a shared cast rupture.

That rupture helped make Summer House a case study in Bravo’s attention economy. NBC News described the series as an upscale “Jersey Shore” set in the Hamptons, a formula that has long turned drunken fights, hookups and cheating allegations into reliable programming while leaving room for occasional conversations about race, mental health and fractured childhoods. The show’s latest season, which premiered on February 3 and ended with the finale on May 19, kept that machine running by turning off-camera drama into a public storyline with ratings value, social-media fuel and a reunion built for clipping, replaying and debating.
The audience appetite was obvious. More than 500 fans packed an AMC theater in New York City on May 26 for a special screening, reacting with cheers and jeers as the cast traded accusations. The event leaned into the franchise’s brand, with themed cocktails including the “Summerita Hose” and “Bravoholics,” plus snacks and recliner seating, proof that Bravo’s messiest moments now function as community entertainment as much as television.

The reunion’s buildup only sharpened the spectacle. Bravo launched an official investigation after leaked audio from the April 23 taping surfaced on social media, calling it a “serious breach of trust.” Cohen called the leak “disgusting and illegal,” and later said the cast had spent about ten hours taping emotionally raw material. Cooke said Bravo was running a “full-blown cyber investigation,” underscoring how even the off-camera breach became part of the show’s commercial gravity.
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