The Shade Behind the Screen: Racism in the Love Island USA Season 7 Fandom
By Spencer Whitelow
Reality Rundown | Gossip. Drama. Truth.
πhttp://realityrundown11.blogspot.com/
Let’s get one thing straight: Love Island USA Season 7 delivered drama, romance, plastic surgery confessions, and reunion-level chaos before the reunion even aired. But beyond the bikinis, challenges, and steamy night cams—there’s a not-so-silent undercurrent that continues to bubble beneath the surface of the fandom: racism.
And no, we’re not just talking microaggressions. We’re talking blatant bias that plays out in real-time, especially in how certain contestants are treated by fans online.
π¨ When Black Women Get Labeled “Aggressive,” but Others Are “Passionate”
Let’s talk about Huda. Love her or hate her, the girl was real. But the minute she raised her voice or expressed herself? She was labeled everything from “mean girl” to “unstable.” Meanwhile, other contestants (ahem) cried, screamed, and even cussed—but were praised for “expressing themselves.” So... passionate or problematic? Or does race decide the difference?
And don't even get us started on Chelley. Calm, articulate, and direct—but somehow she was the villain while others who showed less grace got sympathy edits.
π± The Comment Sections Tell on Themselves
You don’t have to dig deep to find the ugliness. Go on Twitter, Reddit, or TikTok and you’ll see the pattern:
- Black contestants getting 5x the hate.
 - White or white-passing Islanders being praised for doing the bare minimum.
 - Black men being fetishized or insulted depending on who they couple with.
 - “Why is she always mad?” tweets about women just existing.
 
Let’s not play dumb. Fans are quick to say “it’s not about race,” but then treat people of color very differently from their white counterparts.
π The Fan Favorites Test
Let’s do a quiz. Who got the most fan support?
Now ask yourself this: Was their personality really stronger than others—or did their skin tone make them more “likable” in the public eye?
Amaya, for example, became a fan favorite only after pairing with Bryan. Before that? Crickets. Meanwhile, Kaylor was forgiven for every messy moment.
π The Reunion Is Coming—So Is the Bias
When the reunion airs, watch closely. Notice who gets applause and who gets awkward silence. Notice who the host defends. Pay attention to the fan reaction.
You’ll probably notice that some cast members get held accountable harder than others—and race will, once again, quietly shape the tone.
π€ Final Thoughts: Call It Out, Not Just In
Reality TV fans love to say “we support diversity” until that diversity challenges comfort zones. Loving Black culture, Black hairstyles, Black slang—but tearing down Black contestants? That's not love. That’s performative allyship with a side of subconscious racism.
If you’re a fan of the show, check your biases. And if you’re reading the comments, don’t be silent. Defend what’s right.
Because love may be blind—but racism? It’s loud, bold, and still in the villa.
π¬ What do you think? Have you noticed racial bias in the Love Island fandom? Sound off in the comments!
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