
Love Island 2025 gets highest number of Ofcom complaints since 2021
TV watchers logged over 14,000 complaints about the behaviour on the show, which saw Toni Laites and Cach Mercercome come out on top of the drama-filled season.
In what was the highest number of complaints since 2021, the 14,154 reports to Ofcom related to alleged bullying, abusive behaviour and misogyny.
The highest number of complaints came after the July 24 episode, in which viewers were concerned about the alleged bullying of Shakira Khan and 3,547 complaints were lodged.
In other scenes on the show, viewers were also unhappy with Dejon Noel-Williams' behaviour towards Megan Moore.
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However, Ofcom has now said that they have decided not to take the complaints any further, saying the behaviour on the show was 'not shown in a positive light' and is in line with what viewers expect from the format.
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A watchdog spokesperson said: 'We carefully assessed the complaints we received about this series of Love Island.
'We recognise that emotionally charged or confrontational scenes can upset some viewers. But, in our view, negative behaviour in the villa was not shown in a positive light, and contestants were seen supporting or apologising to each other.
'We also took into account that the format of this reality show is well-established, and viewers would expect to see highs and lows as relationships and friendships are tested.'
Yet Love Island viewers at the time were not best pleased by the behaviour on the Maya Jama-hosted show.
Last year saw a much lower 3,500 complaints lodged, but did not surpass 2021's series – which was won by Liam Reardon and Millie Court – when 36,000 complaints were submitted.
ITV has said that participants receive training about 'mutually respectful behaviour in relationships' and 'behaviour patterns associated with controlling and coercive behaviour' ahead of entering the villa.
They also receive psychological support throughout the show as well as an aftercare package which includes further support.
Through the season this summer, Love Island viewers took to social media to complain about the behaviour in the villa. More Trending
Taking to X (formerly Twitter), @jadecvine wrote: 'Never thought I'd do an ofcom complaint in my life and now I've done 2 in one week. #LoveIsland.'
@jwkioskk simply wrote: 'I have never seen truly such vile behaviour on TV. #LoveIsland.'
@ninia_benjamin added: 'This ITV is why you should have stepped in. But no you allowed this to go on watched by them. Then wonder why people are going Ofcom. A mean spiritedness was foisted on this series which was UNCALLED for. Love Island for shame.'
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You can catch up on this season of Love Island on ITVX.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Katie Price and Kerry Katona's daughters learn from their mothers' mistakes with surgeries, broken marriages and addictions - as they take VERY different paths to the noughties hell-raisers
From multiple failed marriages to addiction and chaotic lives that were rarely out of the headlines, Kerry Katona and Katie Price were the original noughties hell-raisers and with so much in common, it's no surprise they became close friends. Now the pair have something new to bond over - watching their daughters become young women and take their first steps into the limelight in their own right. Katie's daughter Princess made her first foray into solo reality TV this week with the launch of her ITV show The Princess Diaries, while Kerry's daughters Molly, Lily-Sue and Heidi are also weighing up their options in the worlds of entertainment and influencing. However, there's none of the drama that their mothers were famous for in their heyday. For instance, Kerry's daughter Molly is training to be an actress at Paul Mescal 's prestigious alma mater The Lir in Dublin, and recently said her dream role would be to play the titular role in Ibsen's Hedda Gabler. Meanwhile, Princess has won plaudits for her maturity and authenticity in her new TV show, and is modelling herself on savvy businesswoman Kylie Jenner rather than her own mother Katie. Here the Daily Mail reveals how, despite chaotic times in the past, the girls are forging their own paths. She is said to already have a net worth of £500,000, and starred on the cover of OK! Magazine for her 18th birthday Princess Andre was born on June 29, 2007, to mum Katie and dad Peter Andre. Despite her mother's headline-grabbing life in the spotlight, Princess has built a life of her own. She is said to already have a net worth of £500,000, and starred on the cover of OK! Magazine for her 18th birthday. While this is a substantial amount of money, this is only half of what Princess hopes to secure, as she has vowed to become a 'millionaire by the age of 20'. For a single brand deal video, the blonde beauty can earn anywhere between £2,540 to £3,810. 