logo
EXCLUSIVE Virgin Island airs most outrageous lesson yet as experts groan, writhe on top of each other and even demo SPANKING for jaw-dropping sex position coaching

EXCLUSIVE Virgin Island airs most outrageous lesson yet as experts groan, writhe on top of each other and even demo SPANKING for jaw-dropping sex position coaching

Daily Mail​7 days ago

Virgin Island is set to air the most outrageous lesson yet as experts groan, writhe on top of each other and even demonstrate spanking in a jaw-dropping sex position lesson on Monday's episode of the Channel 4 show.
MailOnline has obtained an exclusive clip of today's (26 May 2025) episode - and it pushes boundaries further than ever before.
Sexperts Dr Danielle Harel and Celeste Hirschmam, MA, get very up close and personal with each other to show the contributors what kind of positions can form part of getting intimate.
In the first look, the voice over says: 'Celeste and Danielle are first going to teach them a few positions... to raise confidence in the bedroom.'
Celeste tells the virgins: 'So in this next exercise, we are going to help you get skillful moving bodies around in a smooth, fluid way.'
Danielle adds: 'And also add a little bit of passionate talk.'
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
Celeste tells them: 'So just one sentence along the lines of... you can say "you're so sexy", "I love touching you", or "you're so hot".
'Just something that has passion in it...
'Ready to see the demo?'
The voice over explains: 'First there is a side way missionary, then they switch to cow girl. Next it's the secondary missionary and finally, the leap frog.'
The sexperts show off the various sex positions while breathing heavily and even ended the demonstration with a smack on the bum.
Danielle tells the group: 'That's how it's done.'
Zac then puts himself forward to try it in front of the rest of the virgins.
The voice over explains: 'So far, Zac has been the most eager in the group.'
Zac decides to put himself forward and do a demonstration in front of the rest of the group
Zac jumps onto the bed and says: 'Right... starting position.'
Danielle tells him: 'Starting position is relax' and the group burst into laughter.
'Just sit for a moment to connect,' Danielle adds.
The pair lock eyes for a few moments and Danielle whispers: 'Sexy.'
Zac replies: 'Very,' with a big smile on his face.
He adds: 'I'm a lucky boy!'
Danielle tells him: 'Yeah, I like that.'
The pair then get straight into it and try all of the sex positions that they were shown.
'That feels good,' Danielle confesses.
She asks him at the end: 'Wanna try a little smack?'
It comes after Virgin Island's male sex surrogate revealed what really happens when he's not attracted to a client - but has to perform in bed.
Andre Lazarus and Kat Slade sat down with Ben Shephard and Cat Deeley on Thursday's instalment of This Morning.
The pair star on Channel 4 's shocking new show which sees sexologists Dr Danielle Harel and Celeste Hirschman and their team, guide a group of 12 virgins on a unique course.
Since launching earlier this month, viewers have seen the contributors, all aged between 22 and 30 years old, overcome a range of emotional hurdles to take their first steps towards sex and intimacy.
Sessions with a surrogate partner is one of the approaches some of the contributors get involved in, and Andre opened up more about the dynamics of the relationship.
From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop.
'Intimacy does involve attraction, physically there has to be something that happens to a man if it's going to go further as well, how do you manage that Andre if you've got a client that perhaps you aren't sexually attracted to but wants to take that further?' Ben asked.
Andre, who has been a surrogate partner for four years, said: 'Physically, I would say that as a man we don't have to have all of our body parts working in order to form intimate connection or in order to have physical intimacy be something that feels good in our body.'
The Channel 4 star went on to explain how he felt it was a 'common misconception'.
He went on: 'Really what we can do is tune into our body and say I'm enjoying touch, I'm enjoying kissing, I'm enjoying hugging and that can be an intimate moment and then that takes us out of our head which allows the rest of our body to come online.'
Virgin Island will be available to stream on Channel 4 from 9pm tonight

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TV tonight: chapter two of the ultimate Jane Austen docu-series
TV tonight: chapter two of the ultimate Jane Austen docu-series

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

TV tonight: chapter two of the ultimate Jane Austen docu-series

9pm, BBC Two At this point in the documentary series, Austen has written Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility plus Northanger Abbey – but nobody outside her family has read them. This chapter shows her journey to getting them published. But just after she gets good news, her father becomes sick and she faces losing her biggest cheerleader. Hollie Richardson 8pm, Channel 4Not-so-smooth sailing: this new behind-the-scenes documentary series meets the people working at the non-stop transport hub that sees more than 10 million passengers and a significant percentage of the UK's European trade pass through every year. Episode one includes a cargo team preparing to receive a third of the country's weekly supply of bananas. Can they avoid any slip-ups? And what happens when a lorry driver claims he has a gun? Graeme Virtue 9pm, Channel 4More chaos on a night out with the police in Brighton – and it's not the fun kind. A welfare check has to be carried out after a phone call from an ex-partner, while a group of drunk partygoers need to be removed from a bar, and there's a suspected spiking when a woman collapses in a pub. HR 9pm, Sky WitnessVanessa Williams is great value in this unconventional crime comedy-drama as a vodka-swilling socialite who resorts to elegant but drastic measures when her plans to take revenge on a snooty jewellery store go wrong. Attorney and detective Elsbeth (Carrie Preston) has to tune in to posh vibes to solve a murder and stop a heist. Jack Seale 10pm, Sky ComedyThe second, aviation-themed series of Nathan Fielder's awkward documentary comedy takes a brief detour in this episode. Nathan helps a couple whose dog-cloning experiment has gone awry, by trying to replicate their original pet's 2011-era upbringing. He then applies the technique to himself, via a close reading of heroic pilot Sully Sullenberger's memoir. Ellen E Jones 10.50pm, U&DaveWould you be able to keep a straight face as your parent told a whole audience about their sex life? That's what one poor woman has to do in this comedy show that chips off prize money each time someone laughs. Next up, a kid takes to the stage with some outrageously adult jokes. HR

