
Axed Islander Emma reveals secret vapers in the Love Island villa and fans will be shocked
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
LOVE Island star Emma Munro has revealed exactly which Islanders enjoy a cheeky vape in the villa and it may surprise you.
ITV2 viewers are always left wondering each year which Islanders are smokers after the show stopped airing contestants smoking on screen.
Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter
Sign up
3
Axed Islander Emma revealed who the secret vapers are in the villa
Credit: YouTube / Spill With Will
3
She said 'almost everyone' enjoyed a vape
Credit: Eroteme
Casa Amor's Emma, who made it back into the main villa alongside Conor, identified which of her co-stars would most frequently visit the smoking area outside the villa.
Appearing on Spill with Will podcast, Emma said: "Almost all of them [vape], Helena and Harry were the worst for it, they were always in there."
Emma said: "I've tried before, I feel high whenever I try it, my heads spinning."
During the earlier seasons of Love Island, viewers watched the Islanders smoke on their screens.
But now they have to do it off camera to discourage social smoking.
During the same chat, Emma also revealed what her ex and former co-star Harry Cooksley messaged her before heading into the villa.
Harry, 30, was initially left stunned when his ex Emma entered the Mallorca villa, and he could be heard saying: "Oh my god, it's my ex."
Now Emma has let slip their last conversation before he entered the ITV2 series as a show OG.
She denied knowing he was going on the matchmaking series and said: "No, he [Harry] sent me the weirdest text right before he went into holding.
"And he basically said 'oh you won't be able to contact me for the summer, please get hold of my mum if you need anything.'
Axed Love Islander Emma addresses villa feud as she reveals Islander she was 'scared' to speak to and secret rows that were never aired
"I thought oh he's going to rehab.
"Or he's checked into a wellness centre, how wrong was I?"
Emma, who was recently given the boot from the show, told how she first became aware of his telly gig when she saw his Instagram post.
She added: "I wasn't shocked you know.
"I feel like this is a bit of him, he'd be the perfect candidate.
"And he has been, he's carried the show on his back lets be honest."
PLOT REVEAL
During their time in the villa together, the pair's connection appeared to take a turn - after Harry pulled Emma for a chat and they enjoyed some banter about PDA, with him even smelling her armpit.
Fans were then quick to claim the brunette's "real mask had slipped."
This was exacerbated when she was heard discussing the show's £50K cash prize pot on the ITV2 series.
In spin off show Aftersun, host Maya Jama directly asked the TV show star why.
She said: "You're one of the few Islanders who have actually mentioned the 50k."
Emma replied: "We have broken the fourth wall," to which Maya said: "You did, can you clarify what you meant by that?
"I think you said something after like 'ahh play along' something like that?"
Emma giggled before she said: "Look I'm glad you brought that up because the whole thing was a complete joke.
"Harry and I had nothing else to talk about and we are both really playful but I can confirm there was no game plan and we were just being silly.
"None of it was serious."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Lewis Capaldi reveals how he REALLY feels about ex who broke up with him and went on to win Love Island
Read on to discover more about the Scots singer's love life SOMEONE YOU LOVED SOMEONE YOU LOVED Lewis Capaldi reveals how he REALLY feels about ex who broke up with him and went on to win Love Island Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) LEWIS Capaldi has hailed his ex-girlfriend as 'lovely' years after the pair split up. The Someone You Loved hitmaker, 28, met reality star Paige Turley, 27, when the pair were teenagers growing up in Barthgate Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 3 Lewis Capaldi opened up on his love life during an interview on US radio Credit: Alamy 3 Paige Turley and Finn Tapp won the winter edition of Love Island Credit: Instagram Lewis dated the pretty blonde for 18 months after they met in college. But their relationship ended when Paige reportedly cheated on the singer-songwriter with his best friend. It inspired Lewis to write his debut album Divinely Uninspired To A Hellish Extent. And in a recent interview, he revealed that there was no bad blood towards the reality star. He told New York-based radio station Z100: "My ex-girlfriend from back home went on Love Island and won it. "Paige, her name is, she's a lovely girl, she went on and won it." Paige went on to win the winter edition of Love Island in 2020 with footballer beau Finn Tapp. However their romance fizzled out in 2023 after a three year relationship. Lewis is currently dating stunning influencer and social media star Remy O'Brien. Elsewhere we previously told how Lewis was spotted on a VIP dating app just hours after splitting with his actress girlfriend - and poked fun at his own weight. The Scots singer and former flame Ellie MacDowall called it quits on their romance after struggling to make time for each other. And Lewis appeared to be on the rebound as he looks for love on Raya - a dating site for the rich and famous. His online profile reads: 'I am fatter than my pictures would suggest.' A source said: 'There's an endless stream of gorgeous singletons on the platform and hopefully Lewis finds the one.'


