“EVERYTHING HAS COLLAPSED”: Brit Eady Files for Divorce Amid $20 Million Bravo Lawsuit, Declaring No Hope for Reconciliation and Refusing Spousal Support

In a stunning turn that has sent shockwaves through the reality television world, former Real Housewives of Atlanta star Brit Eady has officially filed for divorce from her husband of five years, Michael Cunningham, delivering a devastating blow to what once appeared to be a stable marriage forged during the height of the pandemic.
Court documents reveal Eady’s unequivocal stance: the marriage is “irretrievably broken,” with “no reasonable hope of reconciliation anymore.” She has explicitly requested to block any spousal support, signaling a firm refusal to provide financial assistance post-split. “I don’t want to carry anyone anymore after what hurt me,” Eady reportedly declared in statements surrounding the filing, words that carry the weight of deep personal betrayal and exhaustion.
The timing could not be more explosive. Eady’s divorce comes on the heels of her aggressive $20 million lawsuit against Bravo, NBCUniversal, and production companies Truly Original and Endemol Shine North America. Filed in June 2025, the suit accuses the network of defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, harassment, and fostering a hostile work environment.

At the center of the allegations is a notorious episode from RHOA Season 16, where castmate Kenya Moore displayed explicit images purporting to depict Eady during a dramatic confrontation at Moore’s hair spa grand opening. Eady has consistently maintained the photos were not of her, yet the damage to her reputation and mental health proved catastrophic, she claims, with Bravo failing to intervene or protect her.
As the divorce proceedings unfold, questions swirl about the true motives behind the split. What began as whispers of marital strain has hardened into a calculated and irreversible end. Eady’s insistence on no spousal support, combined with her refusal to “carry” her estranged husband any longer, paints a picture of profound resentment built over years of unseen turmoil. Insiders suggest the relentless public scrutiny from her RHOA tenure, amplified by the explicit photo scandal and subsequent lawsuit, may have eroded the foundation of the relationship beyond repair.
The emotional toll is palpable. Eady, once a poised insurance executive thrust into the Bravo spotlight, now faces the wreckage of both her marriage and her television legacy. Her decision to seal parts of the divorce case, citing their public profiles, underscores the intense desire for privacy amid the chaos. Yet the revelations keep mounting: the couple plans to sell their marital home and divide proceeds equally, a pragmatic but poignant final act.
For fans and observers alike, the collapse feels seismic. Was the marriage doomed by the Bravo drama, or did deeper fractures exist long before the cameras rolled? Eady’s bold moves, from rejecting support to pursuing massive damages against the network that elevated her, suggest a woman reclaiming control at any cost. As legal battles rage on two fronts, one truth emerges clearly: everything has indeed collapsed, and the fallout is far from over.