The following day’s brunch was “the most awkward part of it all” because “everything that had gone on at the wedding night was discussed amongst the guests the next morning”, the DJ said.
He added that the newlyweds left “devastated”, but said the dance “is a very small part of a bigger problem” for the feuding family.
It’s “sad” that many people have focused on that part of Brooklyn’s statement, he said.
“It’s taken a lot for someone to go to social media to post it,” Marnoch said.
“He wanted to change the narrative. For all of his life he’s been called a nepo baby, and ‘He should be grateful that he’s got the family name’.
“That’s what he was born into. I think what we’re all missing here is the fact that parents have lost their child, and a son’s lost his parents and the rest of his family.”
In his explosive Instagram post on Monday, Brooklyn said he did not want to “reconcile” with his family, citing further wedding dress drama and an accusation that his parents put “brand Beckham” first.
Sir David and Lady Beckham have not directly commented about the claims or given their side of the story.
Mock-ups and memes of Lady Beckham’s supposed wedding dance have been flooding the internet all week.
BBC News’s Noor Nanji noted: “They’re all made up, of course, but people on social media are demanding those who were there to ‘release the tapes’ of the dance.”