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Celeb SAS stars WILL get full show fee despite quitting – with S Club's Hannah getting five figures for MINUTES onscreen
Multiple stars have exited the course in the early episodes big money Celeb SAS stars WILL get full show fee despite quitting – with S Club's Hannah getting five figures for MINUTES onscreen Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) CELEBRITY SAS stars who quit the show early will still receive the full show fee. S Club's Hannah Spearitt, 44, lasted just minutes on-screen before deciding to bow out. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 4 Some of the latest Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins recruits Credit: Pete Dadds / Channel 4 4 Hannah Spearitt featured for just minutes on-screen Credit: PA 4 Former Love Island star Tasha Ghouri also gave up her armband Credit: Pete Dadds / Channel 4 Although some stars pulled out of the gruelling course, it is understood they will still receive the full fee. A source told The Sun: 'Hannah Spearitt, Chloe Burrows and Tasha Ghouri will all have been paid over £10k - some as much as £20k - but unlike other reality shows, they do get paid if they pull out. "So even though Hannah only lasted one minute, she'll still get paid over £10k for that minute. "It's well worth stars signing up even if they don't think they can complete the show just for the payday - it might be embarrassing taking their armband off early in the show, but it's good money!' The Sun has contacted Channel 4 for comment. The full line-up was revealed last month ahead of the new series launching. Hannah wasn't the only famous face to give up their armband early on. The Sun had previously revealed Louie Spence quit the course within hours. The dancer and choreographer, 56, later opened up on the reasons for his decision. He said: 'I felt like a granddad in a school. Celeb SAS Who Dares Wins full line up revealed with ex Premier League footballer, pop icon and THREE Love Islanders "On SAS I couldn't high kick my way out of trouble.' 'If they asked me to go in the I'm A Celeb jungle, that would be better, darling – that's a bit like Big Brother. "You sit around and do nothing but eat kangaroo balls. "It's more entertainment than anything else.' Former Love Island stars Chloe and Tasha ended up quitting in close proximity. The stars were tasked with trekking up a hill, before taking on the challenge of hanging from a wire over a ravine. Chloe struggled on the climb, having already told her co-stars that she was finding the demands of the show difficult. As she was berated by the Special Forces staff for her moaning noises, she ripped off her arm band and told them between gasps for breath: "I can't do it." The DS was furious and yelled: "Can't do what? We've walked 300 metres up a f***ing hill!" He then told Chloe she was "wasting a massive opportunity" but through her tears, she told him: "I'm done, I'm done." After handing over her arm band, she headed down the hill, chucking her water bottle before taking off her backpack and saying: "F*** off, this is the worst thing I have ever done in my whole life!" The group continued climbing the hill, and the DS drilled number 5 - Tasha Ghouri - telling her to "dig deep" as she lagged behind. Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins 2025 S Club singer Hannah Spearitt Dancer and TV star Louie Spence Love Island star and podcaster Chloe Burrows Love Island and Strictly star Tasha Ghouri Former footballer Troy Deeney Peru Two drug mule turned author and influencer Michealla McCollum Rapper and ex-Loose Women star Lady Leshurr Love Island lothario Adam Collard TV & media personality Rebecca Loos Ex Footballer Adebayo 'The Beast' Akinfenwa Drag Race UK winner Bimini Bon Boulash Pro boxer Conor Benn The X Factor star Lucy Spraggan The Traitors winner Harry Clark An exhausted and struggling Tasha held up her arm band and told the shocked DS: "I'm not mentally here. I'm not mentally here to do this." After heading down the hill, the two women reunited and discussed their sudden exits from the course. Tasha said: "You have to be so mentally strong to do this." Chloe replied: "And physically."


