Chrissie Swan has defended MAFS star Jesse after fans came for him over his very long ‘ick’ list.

Jesse told the relationship experts that he can’t stand “star sign chicks”, “drama queens” and “any girl who starts a sentence with ‘honey’, ‘sweetie’, and ‘oh my god, babe'”.

Jesse was matched up with Claire who asked Jesse about his star sign during the wedding and gifted him a gem stone. Now, Chrissie Swan has defended Jesse and his detailed list, saying that it good the MAFS star knows what he wants.

“Listen in defensive of Jesse, and I can’t believe I just said that sentence, we have been told over the last few years that you do need to make a list of your wish list if you will, and you know that will manifest blah blah blah lighter candle rubber, Rose Quartz, and all of a sudden this perfect partner will appear. So what is the truth, is it that we need to write this list or we don’t?” Chrissie asked the expert,” Swan told Yahoo Lifestyle Australia

“You need to look more if you’re going to have a list of things like values, things like how you want to raise kids or what sort of personality traits are you attracted to so more at a core level than the superficial,”shse said.

“I think on MAFS what happens is a lot of them have this superficial list that rules people out. We lose them early on in the experiment because they turn around and say, ‘Hey you gave me a brunette, not a blonde, I’m out’.”

MAFS season ten premiered last Monday, and, so far, viewers have seen Adam and Janelle, Bronte and Harrison, Lyndall and Cameron, Jesse and Claire, Dan and Sandy, Melissa and Josh, Melinda and Layton and Ollie and Tahnee exchange vows on the first week of MAFS season ten. The general consensus on social media is that Lyndal and Cameron and Ollie and Tahnee are very well matched and are expected the stay together.

Love Film & TV?

Get the latest Film & TV news, features, updates and giveaways straight to your inbox Learn more

Get unlimited access to the coverage that shapes our culture.
to Rolling Stone magazine
to Rolling Stone magazine