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Instagram allows users to boost the reach of their content for a paid fee in effort to maximise the engagement of a post.
And while Bryce may have had good intentions to promote his content amid Melbourne s latest lockdown, his post angered fans who were able to see his content without having to follow him. He thinks he is a celebrity : And while he may have had good intentions to share his message of support amid Melbourne s latest lockdown, the reality star s decision to sponsor his post angered fans on social media not following him He really thinks he is a celebrity, one user commented, while a second wrote: Thank you for giving me a reason NOT to get Instagram
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Shortly after filming the show - in which he was accused by both cast members and fans of gaslighting his wife Melissa Rawson - he left his radio gig in hushed circumstances soon after the show aired.
Bryce and Melissa later decided to release their own podcast, only to be inundated with one-star reviews from trolls.
Panic stations: Sharing a picture of the near-empty shelves in the toilet roll aisle of his local Woolworths, Bryce joked in the caption: Covid or gastro outbreak?
Mr Walkerden, formerly of NOVA Entertainment, owns the podcast platform that signed the embattled MAFS duo and staunchly defended the pair against trolls this week.
Mr Walkerden, formerly of NOVA, runs podcast company Podshape, which recently made headlines for hiring controversial Married At First Sight couple Bryce Ruthven and Melissa Rawson