The most X-rated reality series on Australian television is gearing up for an even wilder second season.
Daily Mail Australia can exclusively reveal that Aussie Shore is set to return with even more chaos, drama and jaw-dropping antics—thanks to a new crop of party-loving bombshells ready to stir the pot.
Among the fresh faces joining the infamous party house is Melbourne-based event manager Lachlan Di Sebastiano, a self-proclaimed good-time guy who is no stranger to a wild night out.
Friends describe the cheeky larrikin as ‘fun, loyal, and always up for an adventure,’ with one source revealing he’s ‘all about living that YOLO life’.
But it’s Harrison Quinero who is set to bring the most controversy.
A stripper and professional wrestler, Harrison has been branded the bad boy you can’t help but love, and with a fresh heartbreak after his girlfriend allegedly cheated on him he’s ready to let loose in a big way.

Aussie Shore, the most X-rated reality series on Australian television, is gearing up for an even wilder second season

Among the fresh faces joining the infamous party house is Melbourne-based event manager Lachlan Di Sebastiano, a self-proclaimed good-time guy who is no stranger to a wild night out
‘Harrison is pure, unscripted chaos,’ an insider told Daily Mail Australia.
‘He doesn’t hold back and he’s bound to make waves in the house.’
Also making his way into the mix is Dante Surace, a Melbourne-based influencer whose social media is already littered with party snaps alongside MAFS stars Bronte Schofield and Lyndall Grace.
The social media identity is no stranger to drama and has already been making headlines for his A-list reality star connections.
The first season of Aussie Shore delivered all the booze-fuelled antics fans could have hoped for.
The series, featuring Love Island and I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! star Callum Hole, made headlines for its endless string of wild moments.
Hosted by Charlotte Crosby, it is the Aussie version of the Geordie and Jersey Shore franchises that dominated the US and UK in the mid-2010s.
The show was given the wild description: ‘We’re hot, we’re h**ny, and we’re ready to f**ing party’.

Friends describe the cheeky larrikin as ‘fun, loyal, and always up for an adventure,’ with one source revealing he’s ‘all about living that YOLO life’

But it’s Harrison Quinero who is set to bring the most controversy

A stripper and professional wrestler, Harrison has been branded the bad boy you can’t help but love

Also making his way into the mix is Dante Surace

The Melbourne-based influencer’s social media is already littered with party snaps alongside MAFS stars Bronte Schofield and Lyndall Grace
In the first two episodes alone, the housemates shocked viewers with explicit sex scenes, full frontal nudity, and a ‘p**s transplant’ – where contestants urinated on each other in the pool
However, the wild sex scenes viewers see on-screen had caveats.
Unlike the halcyon days of reality television that Millennials were raised on, sitting in their bedrooms with AOL and MTV, producers had a strict duty of care to the cast.
Non cast-members wanting to sleep over with someone they met on a night out had to undertake several robust security checks before even setting foot in the property.
They also had to be stone cold sober to enter the lavish – and rented – property on Hibiscus Lane in Holloways Beach.
‘It’s a long detailed process,’ Aussie Shore’s executive producer Dan Sheldon told news.com.au last year.
‘They have to have written right consent as well, and there’s a 20 minute cooling off period. It’s very strict. Brutal.’
Sarah Thornton, Head of Popular Factual at Network 10 for Paramount ANZ, said some Shore shows (of which there are more than 15 around the world, including the UK’s Geordie Shore) don’t allow the cast to bring outsiders in.

In the first two episodes of the first season, the housemates shocked viewers with explicit sex scenes, full frontal nudity, and a ‘p**s transplant’ – where contestants urinated on each other in the pool
‘Filming a group of boozed up 20-somethings running wild in a fully-funded party house, while also quietly intervening so that nothing actually dangerous happens, ‘is already ‘a logistical nightmare,’ she said.
Thornton said other Shore franchises have followed similar protocols, but true to Australian nightlife culture, additional precautions were added.
‘I guess I’d say there’s this sense of real freedom and a bubble of freedom around the cast, and then there’s a lot of people working incredibly hard on very serious things to make sure that they’re in that bubble in a way that’s really safe,’ he added.