Former Love Islandstar Malin Andersson,who shot to fame on series two, has radically changed her opinion of the hit dating show, branding it “full of toxicity” and insisting it should be axed.
While other participants, including Amy Hart and Amber Davies, have praised the show for its support and aftercare – with Olivia Attwood saying “ Love Island saved me”– Malin, who took part in the show in 2016, has a very different view.
Here, the 32-year-old, who memorably confronted ex Terry Walsh in the villa, tells new why she feels so strongly about her time on Love Island and why she would be dead against her daughter Xaya, three, going on the show when she’s older.
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Hi, Malin! Love Island’s back but you’re not watching. Why?
I haven’t watched any of them. It should be axed. When I was on it, we were naive, it felt more organic – still scripted but more authentic. Even then, it wasn’t pure, it was full of toxicity. Now millions watch it, especially young people, and their idea of love gets completely skewed.
Some contestants spiral completely. Did you ever feel like that on the show?
Oh, 100%. I felt disposable, like a piece of rubbish tossed aside. In there, you’re fighting to be seen, to be a main character, seeking validation. It’s not healthy – it creates unrealistic drama and messes up how viewers see love. The whole thing is toxic and should go in the bin.
Let’s talk about the time when you came back in to confront Terry. How did that happen?
I was already partying in Spain when Emma [Jane Woodhams] went in with the TOWIE lot. They realised I was nearby and asked me to come in too. So I did the next day.
Were you watching the show then?
No. I was just partying and Tweeting stuff to provoke producers to get me back in – and it worked.
How did you feel after confronting Terry? Did it bring clarity?
No, it just showed me that I had been attracting terrible men my whole life until I figured out why.
How did you heal?
It’s been a powerful journey but not easy. I had to look at parts of myself I didn’t want to see – why I wanted to be seen, why I accepted bad love. It starts with what we’re shown as kids. TV shows like Love Island feed the same toxic ideas. They don’t care about feelings – just money and drama. I wish there were shows about real healing.
Why do you think people love watching the show?
People are living through other people’s lives because they want escapism. We’re all scrolling, looking at everyone else’s stories, wanting to be part of it. The format is easy: pretty girls, good-looking guys who can’t even talk properly. It’s a quick dopamine hit.
This year they say they will show sex on screen if it happens, to show “real relationships”. What are your thoughts?
They’re struggling for viewers, that’s all. It’s not real – living in a house with people with no phone or sanity, isn’t real.
When you were there, did producers suggest you talk to certain people or stir things?
All the time. If people were gossiping about me, they’d tell me to go over. They’d nudge conversations or set up who should talk to whom. It’s all manipulated for reactions.
So why did you decide to go on the show in the first place?
I’d been on Take Me Out at 18. The same producer called me a year later, asked if I was single. I said yes, and they fast-tracked me in, I didn’t even audition. I was just a young girl wanting fun – clueless, really.
This year on Love Island there are older contestants – 30 and 29. The youngest is 22. How does that dynamic work?
The older ones get seen as Mummy and Daddy, that’s how society is. I’m 32 and people act like that’s ancient. The show pushes a narrow look – perfect bodies, the “ideal” appearance. Anything outside that is labelled abnormal. It tells kids they have to fit that mould.
How about diversity? There are more people from different backgrounds on the show…
It’s sad we even have to call it “diverse”. We should just be one mix of people – different races, professions, appearances. We’re all the same inside.
Are you looking for love now?
I feel he’s around the corner! I want someone with a pure soul and real masculine energy – not ego-driven but someone who makes me feel safe. I’m not really dating right now.
Will you tell your daughter about your time on the show?
She’ll find out eventually. She sees how I live and grow, and that’s why I feel so strongly about all this – to protect her too.
If she ever wanted to go on Love Island, what would you say?
Nah, babes. I’d tell her no way – with no reason given.
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