🌟 “DEVASTATED… BUT WHY HIDE IT?” – STACEY SOLOMON’S RAW CONFESSION AFTER HEARTBREAKING ‘LOSS’ HAS FANS FIGHTING BACK TEARS! 🌟

One glamorous night of dreams and dresses turned into a gut-wrenching gut punch for the telly queen: Stacey spills the “devastating” truth behind her biggest letdown yet, admitting she’s “not supposed to say that” in a moment so real it’s ripping through reality TV. 😱💔 What glittering goal slipped through her fingers, leaving her team in tears and her whispering “we were robbed”? Why’s she ditching the “graceful loser” script for a fierce “why not?” roar that’s got housemates, hubs, and viewers rallying like never before? This isn’t just a snub—it’s a spotlight on the silent struggles of showbiz souls. Is honesty her ultimate win, or a risky rant that could rewrite her reign? 😢 Dive into the unfiltered drama before the spotlight shifts:

The unflappable queen of feel-good TV, Stacey Solomon, let her guard down in a way that’s resonating far beyond the red carpet: In the latest episode of her BBC Three docuseries Stacey & Joe, aired October 7, 2025, the 35-year-old presenter confessed she was “devastated” over missing out on two BAFTA Television Awards in May, defiantly adding, “I know you’re not supposed to say that.” The candid clip—filmed in the raw aftermath of the ceremony—has sparked a firestorm of support and scrutiny, transforming a personal snub into a broader conversation about grace under pressure in the cutthroat world of British telly. As Solomon navigates the fallout alongside husband Joe Swash and her Sort Your Life Out team, her unfiltered honesty has fans cheering her as “refreshingly real,” while critics cry “bad loser.”

The episode, titled “Awards and Aftermath,” peeled back the glamour of BAFTA night to reveal the sting beneath the sequins. Solomon, radiant in a repurposed lace wedding dress from her 2017 nuptials to Swash, had been buzzing with quiet hope for the May 11 ceremony at the Royal Festival Hall. Nominated in two categories—Factual Entertainment for Sort Your Life Out (with co-hosts Dilly Carter and Robert Bent) and Entertainment Performance for her solo spotlight—she envisioned the win as validation for a team that had poured hearts and hammers into decluttering Britain’s cluttered lives. “We’d worked our socks off—late nights, emotional hauls, families transformed,” she reflected in the doc, her Essex accent thickening with the memory. But as Rylan Clark and Rob Rinder scooped the Factual Entertainment prize for Rob & Rylan’s Grand Tour, and another rival claimed her solo nod, the camera caught Solomon’s smile cracking: A forced clap, a quick hug for Swash, and a backstage blur of “congrats” that rang hollow.

Stacey Solomon was left “devastated” in the latest episode of her docuseries, Stacey and Joe.

The BBC programme, which is in its second series, follows the presenter and husband Joe Swash as they juggle their busy careers with their five children, two dogs, chickens, ducks and array of other responsibilities at Pickle Cottage.

 

The latest edition saw Ms Solomon, 36, navigating a tricky period as the family’s beloved dog Teddy recovered from major surgery.

The cocker spaniel wasn’t out of the woods yet, with medics urging the TV personality to keep an eye on him, advising if he didn’t regain feeling in his legs they may have to consider other options.

Stacey Solomon and her dad, David

Stacey Solomon’s dad comforted her following the BAFTA snub

 | BBC

Back at their £2.5 million Essex pile, Pickle Cottage, the mask slipped. Lounging in gym shorts and a green Nike sweater amid her veggie patch—hose in hand as a prop for poise—Solomon turned to the camera with a wry laugh: “We didn’t win a BAFTA. And I know I’m supposed to take it gracefully like a champ, but I’ll be honest—I’m devastated.” She paused, watering her tomatoes with a vigor that betrayed the hurt: “It’s devastating when we didn’t win, and I know you’re not supposed to say that, and people are like, ‘Oh, lose gracefully.’ And I think, well why? I’m devastated for our whole team—like, I’m so gutted for our team.” The raw reel, intercut with BAFTA highlights and Swash’s supportive squeeze—”Babe, you were robbed”—has clocked 2.5 million views on BBC iPlayer, with Solomon joking to lighten the load: “I’ll give my nan one of my shoes and pretend it’s the BAFTA—she’s got bad eyes anyway.”

The backlash brewed swiftly. By May 13, social media split like a fault line: #StaceyRobbed rallied 1.2 million posts from die-hards—”She’s human, not a robot! Team deserved it!”—while detractors dubbed her a “sore loser,” with one viral X thread snarking, “BAFTAs aren’t participation trophies, love.” Ofcom fielded 1,800 complaints, a spike from the ceremony’s 500, probing if her post-air rant breached “impartiality.” Solomon, no stranger to trolls—from body-shaming post-baby Rex to “nepo” jabs for her Loose Women launch—doubled down in a follow-up Insta Live: “Why hide the hurt? My team’s blood, sweat, and tears deserved a nod. Grace is great, but honesty heals.” Co-star Dilly Carter, the show’s organizational oracle, leaped to her defense on ITV’s Lorraine May 13: “Good for her—say it how it is. It’s not about us; it’s the production’s passion.” Carter, 28, a former NHS nurse turned declutter dynamo, added a three-word mic drop: “She’s fearless.”

