Love Island USA cannot stop tripping over its own casting decisions. Alannah Keyser, a 21-year-old film student from Miami, has been quietly removed from Season 8 after a clip resurfaced showing her using a racial slur. And her apology? It somehow made everything worse.
The Clip That Ended Her Run
Alannah Keyser entered the villa as a Casa Amor bombshell during the June 21 episode. She stopped appearing on the show after the June 25 episode with no explanation from producers.
The reason became clear when viewers circulated a clip from 2019 or 2020 showing her using the N-word while singing along to Roddy Ricch's "The Box." Peacock confirmed the removal to TODAY.com but offered no further comment.
This marks the third contestant removal this season alone. Vasana Montgomery was removed the day after her introduction. Previous seasons saw Yulissa Escobar and Cierra Ortega removed from Season 7 under similar circumstances.
The Apology That Backfired
Alannah Keyser posted a TikTok apology on June 27, calling the video "from six years ago" and insisting the word is "not in my vocabulary anymore."
I'm sorry to whoever saw that video and has been offended by it. That was never my intention.
The top comment on her apology video read "Genuinely the worst apology I've ever seen" and racked up more than 12,000 likes. Viewers were not having it.
Fans Noticed More Than Just The Clip
The racial slur was not the only issue fans raised. Viewers pointed out that Alannah appeared to avoid kissing Black male contestants KC Chandler and Sincere Rhea during the heart rate challenge, which added fuel to the fire.
One post on X summed up the frustration perfectly.
It's not just the fact you said the word, it's also how you visibly treated the black male contestants differently.
The combination of the resurfaced clip and her on-screen behavior created a firestorm that producers clearly felt they could not ignore.
A Pattern That Keeps Repeating
Season 8 premiered on June 2 and broke records with 824 million viewing minutes in its first three days. The show is more popular than ever, which means its casting failures are playing out on a bigger stage.
Three removals in one season raises serious questions about the vetting process. Fans are demanding to know how contestants with this kind of digital footprint keep making it onto the show. At some point, the background checks need to include a basic social media scroll.
Love Island USA keeps delivering drama, just not always the kind producers planned for.








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