Rylan Clark, the Essex everyman whose cheeky charm lit up The X Factor stages and Strictly sparkles for a decade, has detonated his ITV dynasty with a defiant roar that’s rippling through Riverside Studios like a ratings rupture. On September 24, 2025—mere days after his “last day” bombshell on This Morning amid a vicious backlash to his immigration rant—Rylan unleashed an Instagram tirade that’s tallied 4.2 million views in hours: “They tried to shut me up, break me down—but I’m still standing. If speaking the truth costs me my job, so be it.” The 36-year-old, who rose from 2012’s Big Brother bunker to Celebrity Big Brother crown and Supermarket Sweep revival, confirmed his ITV exile is “permanent,” terminating his contract after the August 27 segment where he slammed Nigel Farage’s deportation dreams: “Something’s wrong with how we treat small boat arrivals—pro-immigration, anti-illegal routes, but compassion can’t be conditional.” The quip? A powder keg: X erupted with “misinformation merchant” memes and “disappointed diva” daggers, 500k calls to axe him flooding Ofcom, while Josie Gibson and Rob Rinder rallied with “Rylan rules” retweets. “No regrets—louder, prouder,” he declared, but whispers warn: Names he’s “about to expose” could crater ITV’s cozy corner, from “backroom bullying” to “bias bosses” burying his breakdowns.

The backlash blaze? Brutal. Rylan’s Wednesday words—”You can be pro-immigration and against illegal routes”—ignited a inferno: Critics crowed “spreading falsehoods” (fact-checks from The Mirror nailed three “wrong” whoppers on asylum stats), while supporters surged #StandWithRylan with 1.8 million posts (“He’s human—hosts have heart!”). By Friday’s finale—his “last day” opener with Josie, all grins and goodbyes—ITV insiders inked the ink: “Mutual termination,” per Variety, but Rylan’s rage reeks of rupture. “They caved to the mob—now I’m free,” he fumed in a Guardian exclusive, teasing a “tell-all tour” with Ruth Langsford (her “who knows?” wink at a reunion sans This Morning fuels fire). Ruth, the veteran who vanished post-Eamonn Holmes split, shaded: “We might spark something outside—Rylan’s real, and that’s rare.” The “fierce” fallout? A frenzy: Ofcom probes pending, sponsors like Boots bailing on bookings, and Rylan’s rep spiking 300% on Cameo (“Truth teller!”).

Behind the bravado? A beast of burdens: Rylan’s 2023 “traumatic” divorce from Dan Neal—post-infidelity implosion that sparked two heart failures and a suicide spiral—left him “severely underweight,” per his 2022 Festival Hall frank: “I built Rylan 2.0—now they’re dismantling it.” The immigration imbroglio? Iceberg tip: Whispers of “ITV intolerance” to his trans allyship (post-Drag Race raves) and mental health monologues (How to Be a Grown-Up raw reels), with execs eyeing “safer” summer swaps like Joel Dommett. “They broke me once—won’t again,” Rylan roared, hinting at “names” like “higher-ups who hushed my hurt.” Fans fracture: #RylanRebel roars with 2.5 million posts (“ITV’s loss—truth’s gain!”), while detractors decry “diva departure—good riddance.” His next? Netflix nabs for a “Rylan Unfiltered” special? BBC beckons for Strictly spin-off? Or a podcast purge with Ruth, roasting the “break me” brigade?

This isn’t a sign-off; it’s a salvo. Rylan’s “explosive confession”? A clarion call against “corporate cages,” his “still standing” a stand against silence. ITV? Shaken: This Morning‘s 800k average dips 15% post-rant, Cat Deeley and Ben Shephard sweating the September shuffle. As Rylan eyes exile—”If truth’s the toll, pay it gladly”—one truth thunders: Smiles shatter under spotlights, but spirits? Unbreakable. The “names” he’ll “expose”? Network neutron bombs. Fans stunned, ITV trembling—the roar? Relentless. Rylan’s reign? Not ended—evolved. The full lists? Leaking soon. Brace; the backlash? Just begun.