

Written by Swikblog Editorial Team
Monday 8 December 2025 – Australia / London
Social media star Angry Ginge has been crowned King of the Jungle in an emotional I’m A Celebrity 2025 finale, beating Tom Read Wilson and Shona McGarty after three gruelling weeks in the Australian bush.
After 22 days of hunger, creepy-crawly trials and camp tensions, Angry Ginge – real name Morgan Burtwistle – was officially crowned King of the Jungle on Sunday night’s I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! 2025 final. Standing on the iconic red podium beside presenters Ant and Dec, the 24-year-old content creator fought back tears as the result was announced, bringing a dramatic series to a close.
The live ITV finale in Australia ended with a familiar trio in the spotlight: Angry Ginge as winner, Celebs Go Dating favourite Tom Read Wilson as runner-up, and former EastEnders star Shona McGarty in third place. It capped a season that mixed old-school jungle chaos with a new wave of social media-driven fandom and constant online debate over who deserved the crown.
‘Dream come true’: Angry Ginge’s emotional crowning moment
Moments after being handed his crown and floral garland, Angry Ginge looked visibly overwhelmed. He spoke about how surreal it felt to go from gaming streams and football videos to one of British TV’s biggest reality titles, describing the experience as the hardest thing he has ever done – and one he never expected to win.
Viewers have watched him swing between laddish chaos and unexpected vulnerability, opening up about relationships, pressure and self-doubt in the camp. That mix of big-energy humour and raw honesty appears to have resonated with voters at home, who kept him safe through every elimination and ultimately carried him over the line on finale night.
His victory also underlines how far the jungle format has shifted. An online-first star, built on Twitch and YouTube, has now beaten more established TV and soap names to one of ITV’s most recognisable crowns.
Tom Read Wilson and Shona McGarty complete a popular final three
The final two came down to Angry Ginge and Tom Read Wilson, after Shona McGarty’s name was called first in the final elimination of the series. The former EastEnders actor left the camp to huge applause, reflecting on how the jungle had forced her to confront fears and grow in confidence away from soap storylines and red carpets.
Tom Read Wilson, meanwhile, leaves the show as one of the season’s breakout personalities. His precise diction, theatrical storytelling and tendency to turn even the grimmest challenges into a campfire monologue made him a cult favourite online. Finishing second, he spent his final moments in camp reassuring Ginge that simply making the last two felt like a win in itself.
Between them, the trio offered three very different routes to the jungle crown: an influencer, a TV personality and a soap actor – each with their own fanbase, and each tested in very different ways by the producers’ trial designers.
Brutal Bushtucker Trials, Celebrity Cyclone and a 12-star banquet
The final episode leaned into tradition. Each contestant faced a bespoke Bushtucker Trial designed to push their personal limits, from confined spaces swarming with rats and insects to stomach-turning eating challenges and helmets packed with critters. Collectively, they secured the full twelve stars, guaranteeing an all-out jungle banquet for their last night in camp.
That feast followed the now-iconic Celebrity Cyclone earlier in the weekend – the water-soaked, wind-tunnel assault course that has become the unofficial barometer of how much fight a final four still has left. Angry Ginge’s commitment to hurling himself up the slippery ramp, taking foam-ball hits for his teammates, was widely shared across social media and helped cement the narrative of him as a fully committed campmate rather than just a class clown.
From ‘Milkgate’ to make-ups: controversy that defined the series
Away from the trials, this year’s instalment will be remembered for its camp politics – and in particular, the much-discussed “Milkgate” saga. What began as a seemingly minor dispute over milk rations escalated into a full-blown bust-up involving Angry Ginge and fellow campmates, prompting debates on fairness, favouritism and whether contraband or miscommunication was really to blame.
The row dominated headlines and nightly debrief shows, turning Ginge into one of the most polarising figures of the early weeks. Yet over time, viewers watched bridges being rebuilt in camp – shared jokes by the fire, apologies, and a sense that living on rice, beans and limited sleep makes even tiny disagreements feel enormous.
By the final, the narrative had flipped: the same contestant who weathered Milkgate was now being praised for grafting in trials, backing up his friends and wearing his heart on his sleeve when eliminations hit hard.
Why Angry Ginge’s win matters for reality TV
Angry Ginge’s win underscores how reality formats are increasingly shaped by the same forces driving streaming and TikTok fame. As a Twitch and YouTube creator with a loyal young audience, he entered the jungle with built-in support – but still had to win over a more traditional ITV crowd that may never have watched a single one of his streams.
Over three weeks of camp conversations, late-night reflections and nail-biting challenges, that gap appears to have closed. His victory sends a clear message: the line between mainstream celebrity and online creator is thinner than ever. For ITV, it is proof that casting digital-first talent can still deliver big ratings and water-cooler drama alongside soap legends and music veterans.
Viewers looking to dig deeper into how the series unfolded can revisit ITV’s official I’m A Celebrity hub, or read a full written recap of the emotional finale via this independent analysis of Angry Ginge’s win .
What happens next for the King of the Jungle?
For now, the new King of the Jungle will swap camp beds and cockroach helmets for press calls and a long-awaited reunion with friends and family. But the bigger question is what comes after the interviews and the hotel breakfasts.
Reality history suggests that brand deals, TV guest spots and live tour opportunities will flood in. Given Angry Ginge’s background in gaming and football content, it would be no surprise to see him return to streaming with a bigger audience than ever – or pivot into new formats that blend his online persona with the mainstream profile I’m A Celeb has just handed him.
Whatever happens next, the image that will define this series is simple: a young creator in tears on a jungle podium, crown slipping slightly as he laughs and cries at the same time, trying to take in the fact that millions of viewers have just voted him their winner.
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