On the heels of "The Bachelor" finale and his highly-touted appearance on "After The Final Rose," Matt James has implied that he's seeking therapy.
"Google Therapist Near me," he tweeted the day after the airing of both shows.
Whether Matt was serious or tweeted in jest, show producers are making it clear that they stand with the 29-year-old and are there if he needs them. According to the TMZ, the tweet "set off alarm bells" with the head honchos of the franchise.
The ABC franchise, the report says, takes mental health very seriously and offers professional therapy and counseling to contestants both during production and years after filming is over. Participants of "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" are made aware of this very early on.
Matt, first Black lead of "The Bachelor," picked Rachael Kirkconnell at the end of season 25, but he didn't propose. Still, he voiced his commitment to Rachael and openly said he envisioned her as his wife.
However, not long after the finale was filmed (but before it aired), three-year-old social media images surfaced that showed Rachael at an Antebellum South-themed party. She also "liked" other images that contained a Confederate flag, and she posted Qanon conspiracy theories online.
On the "After The Final Rose" special, Matt said he and Rachael were no longer together and acknowledged that the past racist acts where the reason.
"It's heartbreaking. If you don't understand that something like that is problematic in 2018, there's a lot of me that you won't understand. It's as simple as that," he said.
Rachael acknowledged that she was still in love with Matt, but he essentially squashed any hopes of a reconciliation and said she needed to confront her racist actions and work on herself.
"When I questioned our relationship, it was in the context of you not fully understanding my Blackness and what it means to be a Black man in America," he told her. "It broke my heart because this is the last conversation I thought we'd be having. I didn't sign up to have this conversation."