She was supposed to find a husband in nine weeks but last night Channel Ten unceremoniously dumped Yasmin's Getting Married after only four programs.
It's more proof that the reality genre is in deep trouble and that the 7pm timeslot is ruled by an audience that has little interest in marriage, let alone when it's being chased by an attractive, well-spoken 29-year-old recruitment manager who has surrendered herself to the instant fame of voyeuristic television.
Yasmin Dale's show was a flop from the start.
The star of the original show, Renae's Getting Married, pulled out after finding true true love. Yasmin tried to put on the ring, only to score the worst debut of any Australian prime-time show this decade - 778,000 in the mainland capitals.
In the same time slot, Big Brother was averaging more than 1 million viewers each week night. Yasmin alienated so many people at 7pm that Seven's ancient soap Home and Away gained 200,000 viewers to 1.46 million and Nine's ancient game show Temptation rose by 300,000 viewers to 1.42 million.
Ten's chief programming officer, David Mott, said: "Our audience has not embraced this bold new initiative."
Ten is not jilting Dale, who in pre-program publicity said that "my ring finger has been bare for too long". The network has promised to pay for her wedding if she can find a bloke to walk up the altar. Meanwhile it is replacing Yasmin with Futurama, a cartoon. Enough said.