Raina Morris responded on Instagram on Wednesday, May 27, 2026, with the words "Strictly business" and a photo marked "strict lovers" after a TikTok alleged she had imposed three strict rules on her boyfriend Belmont Cameli while he filmed the Prime Video series Off Campus.
The Instagram post included a photo of Morris and Cameli with the text "strict lovers" written across it; Cameli replied beneath the post with a handshake, briefcase and kiss emojis. Ella Bright, Cameli’s costar in Off Campus, commented on Morris’s post with "Grab your chicken?"
The TikTok that sparked the exchange made a series of specific allegations: that Morris had set "three strict rules" for Cameli, that an on‑set supervisor must oversee intimate scene shoots, that scenes should be filmed only with the full crew present, and that Morris had banned filming of Cameli’s private areas. The video also claimed that Cameli and Bright were required to wear custom attire to prevent genuine physical contact, that Cameli was banned from off‑screen intimate contact, and that Bright could not hype up her intimate scenes with Cameli in interviews. The TikTok voiceover framed the whole report this way: "Unknown to everyone, his girlfriend, Raina Morris, has secretly set three strict rules for him."
The TikTok provoked a brisk reaction online. Many fans met the allegations with skepticism and called the clip "ragebait," and Morris’s breezy Instagram reply—plus Cameli’s playful emojis—shifted the tone away from the seriousness of the original post.
The exchange matters now because it landed as Off Campus is streaming and drawing attention to its on‑screen romances. Morris and Cameli have been publicly linked since at least March 2025; Cameli revealed the relationship on Instagram at the New York City premiere of The Alto Knights that month, and Morris accompanied him to the Los Angeles premiere of Off Campus in April 2026. Those public appearances, together with multiple photos of Cameli on Morris’s page and flirtatious responses he has left on her photos, have kept scrutiny on how their private relationship intersects with Cameli’s work.
Context: Off Campus is streaming on Prime Video, and the allegation originated on a May TikTok video that laid out the rules and procedures cited above. Morris has a background as a TV writer—she graduated from Northeastern University with a degree in health science before switching to TV writing in college, and her credits include Emily in Paris, Neon and Schmigadoon!—and she has also done stand‑up comedy. She grew up in Portland, Oregon, was born on July 17, and has said in the past on the Perfect Person podcast that driving on highways is "Too scary, too fast."
The apparent friction in this story is simple: the TikTok presents a detailed, policing picture of how intimate scenes are handled; Morris’s Instagram reply reads as mockery, not confirmation. Fans’ skeptical reaction and Bright’s offbeat "Grab your chicken?" comment underline the gap between the viral allegation and how the people named in it chose to respond publicly on May 27.
So which is it—did Morris set those rules? The public record available on May 27 shows only the TikTok’s allegations and Morris’s and Cameli’s light, public responses. Morris’s Instagram reaction and Cameli’s emojis effectively undercut the TikTok’s claim; nothing in the public exchanges that day confirmed the detailed rules the video described, and many viewers treated the original post as provocation rather than proof.


