Inside Love Island’s winner package including selfies from the villa, mobile phones and cake
29.06.2022 - 21:43
/ ok.co.uk
Love Island 2022 is well underway, and it's only a matter of weeks until this year's winning couple will be announced. While we all know the winners will receive £50,000, many fans of the ITV2 dating show have been wondering what else they are given for coming in first place.
Ex-Love Islander Amber Gill has opened up about what was in her "winner package", after she won the hit ITV2 dating show in 2019 alongside Greg O'Shea. The 24 year old took part in a Q&A session for Closer magazine alongside fellow former Islander Anna Vakili, 31, where they revealed what happens behind the scenes on the show.
Never miss a celebrity exclusive again! Become an OK! VIP and get all of our exclusive interviews, videos and stunning photo shoots sent straight to your inbox every week!You'll receive an email with stories exclusive only for OK! VIP members, including celebrity house tours, baby reveals, wedding snaps and so much more! What are you waiting for? Sign up here Get exclusive celebrity stories and fabulous photoshoots straight to your inboxwith OK!'s daily newsletter While in the Love Island villa, each contestant is given a special mobile phone which allows them to contact each other and receive messages from producers. They cannot contact anyone from the outside world on the device, but they can use it to document their time in the villa and many use theirs to snap selfies with their new pals.
Anna and Amber were asked if they got to keep the photos they took on their villa phones, with Anna revealing: "We didn't get to keep any of the photos that we took," before Amber surprised her by saying that she did get to keep them. "I actually got a lot of the photos that we took.
Because I got my Samsung phone after I finished. It was
.
The website popstar.one is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can
send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.