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    Home » The Marciano and Demi Lawsuit Is Getting Messier — and Reality TV May Never Be the Same
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    The Marciano and Demi Lawsuit Is Getting Messier — and Reality TV May Never Be the Same

    David ReyesBy David ReyesApril 19, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Credit: Entertainment Tonight

    Like so many of these things, it began between a sunset and a camera crew. Influencers from The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives had traveled to the Italian villa where Vanderpump Villa was filming its third season in 2024 for what was meant to be an enjoyable, footage-ready visit. A federal defamation lawsuit, a motion to dismiss, and enough social media commentary to fill several dozen podcasts are all related to what happened during that trip, or what various people claim happened. Most likely, it has already.

    Marciano Brunette, a 33-year-old hospitality star from the Vanderpump stable, and Demi Engemann, a 31-year-old influencer and cast member of Mormon Wives, are the two individuals at the center of all of this. A year ago, her name was more frequently associated with disputes over Fruity Pebbles than with federal court documents. Marciano claims that he and Demi had an amicable off-camera kiss while in Italy. Demi claims that the incident was not at all consensual, calling Marciano a “sexual predator” and publicly characterizing it as “unwanted touch” before classifying it as sexual assault. The two accounts are those. They can’t both be true.

    FieldDetail
    PlaintiffMarciano Brunette, age 33 — reality TV personality, Vanderpump Villa (Peacock)
    DefendantDemi Engemann, age 31 — influencer, The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives (Hulu)
    Also namedJeff Jenkins Productions (production company behind Mormon Wives)
    Case filedDecember 5, 2025 — U.S. Federal Court, District of Utah
    Case number2:25-cv-01102
    Type of claimDefamation
    Alleged incidentMomTok cast visit to Vanderpump Villa filming location, Italy, 2024
    Plaintiff’s claimConsensual, off-camera kiss; denies sexual assault allegations
    Defendant’s claim“Unwanted touch” / sexual assault; referred to Brunette as a “sexual predator.”
    Defendant’s legal moveMotion to dismiss filed Feb. 17, 2026, under Utah’s Uniform Public Expression Protection Act
    Defense argumentFirst Amendment protection; matter of public interest; both parties are public figures
    Current status (as of Apr 2026)Ongoing — motion to dismiss under review
    ReferencePeople.com — Case Coverage

    On December 5, 2025, the day after the Season 3 reunion of Mormon Wives aired, Marciano filed his defamation lawsuit in federal court in Utah. Though it’s possible that the calendar just happened that way, the timing felt purposeful. His legal team contended in the complaint that Demi had methodically reframed what they called “an obviously consensual interaction” as criminal activity, broadcasting that framing to the sizable audience she commands as a social media and reality TV star. Additionally, they named Jeff Jenkins Productions, the company behind Mormon Wives, and claimed that the producers purposefully limited Marciano’s ability to react while shaping the story to maximize impact. That is a serious accusation, not only against Demi but also against the show’s apparatus.

    In response, Demi’s legal team filed a motion to dismiss under Utah’s Uniform Public Expression Protection Act in February 2026. The argument is essentially twofold: first, that Demi was using her First Amendment right to discuss her personal experience; second, that the standard for defamation is significantly higher than Marciano’s complaint because both parties are public figures involved in a matter of public interest. Her lawyers described the lawsuit as “a sham” and presented it as an effort to punish a woman for speaking up. The filing also went on offense, pointing out that Marciano had allegedly boasted about behavior on national television, which prompted a former employer to enact a particular workplace policy pertaining to him and female coworkers. Depending on how the court interprets that detail, which is presented as context about his character, it can be either devastating or irrelevant. Judges are paid to make these kinds of decisions.

    Seeing all of this unfold in court documents and Instagram comment sections at the same time gives one the impression that the relationship between reality TV and legal accountability has undergone a truly peculiar transformation. There has always been conflict over these shows. The result is conflict. However, for the majority of their history, it was anticipated that the conflict would remain under control, with characters fighting on screen, viewers taking sides, and everyone moving on to the following season. The Brunette-Engemann scenario shows that friction is no longer always contained. It enters the realm of federal filings. Producers are named as defendants in this case. When one person’s description of another’s behavior becomes a plot, it begs the question of what a production company’s obligations are.

    The Mormon Wives footage from Season 4 gives the case a unique feel. During a different DadTok trip to London’s Vanderpump Villa, Zac Affleck informs Demi’s husband Brett on camera that Marciano “still claims to this day, on camera, that he kissed Demi.” A disclaimer confirming the lawsuit concludes the episode. A show admitting mid-broadcast that one of its plotlines is now also a legal issue is an odd moment. Television rarely does that, and it’s still unclear if the production company, which is also named in the lawsuit, benefits or suffers from that level of transparency.

    This case may be settled amicably before a trial ever occurs. Demi’s team is aware that defamation lawsuits involving public figures are notoriously hard to win because the actual malice standard is a high bar. It’s also important to consider whether Marciano wants to change the perception of his name or seek legal vindication. The day following the reunion’s broadcast, the lawsuit was submitted. Press coverage of lawsuits is unique.

    It’s more difficult to argue that any of this is beneficial to either of them. One person has a reputation for being a “predator.” The other is now inextricably linked to a federal case and a narrative that is repeated each time a new filing is made. Both of their platforms were created by reality television. It’s also what initially placed them both in that Italian villa.

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    David Reyes

    Experienced political and cultural analyst, David Reyes offers insightful commentary on current events in Britain. He worked in communications and media analysis for a number of years after receiving his degree in political science, where he became very interested in the relationship between public opinion, policy, and leadership.

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