Her jaw-dropping revelations come less than a week after the brunette bride told WHO Online exclusively that they were "treated like animals" while taking part in the controversial dating experiment.
"It was f***ing putrid. They sit us on these hard plastic chairs in this dirty tent for hours and refuse to give us any reading material unless you ask. One time, I was wearing a white dress and I left with it literally being black," she told us over the phone. "It's not right. I live in a first world country and I'd like to at least sit on a comfortable chair."
Speaking about filming the final dinner party— where she exposed Mikey Pembroke and Stacey Hampton's affair— in a warehouse with no air-conditioning or fans, the outspoken bride said she raged at the show's producers when they decided to light a fire in the room, leaving many cast members feeling dizzy and unwell.
"It was 40 degrees in an uninsulated warehouse and it was so hot that Chris [Nicholls] got pulled off-set because he had sweated through his whole shirt and needed a dry one," she revealed, adding she's still traumatised by what happened behind the scenes. "It was so f***ing hot I split the seam in my $1,000 dress because the beading and silk were literally wet from sweat."
"I was screaming at them to get the fans. I was literally eating icy polls and trying to cool my body down in the freezer. It's just absolutely f***ed and it's not right."
Although they spent countless hours filming, Natasha said her co-stars weren't provided with enough food to keep them going, admitting she often had no choice but to source her own meals.
"They give you fried rice that has been sitting around for god knows how long. I am gluten-free and they never served gluten-free food so I used to have to go down and get chips from the vending machine," she revealed. "There was even one night where Vanessa [Romito] got fed nothing because they had forgotten about her food intolerances."
Last week, her co-star Mishel Karen told The Daily Telegraph they "didn't have any human rights" while filming.
"We were sleep-deprived, we had everything we owned taken from us, we were spoken to like pieces of sh*t," she told the outlet.