Khloe Kardashian's fans cringed with embarrassment as the reality star gushed over her love to boyfriend Tristan Thompson in The Kardashians new trailer- filmed before the bombshell the basketball player had fathered a love child.
Sharing the preview on Instagram on Thursday, Khloe, 37, was on the treadmill when she told Tristan, 31, "Scott (Disick) is never leaving. Kanye (West) is never leaving.
"Looks like you're never leaving."
But Tristan hit back: "More like you're never leaving me", which left Khloe looking less-than-impressed with the jibe as she replied: "Oh, okay".
The scenes were filmed before news broke weeks later that Tristan had cheated on Khloe and was fathering a child with a personal trainer.
Fans soon took to Khloe's comment section to talk about the excruciatingly awkward scenes and how they were a warning flag all was not well in their relationship.
One follower commented: "Just leave Tristan out of your life!", while another added: "This didn't age well."
A third said: "Tristan has a nerve".
While a fourth typed: "That last “you’re never leaving” didn’t age well."
And Khloe found out that Tristan was having a baby with another woman whilst she was filming a scene for the reality show.
The reality star received the news that the basketball player, 31, had fathered a child with fitness model Maralee Nichols while cameras were rolling months ago.
Maralee gave birth to a baby named Theo, who is now five months old, in December last year.
Khloé - who shares daughter True Thompson, four, with the NBA player - is reported to have found out about the paternity drama from her sister Kim Kardashian, 41, on camera.
Danielle King - an executive producer on the Kardashians - told US Weekly there had been crew with Khloé to film something else that day when the drama unfolded.
"Well for that particular moment, my crew was there. We were there to film something else early in the morning and the morning that news broke, we legitimately just happened to be there. We have that moment on camera," she said.
Danielle said that such moments are "genuinely captured" because film crews are "almost always there."