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Princess has also reportedly set her sights on becoming the UK's answer to Kylie Jenner with her own billion-pound makeup empire. She has given fans a new insight into her hopes for the future with her new TV show, which follows her attempts to establish herself as a makeup mogul. Princess is also said to have made it clear that while her mum made her name as a glamour model, she has no intentions of following in her footsteps. An insider told The Sun: 'Princess has got ambitions of being the next Kylie Jenner. 'Everyone's been saying they can see that happening, with her own TV show and a makeup range coming out. She also has lots more deals in the pipeline to consider. 'When Katie says that Princess is "following in her footsteps", she isn't.' Heidi Elizabeth Croft Heidi Elizabeth Croft was born on February 20, 2007, to mum Kerry Katona and dad Mark Croft. Throughout her long-lasting career, Kerry has battled with bankruptcies, abusive relationships and drug addictions. 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Recently she was nominated for the Spotlight Prize, awarded to aspiring young actors in the UK and Ireland, and has expressed an interested in playing Hedda Gabler in Ibsen's play of the same name. She graduated in 2022 with a Foundation Diploma in Acting and Theatre Studies and it's believed she's progressed to the three-year, full-time, intensive honours degree, which she will complete in 2025. The degree course at the the Lir Academy is described as being 'completely different' to other drama schools where students might have classes for 14 hours a week. Lir Academy students are in classes, workshops and rehearsals for at least 35 hours per week, and sometimes more when in production, and the environment is designed to simulate what you'd expect in a professional theatre. Prior to her move, Molly lived in Cheshire with her mother Kerry and younger sister Lilly Sue, 21. Kerry also has Heidi, 17, and Max, 16, from her marriage to Mark Croft. 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'She moved over there and she did three years of education and then she moved to London which she absolutely hated. 'Then she moved back home and I said, "Why don't you move back to Ireland, you were flourishing over there." 'She was desperate to get into the Lir and she finally got in the Lir.' Lilly-Sue McFadden Lilly-Sue McFadden was born when Kerry and Brian were at the height of their pop fame. Despite having famous parents, Lilly has never desired to live off their names like other 'nepo babies'. Indeed, she spent several years working as a support worker in a care home for young adults with learning disabilities, a shop assistant in SpecSavers and a barista. Lilly told the Daily Mail in 2023: 'There's a negative connotation around nepo babies. It is absolutely true, I technically am a nepo baby because I come from two wealthy parents who are famous, which has given me more opportunities but there's nothing wrong with that. 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If they could swap out the glass of Prosecco for a pint of San Miguel, then I'd probably do it! 'Maybe in a couple of years it might end up being me, I'm always growing and changing but at the minute that's not really where I'm at.' And in May 2024, Lilly decided to move to Ireland, as she confessed she is ready to 'quit the UK'. At the time, Kerry revealed in her OK! column that despite feeling emotional over having just one child left in school, she is 'proud' of Lilly because she has been accepted into a drama school. She wrote in OK! Magazine: 'Lilly is looking for a fresh start so has decided she's going to move over to Ireland to live with her grandparents on her dad's side. 'I think it's a good thing because she's 21 so it'll be nice for her to stand on her own two feet, she rules the roost at our house.'


