THE I'M A Celebrity camp is beginning to take shape with first look photos revealing what is in store for the contestants.
I’m A Celebrity already has most of its line-up in place.
So far, it includes Wag queen Coleen Rooney, Dancing on Ice judge Oti Mabuse, ex-Love Islander Tommy Fury, Corrie’s Alan Halsall and social media star GK Barry.
And the camp is getting ready for their arrival with a huge new water tank being set-up for trials.
A swimming pool with glass containers inside suggests there will be an underwater challenge once again, with the celebrities facing a string of creatures inside the tanks.
Aerial views of the camp, which is located in the Springbrook National Park, near Murwillumbah, show that the spine tingling challenge areas are in the process of being constructed.
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Several wooden structures are also in the process of being built, ready for the campmates to face their fears.
The new series of I'm A Celebrity is due to get underway in Australia next month, with Ant McPartlin and Declan Donnelly hosting once again.
Last week The Sun revealed that radio host the Rev Richard Coles is set for I’m A Celebrity — and ready to let rip at his old employer.
The former Communards and Strictly star, 62, said the BBC did not know its a**e from its elbow last year.
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Sources also say Radio 1 rising star Dean McCullough, 32, is in advanced talks to enter the ITV series which starts next month.
An insider said: “As always, the jungle bosses have cleverly put together a sensational line-up guaranteed to make for compulsive viewing.
“Rev Coles will have a variety of tales to tell from his wild days as a pop star in the Eighties, through to performing on Strictly and his later life as a man of the cloth.
"Meanwhile, Dean isn’t known for being a shrinking violet and is sure to be outspoken — plus he’s one of the youngest men lined up for the show so far.”
Richard departed as host of Radio 4’s Saturday Live show under a cloud in March 2023 after 12 years.
The Beeb announced the news, buried in an email, only five days before his final show.
Richard said later he “felt rather hurtled towards the exit”.
He added of the BBC: “You devote your energies to it and yet they perhaps don’t always respond with similar devotion.