“Love Island USA” participants react to another shocking moment on the hit reality TV series.
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The Love Island USA season 8 finale Sunday night will be Must See TV for a generation born after that term was coined. Appointment television has become a rarity for Gen Z, which was raised on on-demand cartoons and can’t even identify a channel guide. That makes Love Island USA all the more precious to advertisers, who drool over this young, media-savvy demographic and rarely find them all in one place.
Gone are the days when the racy content of a show like Love Island USA—where contestants wear next to nothing and more than one has been kicked off for questionable social media posts—would scare advertisers off.
These days, it’s more about guaranteeing authenticity than avoiding raunchy content. The show is in high demand, and media buyers say their clients have embraced becoming part of the cultural conversations.
“With a new episode nearly every day, Love Island is king when it comes to consumer engagement. Brands that align with that audience should never walk about from an opportunity like that,” says Mary Ann O’Brien, founder and CEO of OBI Creative. “Love Island fans are obsessed with their watching patterns and on social media, so if your brand position and target audience align, why not align yourself with that kind of love?”
Holding Gen Z’s attention can be a challenge, she says. “But the reason that Love Island has captured Gen-Z’s attention is because of the authenticity. With a new episode every day featuring the rawest reactions of the cast, there’s something genuine to discuss day in and day out, giving viewers (and advertisers) the holy grail of advertising… word-of-mouth advertising and recall,” she notes.
“Love Island USA” season 8 contestants have become part of a cultural conversation that brands are eager to participate in, say media buyers.
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Love Island USA’s Engaged Audience
Advertisers love the demo the show attracts, and they also love how fans become part of the conversation, says Fiorela Imerai, SEO account director at Wildcat Digital. “My take is that advertisers like Love Island because it does something most shows can’t: it gets people watching, Googling, scrolling and talking at the same time,” she says. “It’s not just TV exposure. A dress, phrase, argument or product can move from the episode to TikTok, Instagram, search and group chats within minutes. That’s where the real value is for brands.”
Jackie Swanson, managing partner at Gartner Consulting, sees similarities to the heyday of cable. “Love Island does for streaming what reality TV did for cable in 2003: produce daily appointment viewing for a specific, engaged audience that brands cannot reach any other way,” Swanson says. “The difference is that Love Island is also producing a second screen experience in real time. The TikTok edits, the outfit identification threads, the contestant rivalries trending on X by the end of an episode, all of it turns 60 minutes of passive viewing into a multi-platform conversation that runs all week. It is essentially a soap opera built for the TikTok era, which matches how younger audiences consume media now.”
This new era also has new rules. “On the advertiser question, brand safety has been getting recalibrated for a few years now, and Love Island is one of the places that recalibration is showing up. The frameworks built in the late 2010s, with their long no-go category lists and strict adjacency rules, were designed around an older audience that mostly does not watch reality television,” Swanson says.
This new era also has new rules. “On the advertiser question, brand safety has been getting recalibrated for a few years now, and Love Island is one of the places that recalibration is showing up. The frameworks built in the late 2010s, with their long no-go category lists and strict adjacency rules, were designed around an older audience that mostly does not watch reality television,” Swanson says. “The audience brands actually need to reach, women 18 to 34 with high social media engagement and discretionary spend on fashion, beauty, and lifestyle, reads adult content very differently than the trade-press conversation about brand safety implies.”
Amaya Espinal and Bryan Arenales, who won season 7 of Love Island USA.
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Love Island USA Advertisers Must Show Authenticity, Experts Say
The real issue is whether brands can integrate themselves into a conversation organically. The advertising industry can sparkle when it embraces creativity, but it can also come off as cringey to young people when a brand tries too hard.
“I don’t think the adult content is the main issue for advertisers. Most brands know what Love Island is,” Imerai says. “The bigger question is whether they can show up without looking awkward or out of place. If the fit is right, the show gives brands a very direct route into youth culture and buying intent.”
For instance, say a healthy food brand buys time on the broadcast. “Where it becomes awkward is if the brand uses messaging like ‘eat like a bombshell’ or ‘get villa-body ready’. That starts to pull the brand into the show’s more sensitive territory around bodies, attraction and desirability, which is where the adult-content context matters,” she says. The brand would be wiser to instead focus on making healthy meals for a night in watching Love Island.
Advertisers are proceeding, if proceeding with care, notes Crystal Foote, founder and head of partnerships at Digital Culture Group, whose data indicates that viewers identify with the show and are also predisposed to reward brands that advertise there. “Blanket blocks on reality TV do not protect brands. They cut them off from an audience that was already predisposed to convert. The question is not whether the content is safe. It is whether your audience sees your presence there as coherent,” Foote says.
Ultimately, the same directive applies to reality TV, and Love Island specifically, as to any show.
“Love Island resonates because it gives audiences emotional stakes, escapism and social currency in one repeatable media environment,” Foote says. “For advertisers, the opportunity is real, but it should be bought with precision. The data favors brands that can use the show’s cultural energy while applying clear guardrails around placement, representation, platform mix and creative tone.”