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
The thong bikini boom: why the skimpiest swimwear is back
There are plenty of places where no one would bat an eyelid at the sight of a thong bikini; on a beach in Brazil or around the Love Island fire pit, visible butt cheeks are practically de rigueur. But my first sighting this year was not while surfing in Australia or sunbathing in the Caribbean, but at an open-water swimming spot, on a rainy day in Scotland. I should not have been surprised. Tiny swimwear is huge news this summer. It is no longer confined to sunny climes, but cropping up everywhere from lidos to leisure centres – and lochs, apparently. The trickle down from catwalks and influencers to holidaymakers and shoppers is notable. A search for 'thong bikini' on Asos yields 187 results, ranging from high-leg styles, to side-tie, to tanga (somewhere between a thong and a standard brief), while high-street outlets including H&M, Calzedonia and Zara all have thong bikini bottoms in their collections. And, as with any trend, there are plenty of celebrity forerunners, including gymnast Simone Biles, model Heidi Klum, actor Sofía Vergara and singer Nicole Scherzinger. Rapper Lizzo is a longtime fan. 'I won't lie, it was nerve-racking initially,' says Victoria, 29, who wore a thong bikini for the first time on a recent solo trip to Naples. As for many new converts, part of the appeal lay in the fact that she would be able to avoid the significant tan lines created by fuller coverage swimwear. 'I saw thong bikinis everywhere and wished I could wear one. But then I thought about it and was like, it's just a bum. Men wear those teeny-tiny trunks where you see everything, so why can't I wear this? Plus, it was really comfy.' The itsy-bitsy bikini revolution may have come to the fore this summer, but it has been rumbling for some time. In 2023, the New York Times declared that 'more women are adopting the 'less is more' philosophy' when it comes to beachwear; the same year, fashion site Who What Wear called thong bikinis the 'controversial swimwear trend you'll see on every beach this summer'. In 2024, New Zealand site The Spinoff asked: 'Why is every bikini bottom a thong now?' 'I think we've moved into another age of body consciousness – a much more expressive moment,' says Shaun Cole, associate professor in fashion at the University of Southampton. 'People are saying: 'It's my body and I can show it off in ways that I choose to, and if that involves wearing clothing that is sometimes deemed socially unacceptable then I'm going to do that.'' Gen Z, in particular, are less inclined to restrict themselves to clothes deemed to be 'flattering' – a term that has fallen spectacularly out of favour. Thong bikinis, once the preserve of those who conformed to a particular body type, are now being manufactured in a more inclusive range of sizes and marketed more diversely. 'Women of all shapes and sizes are leaning into bolder cuts with real confidence as part of a wider cultural shift towards body positivity and self-expression, which is great to see,' says Aliya Wilkinson, founder of luxury swimwear label Ôsalé. Her brand doesn't yet offer thong styles, but she plans to introduce them in the future. 'In the west, fashion has long found ways to augment the butt, to make it look bigger and put emphasis on this part of the female body,' says Roberta Sassatelli, professor of sociology at the University of Bologna and co-author of Body and Gender. 'This is perhaps because the butt is deemed to be very sensual but is not related to reproduction. Because it is totally related to pleasure, it feels more liberated.' The trend is reflected in the popularity of potentially dangerous cosmetic procedures, such as Brazilian butt lifts. Sculpting the perfect behind has also become something of a fitness obsession. In 2018, sports writer Anna Kessel noted that 'the emphasis on a firm, or 'juicy', bottom has now overtaken the flat stomach as the fitness holy grail in mainstream women's health magazines', with an increasing number of gym classes dedicated exclusively to the posterior. Seven years later, could it be that gym-goers are keen to display the results? 'I think the popularity of thong bikinis exists at the convergence of a focus on building glutes in the gym, a kind of exhibitionist creep in which the butt is one of the last frontiers that had remained mostly covered in public, and a greater cultural acceptance of a range of different body types,' says historian Natalia Mehlman Petrzela, author of Fit Nation. 'The low-slung jeans of the early 2000s were certainly correlated with the age when flat abs workouts were all the rage.' Cole suggests there may be another reason why more people are choosing to wear less. 'It could be linked to what's been called the 'pornification' of culture and style,' he says, citing an idea put forward by fashion historian Pamela Church Gibson. '[It is] modelled on a style that has come out of pornography – at the points where pornography stars are dressed – which involves garments such as tiny bikinis or thong-style underwear. There's an acceptance of that style without people really realising where it originated. The popularity of shows such as Love Island, where people are there to show off their bodies as a way of attracting a partner, again ties to that pornification of style.' After years of falling audience figures, Love Island is also experiencing a boom this summer: increased numbers tuned in to watch the UK and US versions, with the New York Times attributing the popularity of the latter to its ability to offer reprieve during 'times of societal and economic hardship'. As dress and design