In today’s digital-first world, love has become more of a broadcast than a bond. Once a deeply personal connection built in privacy and vulnerability, romance is now edited, filtered, and streamed to millions, whether it’s on TV through shows like Temptation Island, Love School, or Splits villa, or across social media through influencer couple content and fake “pranks” for likes.To Gen Z, the first generation raised entirely in the era of TikTok, Instagram reels, and reality TV, this version of love is everywhere. And that’s the problem. They’re learning about relationships not through healthy real-life examples, but through manipulated formats…