Hold the maggots: can I'm a Celebrity survive the vegan era?

Are grubs off the I’m a Celebrity menu?
Are grubs off the I’m a Celebrity menu? Photograph: ITV / Rex Features

As fun as I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here! is for audiences – really, who doesn’t like seeing someone you vaguely recognise from EastEnders scream in mortal terror night after night? – it seems as if some of the contestants have started to wise up.

Three of this year’s intake – the X Factor runner-up Fleur East, The Vamps’ James McVey and the Coronation Street actor Sair Khan – are all said to be vegan, and will therefore not be participating in any of the challenges requiring them to eat piles and piles of live insects.

As for the television presenter Nick Knowles’ stance on the bug-munching bushtucker trials, it is complicated. In an interview with the Radio Times last year, he described his diet as “vegan 80% of the time, vegetarian 5% of the time, and meat about 5%”.

Coronation Street actor and vegan Sair Khan.
Coronation Street actor and vegan Sair Khan. Photograph: ITV/REX/Shutterstock

Most of the time, contestants are forced to live off a diet of beans and rice, with the occasional challenge involving offal. So what happens if you sling a kangaroo bum under Nick’s nose? Would that count as part of his 5%?

Inevitably, the public is less than impressed by what it sees as dietary cowardice. But this isn’t the first time dietary requirements have risked derailing I’m a Celebrity. In 2002, two contestants – the radio DJ Tony Blackburn and the magician Uri Geller – were vegetarian, but their approaches differed wildly.

One week in, the public voted for Geller to eat live maggots. Blackburn said he would lose all respect for Geller if he went through with it. Geller ate them anyway, prioritising the spirit of the competition above his own ethical viewpoint.

Blackburn, meanwhile, refused to eat bugs and ended up winning the series. The message? Either people respect those who stick to their principles, or they just really dislike Uri Geller.

For years, I’m a Celebrity has made its name by covering people in snakes and forcing them to eat insects, but perhaps its new conscientious contestants are a sign that times are changing and people are now unable to stomach the cruelty inherent in some of its challenges. Maybe next year contestants will be forced to eat piles of tofu instead.