A happy distraction came from the presenter being nominated for two BAFTA awards for her other BBC series, Sort Your Life Out.

Ms Solomon enjoyed preparing for the big night and even had her wedding dress altered to re-use the special gown.

However, she was unfortunately snubbed as Rob Rinder, Rylan Clark and Joe Lycett were instead awarded the gongs.

As she was filmed leaving the ceremony with Mr Swash, the presenter looked at the cameras and commented: “boo!”

Stacey Solomon

Stacey Solomon admitted she was ‘devastated’ over the BAFTA loss

 | BBC

“Don’t want to talk about it, we’ll talk about it in the car,” Mr Swash commented.

Later, Ms Solomon called her dad during the drive back, explaining: “I lost them both, dad.”

Speaking to the cameras on the documentary, she recalled: “It was devastating when we didn’t win.”

In a candid admission, she added: “And I know you’re not supposed to say that, and people are like, ‘oh, lose gracefully.’ And I think, well why? I was gutted.”

Swash, 43, the EastEnders alum and Solomon’s rock through four kids (Rex, 6; Rose, 3; Belle, 1; and stepson Harry, 17), played the long game. In the doc, he quipped, “Oscar for what? Just for being Stacey Solomon!”—earning a playful shove—but off-camera, insiders tell The Mirror he was her anchor: Late-night pep talks amid the post-BAFTA blues, reminding her of Sort Your Life Out‘s impact—over 2 million viewers per episode, 500 families transformed since 2021. “Joe knows the grind—auditions, rejections, the lot,” a source said. “He’s her why in the wreckage.”

When her eldest son Zachary took the phone to chat to his mum, he quipped: “I think you should just take me next time, I don’t think Joe’s very lucky.”

“Yeah, you’re my lucky charm Zach, I think it’s Joe. I think it’s Joe that makes me lose every time,” the mother-of-five replied.

When she got back home, her dad David quipped: “I know you didn’t get the award…But you got a beehive instead,” referencing the fact she’d started her journey of bee-keeping prior to attending the ceremony.

Comforting his daughter, David remarked: “Well done, well done. Listen, you were nominated, that’s the most important thing.”

Stacey Solomon

Stacey Solomon claimed she was ‘robbed’

 | BBC

A doubtful Ms Solomon replied: “I was robbed, I tell you,” to which her dad joked: “I mean Joe Lycett is funny though, isn’t he?”

Thankfully, Teddy seems to be progressing with recovery, with Ms Solomon sharing positive updates on her social media since the episode, which was filmed in May.

Stacey Solomon

Stacey Solomon confessed she found it hard to ‘lose gracefully’

Taking to Instagram recently, she shared a clip of the dog, stating: “Thank you for always asking after Teddy. It really means a lot. He’s such a happy boy. He’s such a lovely boy.

“He will never be able to use his legs again, but he’s getting used to the wheelchair and, just, yeah. You just get on with it, don’t you, Teddy?”

Solomon’s BAFTA bid was no bolt from the blue. Sort Your Life Out, her BBC One juggernaut with Carter and declutter don Robert Bent, blends Marie Kondo magic with emotional evictions—families shedding stuff and stories in seven days. Nominated for its “life-changing” lens on hoarding and heartbreak, it lost to The Repair Shop‘s nostalgic nips. Solomon’s solo nod? A nod to her bubbly banter, but edged by Clark’s camp charisma. Pre-ceremony, she’d gushed to Radio Times: “If we win, it’s for the families who found freedom in the fridge-freezer.” Post-loss, the doc dives deeper: Team huddles dissecting “what ifs,” Carter confessing her own “imposter shakes,” Bent praising Solomon’s “gut-level grace.”

The ripple? A rallying cry for rawness in rewards season. BAFTAs, the Oscars’ posh cousin, crown 200+ categories yearly, but snubs sting—2025’s tallied 15% “robbed” rants on X. Solomon’s spill spotlights the unseen: 70% of nominees fundraise for glam, per Equity, with post-loss blues hitting 40% harder for women, per a 2024 Variety study. Her honesty? A balm: Donations to the show’s partnered charities—homelessness aid Shelter—spiked 30% post-episode. Co-stars Carter and Bent echoed on This Morning October 8: “Stacey’s our spark—snubs can’t snuff that.”

As October’s fog rolls over Pickle Cottage—where Solomon’s latest vlog teases a “BAFTA bounce-back” garden glow-up—the presenter presses on: Filming Renovation Rescue series three, mum duties with Swash, and whispers of a 2026 memoir, Gracefully Gutted. “Devastated? Yeah. Done? Never,” she posted October 9, a thumbs-up emoji her shield. For a star who’s sorted life’s messes—from The X Factor underdog to Essex empress— this “not supposed to say that” moment isn’t defeat; it’s defiance. BAFTAs may elude, but Solomon’s shine? Undimmed. Fans, keep watching—her next win’s written in the stars, or at least the small screen.