historian Amber Butchart put it when curating Splash!, a recent exhibition on swimming and style at the Design Museum in London: 'Swimwear's close relationship with the body means it reflects changing attitudes to modesty, morality and public display. From the 18th century, bathing machines were used to protect sea dippers from prying eyes. But throughout the 20th century, a number of boundary-pushing designs challenged previous ideas of decency while also courting controversy. For the last century, what we wear while swimming has been used as an excuse to police bodies.' While it is predominantly women who are opting for poolside thongs today, this wasn't always the case. The earliest iteration of the style is thought to be the ancient loincloth, worn by men. Modern thongs are said to have been adopted in 1939, when the mayor of New York, Fiorello La Guardia, ordered that showgirls must cover themselves rather than perform nude at the city's World's Fair. When it comes to swimwear specifically, Austrian-American Rudi Gernreich – the fashion designer behind the monokini, or 'topless bikini' – is most often credited with creating the thong bikini, in response to Los Angeles city council banning public nudity, including naked sunbathing, in 1974. The thong bikini has prompted similar bans more recently. In January, a council in Greater Sydney, Australia, banned thong and (even skimpier) G-string bikinis at its public pools. A number of women have also been arrested for wearing thong bikinis in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, where the style is banned. In the UK, Greenwich Leisure Ltd, which operates 240 leisure centres under the brand Better, requires swimmers to wear 'full-coverage bikinis', which a spokesperson previously indicated did imply 'that thongs wouldn't be acceptable'. But even when thong styles are not prohibited, many bikini-wearers remain nervous. 'I do own one, but it's only been worn once, when my partner and I had a private villa in Portugal,' says Rebecca, 33. Even then, she says, she felt a little too exposed. 'I don't understand why someone would wear one on a family holiday, for example. Thong bikinis feel quite sexualised, so to me it seems inappropriate. Give me high-waisted bikini bottoms that cover your cheeks any day.' For Sassatelli, the reason thong bikinis are in vogue is not so surprising. 'The thong has never gone away completely,' she says. 'But for people who are in their teens and 20s, they haven't really been 'in fashion'. Once [the fashion industry] has forgotten something, then it can be recuperated – and it makes for a little sense of novelty.'


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Emmerdale star Lisa Riley 'in talks' to join I'm A Celebrity 2025 line up
Lisa Riley's name is being dropped into the mix as one of the possible contenders for this year's series of I'm A Celebrity. A soap star traditionally takes part in the show every year Emmerdale favourite Lisa Riley is being lined up to swap the Dales for the Australian jungle later this year, with reports suggesting she is in advanced talks to take part in the next series of I'm A Celebrity. Riley, 49, is best known for playing Mandy Dingle in the ITV soap, which is a role that she first took on in 1995. Over the last three decades she has been at the heart of some of Emmerdale 's most dramatic storylines and won the hearts of viewers. While she left the soap in 2001 to pursue other projects including Fat Friends, Waterloo Road, and Loose Women, she made a triumphant return to Emmerdale in 2019. Now, producers of I'm A Celebrity are said to be eyeing her up as one of the first names for the 2025 series. A TV insider told The Sun: "Lisa is the perfect celebrity for the show because not only is she from a soap watched by millions she's one of its biggest characters and it's an ITV show to boot. "She also has a naughty, mischievous sense of humour which is guaranteed to get a big response from her other celebrity campmates during their time in the jungle. Lisa is by no means the first star from Emmerdale to have gone on I'm a Celebrity and those that do always tend to get a great response from viewers at home." So far, eight Emmerdale stars have entered the jungle since the show launched in 2002, including Lucy Pargeter, Adam Thomas and Gemma Atkinson. Former cast member Danny Miller even went on to win the show in 2021. Riley herself has expressed an interest in taking part in the reality show for a while now. Earlier this year, she said: "I'm A something I would do before I turned 50 as a test for myself." However, she admitted to having some concerns over the more daunting trials, confessing that she could handle eating challenges but adding: "I could never ever do the mice and the rat box." Her potential signing would follow the tradition of soap stars taking part in the ITV jungle hit. Coronation Street actors have been regulars on the series alongside Emmerdale alumni. Antony Cotton competed in 2011, while Helen Flanagan became infamous in 2012 for being voted to face seven consecutive Bushtucker Trials. Most recently, Jennie McAlpine (Fiz Dobbs) entered the jungle in 2017. Speculation is also currently mounting that Corrie star Adam Hussain could join the 2025 line-up after quitting the cobbles earlier this year. The Mirror have contacted ITV for comment. Meanwhile, when it comes to life in the Dales, soap fans are worried that Riley's character Mandy Dingle might be in danger, as the actress recently posted a photo from the set of Emmerdale featuring a body double. One fan expressed their concerns on social media, writing: "Not good if there's a stunt woman, it means Mandy is in trouble."