I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here Greece Season 12 Dthrip Verified -

– For twelve seasons, I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! Greece has subjected fading pop stars, scandal-ridden politicians, and B-list influencers to the tortures of the Peloponnesian wild. We’ve seen live scorpion smoothies, sunstroke meltdowns, and at least one contestant try to befriend a wild boar.

Cressida lasted 47 seconds before curling into a fetal position, whispering, “The bristles know my fears.”

If you haven’t been glued to ITVX’s Hellenic spin-off, here’s what you need to know. Season 12 introduced a new, seemingly innocuous challenge called “The Dthrip Gauntlet.” The name was first whispered by host Nikos Papadakis with a smirk that should have warned us. “Dthrip,” he explained, is an ancient Greek word for “the friction of a single hair against dry ceramic.” – For twelve seasons, I’m a Celebrity… Get

They were found 200 meters down the road, hiding behind an olive tree, still wearing their jungle boots and sobbing that they “heard the bristles coming through the ground.”

The goal: keep the Dthrip on your head for five minutes. Each minute you last adds one meal to the camp food bank. Cressida lasted 47 seconds before curling into a

Geoff Pargetter? The old legend sat perfectly still for the full five minutes. When the helmet lifted, he turned to the camera and said, “I’ve sat through Question Time . This was Tuesday.”

Cue the celebrity panic. The Dthrip is not an insect. It is not a reptile, a fermented fish sauce, or a submerged cage. No, the Dthrip is far, far worse. Each minute you last adds one meal to the camp food bank

By Thalia Vardalos, Reality TV Correspondent