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Is the audience too conservative, or is the Tu O Kau Station going too far?

Recently, a program called "Love Island" on Channel 9 in Australia became popular on the Internet, and 20 boys and girls from Australia were arranged to develop relationships on the scenic islands for love speed matching. Until now, boys are naked almost every day, while girls are swimsuits every day.

One of the most eye-catching segments of the show, called "Target in the Cave," is one of the most eye-catching segments of the show.

During the campaign period, each player picks a goal with a body part of the ball and throws it into the face goal of the person they want to kiss.

However, the degree and manner of intimacy is controlled by the contestants who participate in the show, and some people may "wipe the gun off fire" out of polite dragonfly.

Just yesterday, a female guest chose to kiss an awkward part of her partner on the show, "the thigh Root," and the hot and beautiful girl was not shy in the camera. But I don't know why the footage makes people feel like some bad pictures.

The other couple on the show didn't give up at all, including the female guest Erin Barnett, who boldly extended her tongue to kiss her partner's pectoral and abdominal muscles.

Although many viewers have expressed "pleasure" or "gladness" in the broadcast of the show, many mainstream media, including Daily Mail and The Age, have questioned the scale of the program, and the programme has been broadcast since its inception. In addition to the show elements, Love Island has been teasing audiences on the edge of the nerve and moral bottom line repeatedly.

As The Age points out, is it "too far" to do so, considering that the audience may be covered by blood-stricken minors?

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