The 90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way Tell-All was supposed to be messy, but nobody expected Manon Berryman to walk in like she was there to dominate, not discuss. From the jump, she set the tone: cold, irritated, and clearly not interested in letting Anthony speak unless it aligned with her version of events. This wasn’t a back-and-forth. It was Manon holding the mic while Anthony nervously waited for permission to breathe.
Every time Anthony tried to explain himself, Manon jumped in. Correcting him. Talking over him. Rolling her eyes. The message was loud and clear: his feelings were secondary, his perspective optional.
Anthony Looked Afraid to Say the Wrong Thing
What really sent viewers spiraling wasn’t just Manon’s behavior — it was Anthony’s. He looked tense, cautious, and hyper-aware, like someone who’s learned the hard way that honesty comes with consequences. Fans immediately noticed how he softened his words, hesitated mid-sentence, and constantly glanced toward Manon as if checking whether he’d crossed an invisible line.
Then came the bombshell. Anthony admitted he’d been deleting messages from friends and family so Manon wouldn’t get upset. That moment changed everything. That wasn’t drama. That was isolation territory. And Manon didn’t even flinch.
No denial. No concern. No embarrassment. Just a shrug-it-off attitude that made the studio feel ice cold.
The Job Shaming Was Hard to Watch
If viewers were already uncomfortable, Manon’s comments about Anthony’s job pushed them over the edge. She didn’t frame it as financial stress or concern for their future. She framed it like his work was beneath her. Like his income was an embarrassment. Like he was an embarrassment.
Anthony sat there taking it, visibly deflated, while Manon casually tore into his livelihood on national television. The lack of compassion was shocking. Fans called it humiliating. Others called it cruel. Either way, it was painful to watch.
The Rage Walk-Off Said Everything
When Manon stormed off the Tell-All stage, it didn’t feel emotional — it felt strategic. She didn’t like the questions. She didn’t like the direction of the conversation. And she definitely didn’t like Anthony getting space to speak freely.
So she left.
Viewers instantly read it as a power move. If she couldn’t control the narrative, she’d end the scene entirely. And backstage, she reportedly dropped the divorce threat like it was leverage, not heartbreak. No vulnerability. No sadness. Just another way to keep control.
Fans Were Not Buying the “Strong Woman” Edit
Social media lit up immediately, and the verdict was brutal. Fans weren’t calling Manon confident or assertive — they were calling her volatile, dismissive, and controlling. Reddit threads exploded with people saying Anthony looked beaten down and anxious, while Manon looked furious anytime she wasn’t in charge.
One comment kept popping up over and over: if a man behaved like this, there would be outrage on a whole different level. The double standard was impossible to ignore.
This Tell-All Exposed the Dynamic, Not Just the Drama
What made this Tell-All so disturbing wasn’t raised voices or tears. It was the pattern. Talking over him. Undermining him. Embarrassing him. Shutting conversations down with anger or walk-outs. Manon didn’t come off as passionate — she came off as someone who needs control and spirals when she loses it.
By the end, Anthony looked like a man who’s learned silence is safer than honesty. Manon looked like someone furious that the audience finally saw what happens behind closed doors.
This wasn’t a bad edit. This wasn’t stress. This was a dynamic exposed under studio lights, and fans aren’t unseeing it. Manon didn’t leave the Tell-All empowered — she left exposed. And whether TLC brings her back or quietly moves on, this is the moment viewers will remember.
