Olivia Bowen says Love Island acted as exposure therapy for disordered eating
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Summary
The clip is a short Good Morning Britain interview with Olivia Bowen promoting her upcoming memoir. She describes how her disordered eating—specifically avoiding being seen eating or serving herself—improved through the forced communal meals on Love Island, which she likens to exposure therapy. Bowen links the behavior to control, emotional processing, anxiety, and depression rather than food itself and distinguishes it from clinical eating disorders. Bowen appeared on Love Island series 2 in 2016. The segment draws directly from her statements and references her book; no other guests or data sources are used. The interview aired July 2, 2026.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast faithfully reports Bowen's first-person account without embellishment or contradiction. Viewers receive a clear personal narrative but lack broader clinical definitions or prevalence data on disordered eating versus eating disorders. The framing is supportive and non-sensational, aligning with standard ITV daytime interview style. Missing context includes earlier public comments by Bowen attributing similar issues primarily to anxiety rather than a standalone eating behavior. No inaccuracies or misleading edits are evident in the provided transcript.
Key Moments
Disordered eating manifested as not wanting to be seen eating or put food on her own plate
Bowen's direct statement, corroborated by same-day reporting of the GMB appearance
Love Island communal meals acted as exposure therapy helping her overcome the fear
Bowen's account; matches quotes in contemporaneous coverage of the interview
Behavior tied to control, emotion processing, anxiety and depression rather than food itself
Bowen's explanation in the segment; consistent with her prior public discussions of anxiety-related eating difficulties