New Statesman
an hour ago
- New Statesman
Celine Song's Materialists makes a business of love
Illustration by Kristian Hammerstad In her wistful debut, Past Lives (2023), the writer-director Celine Song explored the Korean concept of inyeon: every relationship is predetermined by fate, specifically the intertwining of two people in their past lives. 'It's inyeon if two strangers even walk by each other in the street and their clothes accidentally brush,' its heroine, Nora, explains. 'If two people get married, they say it's because there have been 8,000 layers of inyeon over 8,000 lifetimes.' In Song's difficult second album, love is governed by more materialist forces. According to Lucy (a glossy, inscrutable Dakota Johnson), a professional matchmaker responsible for nine weddings, dating is transactional and marriage a business deal. Her clients are struggling to navigate the 'market', with their lists of deal-breakers and non-negotiables: minimum six feet tall, six-figure salary, hairline holding on in there. Love is not a question of some mysterious, intangible power, but of compatible family backgrounds, financial situations, levels of attractiveness. In other words, Lucy says, 'it's just math'. Like Past Lives, Materialists concerns a love triangle. Lucy attends the wedding of a client and, before she takes her seat at the singles' table, must first talk the bride out of calling off the whole thing. The mascara-streaked white puffball on the bed admits she wants to marry her fiancé because he makes her sister jealous; the matchmaker pulls off a complex semantic vault: 'So he makes you feel valuable.' 'I do' safely secured, Lucy takes her seat for dinner next to Harry, the brother of the groom. Harry (played by man-of-the-moment Pedro Pascal) is what matchmakers call a 'unicorn', a man who's too good to be true: tall, wealthy, handsome, charming, with impossibly good taste in flowers. Lucy tries to recruit him as a client; he tries to get her into bed. That bed is bedecked in sheets so lustrous they must be thrown away at the end of each week, for they would surely not survive anything so workaday as a washing machine. The bed is situated in a $12bn (I know this because Lucy asks him) Tribeca penthouse, handsomely decorated in warm white and walnut. Lucy can't help but gawp, her eyes moving voraciously, while Harry kisses her neck. They date, and Harry insists he's interested in her 'intangible assets', but Lucy can't shake the sense that 'the math just doesn't add up'. The other complicating factor in the equation is John (Chris Evans), a struggling actor and Lucy's ex, who just happens to be working as a cater-waiter at the wedding. Uninvited, he plonks down Lucy's go-to drink order – a pint and a Coke – on the table between her and Harry, as if to say: I know her better than you ever will, mate. They broke up, we learn, because they were broke. It's a tale as old as romcoms: woman pulled between a man who's perfect on paper and a man she, despite all rational self-talk, can't quite let go. Not everything can be explained by 'math'. Song's script is uneven: some lines are acutely well observed, the back-and-forth a rhythmic rally, others eye-roll inducing. Characters say things like: 'You make me brave enough to admit that I want to be happy.' The film skewers modern dating in a depressingly funny series of to-camera monologues in which Lucy's clients detail their contradictory standards for their prospective partners. One man in his forties claims he wants to meet an older, more mature woman (he usually dates those in their early twenties), but grimaces when she suggests someone 39: he was thinking more like 27… In other moments, I found its objects of fun more uncomfortable. Lucy appears to have no friends, and groups of women, when they appear, are homogenous gaggles: bossy bridesmaids strut in matching satin; hysterical matchmakers jump up and down, squealing. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Materialists is a romcom for the Money Diaries generation: Lucy discloses that she earns $80,000, and the internet asks how she can afford $700 Loeffler Randall knee-high boots. But while it is unusual to hear figures talked about so openly on screen, romcoms have always been about money, or the collision of different social classes: lumbermill worker meets heiress (The Notebook), businessman meets sex worker (Pretty Woman), actress meets bookstore owner (Notting Hill). Ultimately, the question Materialists poses – what is the role of pragmatism in romance? – is far more interesting than its schmaltzy answer: love wins, however illogical or impractical. This we learned in the 2000s. Still, it is a visual feast: a beautiful picture about beautiful people. There are worse things for a film to be. God knows I've swiped right on less. 'Materialists' is in cinemas from 13 August [See also: 150 years of the bizarre Hans Christian Andersen] Related