Scarlette Douglas has been booted from the I'm A Celebrity jungle.
The Place In The Sun star became the second star to exit the Australian jungle during tonight's show. Their exit comes just two days after Charlene White was revealed to be the first star heading home after the first eviction of the series.
Hosts Ant McPartlin and Dec Donnelly arrived into the camp to reveal the public had been voting and one more of them had been axed from the ITV show after an emotional day of trials, challenges and the letters from home. As they confirmed fans had been voting for who they wanted to save, they announced that Scarlette was next to go.
As she joined hosts Ant and Dec, she admitted she was gutted to be leaving and insisted she was devastated to go. She explained she wanted to keep herself busy as she was a "team player" and was desperate to get "stuck in".
During today's show, Jill Scott and Mike Tindall took on the trial, where they won 10 stars. They had to drink a whole host of horrible concoctions including blended anus, vagina as well as blended spiders.
It comes after Loose Women star Charlene was confirmed to be the first celebrity to leave the jungle in a vote out, following Olivia Attwood's early exit from the programme due to medical concerns.
Following her exit, Charlene explained how Matt Hancock going into the jungle ruined it for her - as she was always concerned about her impartiality as a journalist as that is her primary job.
She told The Mirror and other press: "Being there and having a laugh and having a joke – that kind of finished when Matt came. Because I have interviewed enough of the families who have lost loved ones during the pandemic. I am one of those. As soon as he walked in I thought ‘I’m going to be walking a tightrope here.'
"If I don’t think about them and ask the questions they want to know regarding his reasoning for going into the jungle when we are in the middle of the inquiry into the reaction after the pandemic... then I’m not doing my job. It went from me just having a laugh to constantly worrying... whether I would still be taken seriously when it comes to dealing with politicians."