accusing it of fostering a toxic environment that encourages and protects inappropriate behavior.
The former I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! star, 53, expressed her frustrations in a YouTube video last week,
targeting a specific ITV show and referencing allegations surrounding celebrity chef Gino D’Acampo.


which aired from 2008 until its conclusion in 2022. She labeled the show an “abomination” that normalized misogynistic language and behavior under the guise of humor.

Reflecting on her own experience on the show, Melanie recalled feeling deeply uncomfortable as the audience laughed at crude remarks directed at her. “I had to endure a whole show of listening to a 500-strong audience laugh at some atrocious things that were said to me and about me. My toes were curling, I wanted to die, and I couldn’t leave.”
She went on to condemn the industry for turning a blind eye to inappropriate behavior, arguing that the lack of accountability allows such conduct to thrive. “If you’re going to support somebody’s bad behavior, you create monsters. The industry creates monsters, and then the industry says, ‘Oh, we didn’t know.’ You did know!”

Melanie, who has largely stepped back from television, attributed her decision to leave to the treatment she endured throughout her career. She previously revealed that a comment made by Celebrity MasterChef judge Gregg Wallace had been the final straw.
Discussing the broader issue, she said: “Your silence creates monsters because they genuinely believe they can keep crossing boundaries. A boundary crossed ceases to be a boundary if no one pulls them up on it. And if you’re being paid to be outrageous in the name of entertainment, why would you think you need to curb it?”
Her words highlight a systemic issue within the entertainment industry, where problematic behavior is often excused or ignored, allowing individuals to push limits without consequences.

Melanie also appeared to reference recent allegations against Gino D’Acampo, her former co-host on Let’s Do Lunch with Gino & Mel. While she didn’t name him directly, she alluded to reports that over 40 people have come forward with claims of inappropriate conduct against the Italian chef.
“Years ago, there were some kind of rumblings about the presenter that everybody’s talking about at the moment,” she said. “He went to some kind of etiquette media training because he’s Italian and ‘the translation, he’s not quite getting it’… It’s an insult to Italians. A stupid way of dealing with it. A very narrow-minded, dumb**s way of responding to bad behavior from a human being in the workspace.”

Melanie’s Frustration with the Industry
Reflecting on her 24-year career in television, Melanie likened it to a “war zone,” where she constantly had to navigate an industry that never felt right to her. “If you’re spending all your time cleaning up people’s s***, just clean the house, clean out the house and start again. That’s all I’m saying.”

As the allegations against Gino D’Acampo unfold and the television industry continues to face scrutiny over workplace culture, Melanie Sykes’ powerful words serve as a reminder that silence enables harmful behavior—and that real change can only happen when people speak out.