Who won Love Island USA? Winning couple crowned after tumultuous Season 7

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Who won Love Island USA? Winning couple crowned after tumultuous Season 7

Who won Love Island USA? Winning couple crowned after tumultuous Season 7

Spoiler alert: This article includes details from the series finale of the reality series Love Island USA.

Love Island USA ended a tumultuous summer full of explosive breakups and shock exits with its season finale on Sunday.

A public vote crowned Amaya Espinal, 25, and Bryan Arenales, 28, as the winning couple of its seventh season.

The Peacock reality series, which streams on Crave in Canada, has had a chart-topping run since the season premiered on June 3.

The series brings young singles together in a remote villa in Fiji to explore connections with the ultimate goal of finding love.

Espinal and Arenales formed a connection late in the season, bonding over their shared Latino culture. Espinal, a New York City native, is Dominican, and Arenales is of Puerto Rican and Guatemalan descent, according to his Instagram page.

"I often said how much I wanted to provide that safe place here for you, but little did I know that you would do that for me, too," Arenales said during his final speech before the winners were announced.

"You said I was the water to your fire, but you are my peace to this madness."

Each contestant in the winning couple randomly picked from two envelopes — one that contained the $100,000 US prize and the other nothing.

Arenales got the full prize, and chose to split it evenly with Espinal.

Olandria Carthen and Nicolas Vansteenberghe were the runners-up, and Huda Mustafa and Chris Seeley — who went through an awkward and emotional breakup during the finale — came in third place.

Iris Kendall and Jose (Pepe) Garcia-Gonzalez placed fourth. The show's host, Ariana Madix, also announced that the entire cast of Season 7 will come together again for a New York reunion, which will be released on Peacock on Aug. 25, she said.

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A 'Dominican Cinderella' story

The final four couples each went on dates during the last episode before the winners were crowned.

Espinal and Arenales were given a photo book with pictures of each other throughout their lives, culminating with photos from their relationship during the show.

The two bonded over family traditions.

"With you, I don't ever cry out of sadness. Every time I feel like a heightened emotion with you, it's always just like happy tears," Espinal said.

The date ended with Espinal and Arenales taking a picture, a final memory from their time on Love Island USA.

Amaya Espinal, left, and Bryan Arenales from the reality series "Love Island USA."
Love Island USA winners Amaya Espinal and Bryan Arenales developed their relationship late in the season after bonding over their shared Latino culture. (Ben Symons/Peacock/AP)

The couple then made their relationship exclusive, noting they will only focus on each other when they leave the island.

"I feel like I'm a Dominican Cinderella when I'm with you, and I finally found my perfect glass slipper," Espinal said during their date.

Shake-ups, scandal and surveillance

The show, an American spinoff of the UK series, has shaken up reality TV, becoming Peacock's most-watched entertainment series on mobile devices, according to NBC Universal.

It became a breakout success and captured mainstream attention last summer, and this season grew into a cultural phenomenon.

Stripped of their phones and connection with the outside world, five men and five women arrive in the villa and coupled up based on initial romantic interest.

Throughout the season, the show introduces a steady stream of bombshells, new contestants who are brought in to disrupt existing relationships and build new storylines.

Contestants are routinely dumped from the villa, removed either by a public vote or by the islanders themselves.

A woman and a man standing side-by-side with unhappy faces.
Olandria Carthen and Nicolas Vansteenberghe were the seventh season runners-up. (Ben Symons/Peacock/The Associated Press)

Under constant surveillance, contestants partook in kissing competitions, heart rate challenges and drama-inducing games ripe for viral moments.

Halfway through the season, established couples were temporarily separated for Casa Amor, the show's ultimate test, and encouraged to explore new relationships with a fresh group of single contestants.

This season also came under fire as two contestants — Cierra Ortega and Yulissa Escobar — left the villa following resurfaced posts in which they used racial slurs.

A woman with long, brown, curly hair stands at a podium with a speech cards in her right hand.
This image released by Peacock shows Cierra Ortega in an episode of Love Island USA. (Ben Symons/Peacock/The Associated Press)

Ortega, who was half of one of the season's strongest couples with Vansteenberghe, left the villa just a week before the show's finale after old posts resurfaced that contained a slur against Asian people.

She apologized for the posts in a nearly five-minute TikTok video on Wednesday. Friday's episode saw the elimination of Ace Greene and Chelley Bissainthe, setting the stage for the finale.

Green and Bissainthe were the only couple to maintain a relationship throughout most of the show.

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