Ciara Miller Shuts Down Amanda Batula Reconciliation — Summer House Reunion Part 1
Ciara Miller used her summer house reunion part 1 red-carpet stop on Saturday, May 23, to draw a clean line under the Amanda Batula situation. Speaking at amFAR, she said she is ready to move on after the reunion and closed the door on reconciliation.
“I’m excited to put it all behind me,” Miller said. She added, “The reunion was quite the day, but we are on to bigger and better and, you know, we can say goodbye to certain things.”
Ciara Miller on amFAR
Miller’s comments landed just days before the first of the season 10 reunion’s three parts airs on Bravo on Tuesday, May 26, at 8 p.m. ET. The episode is set to put the cast conflict in public view, with Miller, Batula and West Wilson at the center of it.
She said the session would bring “clarity” and called it “very cathartic.” Miller also said, “It’s one of those situations that’s unfortunate but you know, I’m so excited to move on from this.” That is the clearest signal yet that she is treating the reunion as a cutoff point, not a reset.
Batula and West Wilson
When asked whether she and Batula were “dunzo,” Miller did not hedge: “Yeah, for sure. Yeah. I wouldn’t do this to my worst enemy.” Earlier trailer footage already pointed in that direction, with Miller telling Batula, “Over the past six years, I have been your f***ing champion. I couldn’t fathom that I’d be sitting here pissed that you’re f***ing my ex!”
West Wilson, who previously dated Miller, said in April that he and Batula “realized things were maybe a little bit serious” in February. He also said, “There was no overlap,” and added, “Everyone was single.”
Three parts, one fracture
The timeline matters because the public version of this triangle moved fast: Batula announced her separation from Kyle Cooke in January, Wilson and Batula said their romance was real in March, and Wilson later denied any overlap on his podcast. By Saturday, Miller was signaling she was done carrying the argument for all three of them.
For viewers, the first reunion hour looks less like a cleanup lap than the point where the season’s central friendships stop being negotiable. If Miller is already calling the next chapter hers, the real draw is whether the reunion gives the audience the final version of the story before the last two parts air.