The Jungle Didn’t Expect This: Tom Read Wilson Becomes the Emotional Heir to Paul O’Grady — And Britain Is Feeling It

No one tuned into I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! 2025 expecting a moment like this.

Among the heat, hunger, clashes of ego and headline-grabbing trials, the jungle usually rewards volume — the loudest laughs, the biggest breakdowns, the boldest bravado. But this year, something quietly seismic happened. A different kind of star emerged. And by the final days, campmates and viewers alike were whispering the same name.

Paul O’Grady.

Not because of drag, fame, or career trajectory — but because of heart.

Celebs Go Dating's Tom Read Wilson: 'I never really get beyond date number  four'

A Presence That Didn’t Shout — It Stayed

Tom Read Wilson entered the jungle as a curiosity at best. The 38-year-old Celebs Go Dating receptionist, armed with florid language, old-world manners and a vocabulary that felt wildly out of place in the bush, was tipped as a 50/1 outsider. Few expected him to last. Fewer still expected him to matter.

Yet while others battled for airtime, Tom did something far more powerful: he paid attention.

Night after night, he quietly checked on campmates’ wellbeing — what they jokingly dubbed his “granny rounds.” He brewed tea. He listened. He quoted Latin not to show off, but to soothe nerves. And when emotions cracked open, Tom didn’t rush to fill the silence. He sat in it.

When Jack Osbourne struggled with grief over Ozzy, Tom didn’t offer words — he offered his hand. When Ruby Wax spiraled, he didn’t fix — he stayed. One campmate described it simply: “Tom felt like safety.”

“He Made You Laugh While Your Heart Was Breaking”

File:Paul O'Grady, April 2009.jpg - Wikipedia

By the time Tom finished as runner-up to AngryGinge, the votes almost felt irrelevant. His true victory had already happened — in the hearts of the camp.

“It wasn’t about fame or career,” Aitch said after the finale. “It was about soul. Tom’s got that same soft, caring heart that made Paul O’Grady feel like family to everyone.”

Shona McGarty echoed the sentiment inside the Bush Telegraph: “Tom’s like a hug in human form.”

The comparison hit its emotional peak during the Letters from Home episode. As Tom read a note from his mother, his composure fell away. Tears came freely. Vulnerably. The moment stopped viewers cold — instantly reminding many of Paul O’Grady’s raw tenderness on For the Love of Dogs.

Different men. Different lives. Same emotional truth.

Not An Imitation — A Shared Gift

Paul O’Grady, who died suddenly in March 2023 aged 67, was never just an entertainer. From the razor-sharp Lily Savage to his tireless work with Battersea Dogs Home, he possessed a rare gift: he made people feel seen.

Friends say Tom carries that same instinct — not learned, not copied, but innate.

“Paul cared without judgement,” Julian Clary once said of O’Grady. “That’s incredibly rare. And Tom has it too. Quietly. Kindly. With humour that comes from the soul.”

Social media felt it instantly. The hashtag #TomLikePaul surged past 800,000 posts, with fans stitching clips of Tom’s gentle jungle moments alongside O’Grady’s most tender television scenes.

One viral post read: “Tom isn’t replacing Paul. He’s reminding us of what we miss.”
Another simply said: “Heart of gold. Britain needs this again.”

More Than A Contestant — A Symbol

Tom Read Wilson - IMDb

Tom’s background tells the same story. A former choirboy turned television receptionist, he’s long championed kindness — supporting Mind, animal rescue charities, and mental health awareness long before the jungle amplified his voice.

His familiar catchphrases — “darling,” “fabulous” — carry echoes of O’Grady’s camp warmth. But it’s his depth that’s landed hardest.

“The jungle showed me people’s raw beauty,” Tom reflected after leaving camp. “It reminded me of icons like Paul — people who lived with open hearts.”

Why This Moment Matters

As 2025 draws to a close, Tom Read Wilson’s rise isn’t about trophies or titles. It’s about timing.

In a fractured, exhausted world craving connection, his quiet decency landed like a balm. Britain didn’t just discover a finalist — it rediscovered a feeling.

The jungle may be over. The crown may belong to someone else.
But Tom Read Wilson walked out carrying something far rarer.

A reminder of Paul O’Grady’s magic.
And proof that gentleness still has power.

Forever felt. Never forgotten.