Love Island makers say LGBT contestants bring âlogistical difficultiesâ
The makers of TVâs Love Island have said that there have been âlogistical difficultiesâ with plans to include LGBT contestants.
In an interview with the Radio Times, ITV commissioner Amanda Stavri addressed rumours that the production team were looking to bring in contestants of different sexualities, saying: âIt goes without saying that we want to encourage greater inclusivity and diversity.â
However, Stavri outlined current issues she said ITV was facing in adapting the series. âIn terms of gay Islanders, I think the main challenge is regarding the format of Love Island,â she said. âThereâs a sort of logistical difficulty, because although Islanders donât have to be 100% straight, the format must sort of give [them] an equal choice when coupling up.â
âWith our dating shows, such as The Cabins, there is much more sexual diversity. The formats donât have as much restrictions as Love Island.â
Last month, executive producer Richard Cowles told the BBC that bringing in LGBT contestants was ânot impossible and it is not something that we shy away from ... but there is a logistical element which makes it difficultâ.
The producersâ comments come after rumours that ITV was actively casting LGBT contestants for the Mallorca-set series. The show has previously hosted one same-sex couple in Katie Salmon and Sophie Gradon, who appeared on the 2016 series. During a talk at the Cambridge Union last month, Megan Barton-Hanson â who is bisexual and appeared on the 2018 series â said the programme needed a âwhole gay seasonâ to avoid tokenism.
Why itâs high time for a gay Love Island Read moreLove Island is scheduled to return to ITV2 later this month, its first series since the Covid pandemic began. Last year, a possible series was shelved owing to safety concerns, and a mooted move to the UK ruled out.
âWhat signal might it be sending out if weâre doing a show where everyone is crammed together, slavering over each other, while the rest of world has been told not to go near anyone in the park?,â said Kevin Lygo, ITVâs managing director for media and entertainment.
Despite questions around the ethics of the series â with former host Caroline Flack the fourth person associated with Love Island to have ended her life â the franchise remains hugely popular. Stavri said ITV had received more applications from would-be contestants than ever.