JoJo Siwa says Chris Hughes feels like family and her mother ‘adores' him
JoJo Siwa says Chris Hughes feels like family and her mother ‘adores' him

Leader Live

time7 hours ago

  • Leader Live

JoJo Siwa says Chris Hughes feels like family and her mother ‘adores' him

The two met in the ITV1 Celebrity Big Brother house, growing close during their time on the reality show, claiming their relationship was 'platonic'. Since leaving the house, they have been seen together and recently shared photographs of them together on Instagram, suggesting they are in a relationship. A post shared by JoJo Siwa (@itsjojosiwa) Siwa, 22, told Channel 4's Sunday Brunch: 'She (Siwa's mother) does love him. My parents think the absolute world of him and him and my dad are like best friends. 'Chris was actually telling me that yesterday they went to the spa together. They're literally best friends. 'Mum, she absolutely adores him. I love watching her watch us because I've never seen my mum so happy. 'It feels like we're a family. It feels like he's been in my family for however many years. It feels like they just all get along as well as I do. 'I think there will definitely be a lot more time spent here, and I think from him as well, a lot more time spent over there, but we both have families, you know, on either end.' The 22-year old singer is known for her songs Karma and Guilty Pleasure, which she released in 2024, while sports presenter Hughes, 32, appeared on the third season of the ITV reality TV series Love Island. Speaking about her decision to join Celebrity Big Brother, she said: 'I didn't even question a yes or no. I knew it wasn't even a question. It was an immediate yes. 'I think for me, growing up on reality TV, it almost feels like a little bit of home to me, and it just feels like it's just fun. 'And right before I went in, I told my mom, I was like, I think this is gonna be the best thing I've ever done. And she's like, what do you mean? And I was like, I don't know, something tells me, like for my personal, like for my life, it feels like it's gonna be the best thing I've ever done and by a landslide it has been. 'Being on Big Brother you're captured 24/7 so for people to just get to see the real me was something that I wasn't sure how to share, essentially on my own, I guess I wasn't brave enough to share it.' The Celebrity Big Brother final saw Coronation Street actor Jack P Shepherd crowned the winner. Siwa placed third on the ITV1 reality show while Hughes came sixth.

Chef Jamie Oliver says dyslexia documentary was ‘most painful' thing he has done
Chef Jamie Oliver says dyslexia documentary was ‘most painful' thing he has done

Leader Live

time7 hours ago

  • Leader Live

Chef Jamie Oliver says dyslexia documentary was ‘most painful' thing he has done

The 50-year old celebrity chef has lived with the learning difficulty all his life and will now present a one-hour documentary on Channel 4 titled Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution. The show will dive into the challenges and issues children with dyslexia face in Britain while asking whether the Government can do more to fix the education system. Speaking to the Sunday Times, Oliver said: 'I'm unpacking quite a lot of stuff. 'I thought I'd buried it but it's hitting a nerve. 'Genuinely, of all the things I've ever done, this documentary is the most viscerally painful,' 'I've seen so many high-flying, talented, grown men cry about this — I've just done it to you — the concept of being worthless (when you're) young is real. It's really triggering.' According to the NHS dyslexia is described as a 'common learning difficulty that causes problems with reading, writing and spelling'. Having left school with two GCSEs, the chef opened up about the challenges he faced, adding that the kitchen 'saved' him. He said: 'I didn't have any extra time in exams, there were no strategies, just a bit of extra tutoring help. 'There was no robust dyslexic knowledge then.' He also described feeling 'stupid, worthless and thick' and developing 'a hatred of words and a total resentment for education' while other students called him a 'stupid dunce', leaving him with a 'deep-seated feeling of constantly being behind'. 'I didn't tell mum, dad or the teachers. I just bottled it up inside. 'The kitchen saved me. I knew I had something to offer. I knew I wasn't a useless piece of shit.' The Essex-born chef and author is known for hosting cooking shows and documentaries including The Naked Chef and Jamie's Kitchen along with publishing a series of cookbooks including Jamie's 30-Minute Meals. He has also been an avid campaigner over the years including calling on the Government for greater provisions for healthier school meals and playing a role in imposing a sugar tax on soft drinks. He is now campaigning for greater support in schools, calling for early screenings for dyslexia and neurodiversity. Oliver added: 'We also need more training for teachers. In a two to three-year training course only about half a day is given to neurodiversity. 'I've only got love for teachers, we need to appreciate them more. 'But they want to be trained, they want to have the tools to notice, understand and react.' Jamie's Dyslexia Revolution can be watched on Channel 4 on June 9 at 9pm.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store