The Final Knockout: David Haye Blasts “Broken” Adam Thomas in Double Elimination Shock with Gemma Collins
The jungle canopy of I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! has seen its fair share of spectacular responses to pressure, but the latest double elimination has left the campsite in a state of visceral shock. In a move that few “netizen detectives” predicted, heavyweight boxer David Haye and reality icon Gemma Collins were both sent packing. However, it wasn’t the exit itself that dominated the headlines; it was the “sound of breaking glass” caused by Haye’s parting words for fellow campmate Adam Thomas. As he moved toward the bridge, the boxer delivered a clinical critique of Thomas’s “domestic collapse” within the camp, even as hosts Ant and Dec took the rare step of condemning Haye’s own behavior behind the scenes.

What was once a sanctuary of camaraderie has turned into a horror house of psychological warfare. The “Weight of the Name” David Haye carries as a champion athlete clashed violently with the screams and groans of the survival environment, leading to a nightmare finale for his jungle journey.
The “Broken” Man: Haye’s Final Jab at Adam Thomas
Throughout the season, the coordinates of the camp were split between the “wounded healers” and the “prestige” seekers. David Haye, operating with a Zero-Footprint of patience for perceived weakness, focused his final energy on Adam Thomas. Thomas, who has been visibly struggling with the “Dead Zone” of hunger and isolation, was labeled “broken” by the boxer in a spectacular response to their final argument.

“I’ve spent my life in a boxing clinic, learning how to dọn dẹp (clear out) the fear,” Haye remarked in his exit interview. “But Adam? He’s a domestic collapse waiting to happen. To see a man of his prestige reduced to those screams and groans over a few spiders… it’s a nightmare to watch. He’s not just tired; he’s fundamentally broken by this horror house.”
The critique was visceral and left the remaining celebrities in a state of radioactive tension. For Thomas, who has been trying to find a sanctuary in the camp’s small wins, Haye’s words were a missed warning of the psychological toll the competition takes on those who aren’t built for combat.
Ant and Dec Break Character: A Clinical Condemnation
The most spectacular response of the night, however, came from the hosts themselves. Ant and Dec, usually the “doctors” of humor and light-hearted fun, took a somber turn when addressing Haye’s conduct. Reports from the production staff suggested that Haye’s behavior toward the crew and his fellow contestants had become a “Dead Zone” of respect.

In a clinical address before the walk across the bridge, the duo condemned the “invisible” aggression that Haye had brought into the domestic sanctuary of the camp. “The sound of breaking glass you hear isn’t a challenge; it’s the respect in this camp shattering,” Ant noted. The hosts emphasized that while the jungle is a horror house by design, the “Weight of the Name” Haye didn’t give him a pass to ignore the invisible promise of basic human decency. This rare condemnation served as a spectacular response to a season marred by Haye’s increasingly radioactive attitude.
Gemma Collins: The Exit of a “Prestige” Icon

Lost in the “screams and groans” of the Haye-Thomas feud was the exit of Gemma Collins. The GC, a woman who inhabits her own sanctuary of fame, managed to dọn dẹp the jungle debris with her trademark flair, though even she seemed relieved to escape the nightmare of the camp’s atmosphere.
While Haye left in a cloud of controversy, Gemma’s departure was a spectacular response to the physical toll of the show. She acted as a “wounded healer” for the audience, providing the laughs that kept the show from descending fully into a horror house. However, her exit alongside Haye means the camp has lost its two biggest “prestige” personalities in a single night, leaving the remaining contestants in a Dead Zone of leadership.
The Domestic Collapse of Camp Morale

With Haye gone, the coordinates of the camp are moving toward a new era of accountability. The “invisible” pressure Haye exerted is gone, but the debris of his words remains. Adam Thomas is left to dọn dẹp the psychological damage of being called “broken” on national television.

“The jungle is a clinic for the soul,” one producer remarked. “But David was treating it like a fight he had to win by knocking everyone else down. The domestic sanctuary we try to build for the celebs was completely compromised by his Zero-Footprint of empathy.” The sound of breaking glass from this episode will likely echo through the rest of the season, as the “wounded healers” try to rebuild the sanctuary that Haye helped destroy.
The Race to the Final
As the celebrities move toward the final week, the “Weight of the Name” I’m A Celeb has never felt more visceral. The spectacular response to Haye’s exit proves that the public values the sanctuary of character over the prestige of a boxing title. Haye may have cleared out the competition in the ring, but in the jungle, his “horror house” tactics led to a domestic collapse of his own reputation.
Adam Thomas remains in the race, but he is now a patient in the clinic of public opinion, tasked with proving he isn’t the “broken” man Haye claimed he was. The screams and groans of the jungle will continue, but with the radioactive presence of Haye removed, there is a chance for a new sanctuary to form. The “invisible promise” of the show is that it reveals who people truly are when the prestige is dọn dẹp—and tonight, the diagnosis for David Haye was a final, spectacular failure of character. The clinic is still open, and the world is watching to see if Adam Thomas can rise from the debris of this nightmare to find his own spectacular response to the challenge.



