If loads C and E "hate each other", this may be poor.
In particular, if these are the 3rd and 1st stages of an amplifier chain, subsonics sneak from 3rd stage to 1st stage in-phase to cause oscillation, "motorboating".
Which is why we "usually" run the power filter chain the same way as the amplifier chain, only backward. Amplifier 1st 2nd 3rd 4th. Raw power, filters to 4th 3rd 2nd 1st. That puts two filters between the in-phase 3rd and 1st stages (or 4th and 2nd).
Then there is the "other way". Sorta-clean the raw DC and then give a separate filter to EACH stage. This may even work (though an exact design may cost more). But if you combine loads without understanding, you may get putt-putt-putt.
Ignoring the possiblity of huge sub-sonics.... If C is 22K and E is 22K, then the parallel value should be _11K_, not 22K. (Use 10K.)
6 Watts is highly unlikely. Yes, doing the job of two "3W" resistors would be 6W. However I suspect the "3W" rating is pretty conservative. In fact 22K 6W can stand a steady 360 Volts, which is probably about ALL you started with. It is more likely you only have 4mA flowing in the 22K, so 88 Volts across 22K, and 88V*4mA is 0.352 Watts steady dissipation.
You do have to be generous with this part, because at turn-on it has to fill-up the 8uFd or 16uFd, and might touch 6 Watts for a small instant. But I'd expect a 2W part to stand the surge many thousand times, and run just-warm steady-state.