She shot to fame during the third season of the hit ITV2 show in 2017.
And Montana Brown has now claimed that contestants had sex ‘genuinely everywhere’ during the series.
Speaking on the Mouthing Off With Olivia Caridi podcast, the reality star, 25, also said that it was ‘hilarious’ as it can’t really be ‘put on camera’.
Raunchy! Montana Brown has claimed that contestants had sex ‘genuinely everywhere’ during Love Island
She said: ‘People are having sex everywhere — genuinely everywhere — all the time. In the day, in the night, upstairs, downstairs. It is hilarious because you know they can’t really put it on camera.
‘At the start everyone’s so aware of the fact that you are inches away from the next couple in a bed but everyone just gets so comfortable.’
During her time in the villa, Montana coupled up with Alex Beattie but the pair soon split after leaving.
The reality star previously revealed that she regrets having sex on television and even warned future contestants ‘not to do it’.
Candid: Speaking on the Mouthing Off With Olivia Caridi podcast, the reality star, 25, also said that it was ‘hilarious’ as it can’t really be ‘put on camera’ (pictured on Love Island in 2017)
Goodness! She said: ‘People are having sex everywhere — genuinely everywhere — all the time. In the day, in the night, upstairs, downstairs. It is hilarious because you know they can’t really put it on camera.’ (the 2017 cast pictured)
In a 2018 interview, she told The Sun: ‘In hindsight, having sex on TV wasn’t the best idea. My advice to the new hopefuls is not to do it. If I could have done it differently, I wouldn’t have had sex.’
Elsewhere during the podcast interview, Montana revealed that bosses on the show change the clocks so housemates ‘never know what time it is’.
She said: ‘You never know what time it is so they can keep you up as long as possible.
‘The recoupling evenings are the longest. I looked at one of the producer’s watches once and it was 4.30am and I was thinking, “Oh my God, I’ve been up all day, no wonder I’m knackered”.
Ex: During her time in the villa, Montana coupled up with Alex Beattie but the pair soon split after leaving – she previously admitted she regrets having sex on television (pictured in 2017)
‘They don’t tell you the time — so all the phones that go, “You’ve got a text” have different times on them. The oven clock has a different time on it every day.’
Montana, who now owns her own swimwear brand Swim Society, was a student when she first appeared on the show.
The reality star admitted that she now ‘suffers with anxiety’, which she ‘never suffered’ from before.
She added: ‘I never suffered with anxiety before I went on that show. I don’t know anybody in the entertainment industry or that I know from the show that doesn’t suffer from anxiety.’
This comes after Montana called for greater diversity on the show as she insisted it’s ‘unhealthy for people to just see size 8s chomping around in their bikinis.’
She also stated: ‘I wanna see more people of colour’ while concluding that ‘with regards to racial diversity and body diversity, there’s always room for improvement’ on the programme.
Speaking on the latest What Day Is It? podcast, Montana was quizzed about how progressive Love Island is.
She admitted: ‘I feel like, as a mixed race person, you’re always in a minority, especially on a show like that. It’s not something that I necessarily thought of while I was in the show.
Confusing! Elsewhere during the podcast interview, Montana revealed that bosses on the show change the clocks so housemates ‘never know what time it is’
‘I’ve had quite a privileged upbringing. I grew up in quite a white area so I’ve always been in the minority anyway. So it’s something that I didn’t feel uncomfortable with.
‘But I definitely think with regards to racial diversity and body diversity there’s always room for improvement.’
Montana went further, explaining why there’s a need to have a more inclusive cast, which is better representative of society.
She said: ‘I think it’s so important, because that [Love Island] so gets so many millions and millions of views. People wanna see themselves on the screen, people wanna feel like they’re being represented.
‘So it’s really important that they are having curvier girls on there. I think there’s a degree of – not everyone can be cast for love island.
‘There is a really fine line of: you want it to be entertaining, you want it to be aspirational, you wanna see a bunch of good looking people on television having fun and you wanna live vicariously through that.
‘But then you also wanna represent the UK and everybody who is a size bigger than a size 8.
‘I do think that’s unhealthy for people to just see size 8s chomping around in their bikinis, because then people perceive that the only way to be beautiful is to be a size 8, or be a smaller size. So there’s definitely work to do.’
Making a stand: This comes after Montana called for greater diversity on the show as she insisted it’s ‘unhealthy for people to just see size 8s chomping around in their bikinis.’