Latest Trends

Love Island USA season 7 is ruined by “fraternity”

In this editorial, the deputy editor Aiyana Ishmael maintains that the efforts of the Love island Season 7 thrown to recreate the commercial success of the PPG trio of season 6 has a negative impact on the natural chemistry of Icelanders and affects the experiences of those who in and outside the villa.


During Love Island USA Season 6, the public was sold a unicorn: the stars Serena Page, Leah Kateb and Jana Craig formed a real friendship while he was in Fiji in search of love, a link that is not often seen during the epic of reality TV.

He had passed the time of women who were fighting through men for six weeks. We welcomed in a new era of Sisterhood, a slightly more linked than anyone who had never seen on the past seasons of the reality franchise. This undeniable love and support – and their instantly emblematic nickname, PPG – made fans of the series invest in everything that these three girls were hypothetically sold.

Serena had around 2,000 Instagram subscribers when the show was created last June, and she left the villa with more than half a million, which has now turned into more than 4 million followers on Instagram and Tiktok, a series of spin-offs on Peacock, and the representation of one of the largest media agencies in the country. To say that the power of Sisterhood has transformed the personal life of the PPG is a raw and the raw and

It was therefore only a matter of time that Love Island USA Producers, competitors and fans of season 7 would again seek a way to take lightning in a bottle. It seems that we have all quickly forgotten that a successful friendship takes time and work – not only twelve episodes.

Love Island USA – Episode 712 – Picun: (LR) Iris and Dall, Huda Mustafa, Michelle “CHELLEY” BISSAINTHE, Hannah Fields, Olandria Carthen, Cirra Ortega, Amaya Espinal – (Photo by: Benmons / Peacock)Peacock

Probably due to the success of PPG, it seems that each of the candidates of season 7 is too aware of the fact that they are perceived by millions of viewers at home, and desperately aware that reality TV – and “fraternity” – could be an avenue in corporate purge and in influencer freedom, similar to what we saw with Serena, Leah and Jana.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button