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The panel holds completely still.
No new expert, no new format wrinkle — just the same three matchmakers running the process again in a new city. Dallas is the format on cruise control.
A rhythm worth tracking.
Dallas brings back the same three-expert panel that ran Boston — Schwartz, Roberson, and Griffin — without a single change to the format. It's the first season in the show's run where nothing structural moves: no new expert, no new episode count, no shift in premise. Three couples go through the now-standard blind-marriage process in a new city, and the result is the format's steadiest, most predictable outing yet.
The #15 slot.
Slot #15 of 19 in the Married at First Sight Editor's Canon. Dallas ranks low precisely because it's the season where the format first stops moving entirely. No new expert, no cast expansion, no episode-count bump — the exact same three-person panel from Boston runs it back in a new city, full stop. That's not a criticism of the execution, which is as clean as ever, but this canon's whole standard is whether a season still feels like an open question, and Dallas is the first to answer that question with a shrug. It confirms the routine Boston had only just settled into, without adding a single new wrinkle of its own to test.