What Love Island USA can learn from the UK franchise tragedies

BBC News, Los Angeles

Love Island USA – a Spinoffu of the UK Reality series – is still experiencing the most watched season. But his new popularity came with a dark side.
The contestants were brutally cyber bullying on social media. The host Ariana Madix repeated the thought, asking the audience to rethink how they could affect their publications and cast.
The show, which compete and puts daily men and women in a villa in Fiji, usually helps contestants secure millions of social media followers, brand agreements and appearance demands.
However, the disadvantages of one -night fame have been well documented since the show started in England 10 years ago, and some contestants complain about depression, anxiety and relentless examination. After the two contestants appeared in the show, they died with suicide and asked the British government to start an investigation into reality television.
The show’s producers say they learn how to better support the player and crew of the years of success of Franchise. However, psychology experts who work with reality TV shows say that this is a challenging war.

Behavioral psychologist Jo Hemmings, who works with Realism TV productions, including Big Brother, said that the last five years have seen many positive changes to relieve prosperity concerns in the UK – but these steps are not evident in the USA.
“I do not think that the maintenance task has developed as much as it is in the United States.” He said. “Perhaps there is no prosperity, support or transparency at the same level. In addition, I wonder that increasing political polarization and cyber bullying and threats in the US may be more intense and widespread.”
He said this was about getting balance while working on a reality show. Many of these shows are ugly emotional explosions, sexual behavior, aggressive insults and confrontations.
“Manufacturers want excitement and danger,” he said, but psychologists on the set provide “stability and healthy behaviors”.
Repeating in more than 20 countries, Love Island says that it provides support to contestants before, and after production and continues to adjust mental health offers to meet changing needs.
In the US version, ITV America, a maintenance representative, uses a welfare manager who helps both psychologists and islanders as a “non -producer”. During the filming, all players have a psychologist assigned to Villa – and Check Ins can be started by a island, because players are called to the array or doctor.
Before entering the demonstration, each contestant passes through a long veterinary by a psychologist. The contestants are also informed about negative press, social media interactions and public perceptions.
However, this mental health awareness came from some difficult lessons. As the show gained popularity in the UK, some complained of depression or anxiety after appearing as part of the cast. A few people then spoke about the thoughts about getting their own lives.
In 2018 and 2019, the suicides of former Love Island UK contestants Sophie Gradon and Mike Thalassitis asked questions about how and how well the participants are.
Zara Holland competing in Love Island in England in 2016, “If this is what you want to do, you can make a lot of money, but you really need to look at the bigger picture and think in five, six, 10 years, you’ll always be recognized because it’s a reality TV show.” He said.
“It was a really hard time for me. And if I could turn the time down, I wish I had never gone at the show,” he said to the BBC’s news.
For social media contestants, he can serve as a double -edged sword. For more than 20 years, he has proposed productions about mental health services. Jamie Huymbman, some of them “Hell,” he said. He continued: “He really separated us from the influence of our words.”
The contestants want fame – but they are not the only person who feels hurry by taking likes and followers online. The average viewers on social media follow the same satisfaction when they make popular nomments or publications, and they are often encouraged to be critical.
Hemmings said that psychologists could encourage people to ignore online critics, but it was difficult.
“The people may be unstable and hard,” he said. He said: “Those who contributes are young and ambitious, but they need to remember that they may have siblings, siblings, sisters or children.”
One night, fame may create a series of problems that may be overwhelming for the contestants.
“They longing for them, but it brings an undesirable examination,” he said. “Their history has been disbelieved. EXES come out of wooden work to sell stories, and everything they do or says is open to criticism.”
Another complication, “very few reality stars of the successful media career – most struggle or disappears”. However, having a popularity taste can make it difficult to return to their old lives.
The season, which was still published in the season, has been the most watched season of the series since its release in the US in 2019. Sports bars are home to clock parties, celebrities imitate online viral moments-Grammy award-winning Megan Thee Stallion has even appeared in a episode this season and even on the show with the show.
The popularity of the show in the United States will be released next month and after the show returned to life in Los Angeles 6th season, which followed the islanders “Beyond Villa” made a spin-off.
However, this success, brutally criticized for their appearance and actions, led to an increase in negative comments about the players this season. The show published a message in the middle of a episode this week: “The keyword on Love Island… Love. We love our fans. We love our islanders. Cyber bullying, harassment or hatred.”
The host followed a public defense from Ariana Madix: “Don’t contact people’s families. Don’t worry about people. Don’t go to the pages of the islanders and say rude things.”
Love Island’s manufacturers of the United States did not say whether additional mental health measures will be taken after this season – but they continuously review and re -evaluating such measures.

The members of the players do not have access to mobile phones or social media when they are on the island, but they respond to some harassment, including those who know their friends and families, a mother who has a relationship with other island Jeremiah Brown.
The show routinely defended the self and harmonious psychological support system. Housewives Franchise’s reality star Betheny Frankel’s reality stars came to him a “reality calculation” in 2023, which was expanding in 2023, similar criticisms were made.
“Networks and pennants have been exploiting people for a long time, dedi he said, arguing that those who appear in reality programs should be unionized.
Searches, “Love Blind”, “Real Housewives” franchise and “Vanderpump Rules” – Mrs. Madix’in players on the treatment of players watched various cases.
Suzie Gibson, a senior lecturer at Charles Stur University, compared Realism TV stars with “Bat for today’s gladiators, love, fame and Instagram followers”.
“The audience can live through a proxy through their favorites, while the audience hopes to be dismissed or sarcastic.”