The producers of an online reality show turned a Brooklyn couple’s Hamptons property into a “house of ill repute” — hosting wild parties that left drunks stumbling through the neighborhood, a lawsuit charges.
Stuart and Susan Silverman’s East Hamptons house “was left in a shambles” after a producer rented it for the show — called “pArty of 5” — and transformed the property into the “Vice Hamptons Club” for the bacchanalian bashes last summer, the couple claim in their federal suit filed on Long Island this week.
That show features “exploits of a group of partygoers . . . in different cities throughout the world,” the suit notes.
It claims $20,000 worth of paving stones had to be replaced and cites damage throughout the house and property.
And, in a gross twist, the suit notes, “A very expensive couch has to be replaced because, despite the Silvermans’ best efforts to clean it, there were sperm stains that could not be removed.”
The Silvermans rented the house to Joshua Blackman, a co-defendant in the suit, for $10,000 for all of last June, a source said.
They have been “harmed psychologically” after pictures of their house were posted online “showing women in various stages of undress [and they] are now viewed by members of the community and potential tenants as running a house of ill-repute,” the suit said.
The defendants allegedly told the Silvermans that they were going to use the home only for family barbecues and other wholesome gatherings.
Fuming neighbors informed the owners that their home had been taken over by carousing young people.
The Hamptons were rocked by a slew of cases this past summer in which unsuspecting homeowners rented their sprawling East End pads to party promoters who then turned them into animal houses for profit.
Blackman declined to comment.