WARNING: This article contains spoilers for Love Island season 5 that may influence your enjoyment in discovering the plotlines. Read at your own risk.

Love Island season 5, the controversial dating reality program from the United Kingdom, is now finally accessible to viewers in the U.S. As of Saturday, June 22, at least five episodes of the latest season can now be watched on the streaming platform. 

People confirmed that the first five episodes of Love Island season 5 had been released as a batch on Hulu last weekend. Succeeding releases will be scheduled in different batches, and this process will continue until the latest season concludes its run. 

Premiering last June 3 on ITV 2, Love Island season 5 is about to enter its fourth week in the U.K. Fans in America have not yet seen the tension brewing between Yewande Biala, Danny Williams, and Arabella Chi, though but it's apparently where the show ended up last Saturday.

Now, Yewande is threatening to quit the show because she's too broken-hearted to continue. According to Daily Express, previews for the next episode reveals Yewande breaking down in tears in front of the camera. 

"I don't really want to be here anymore, and I just feel like I'm not going to find love here," the reality TV star says in the previews. "I think I just need time to think about what's going on and then I can kind of decide what I want to do."

Viewers in the U.K. will find out Yewande's fate when Love Island season 5 airs a new episode on Monday, June 24. She will reportedly confront the guy she used to date over his feelings for the new competition. 

In past episodes, Yewande and Danny agreed in Love Island season 5. He made a promise to her that his eyes will not stray. But spending a few moments with Arabella changed all that, especially after Danny got to kiss her in a competition. 

Love Island premiered on British TV in 2015 as a reboot of Celebrity Love Island. This dating show's premise puts together single people in a mansion in Mallorca where they must couple up so as not to be eliminated. 

Every week, the contestants, dubbed the "Islanders," also have to play challenges that might test their commitments to their chosen partners. They must also appeal to the viewers because the public partly decides who stays or goes on this show.