Overview
- Bravo, which closed its probe Sunday, said an individual involved in production made an unauthorized recording and that action was taken.
- The network warned that more improperly obtained reunion audio is circulating and urged platforms and users not to post or share it.
- Andy Cohen said Monday a Bravo fan supplied a crucial tip that helped identify the source, calling the leak “disgusting” and illegal.
- Additional clips that surfaced Tuesday offered more reunion audio, though the televised special will present the full context.
- Reunions are taped on closed sets with limited access, making a production‑side leak a serious breach as the multi‑part special begins May 26 on Bravo and streams next day on Peacock.