I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here Greece Season 15 Vp3 [ Latest - 2025 ]
In a season already defined by record-breaking heat, a mutiny over stale bread, and a celebrity contestant who claimed to commune with dolphins, the third and final viewing pack (VP3) of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here Greece didn’t just raise the stakes—it burned the丛林 (jungle) down.
The deep-feature twist? The audio feed was cut. Viewers watched in near-silence for 45 minutes as each celebrity thrashed in the dark. The basketball player, Takis, screamed for his mother. The influencer vomited into her blindfold. But the moment that will live in Greek reality TV history belongs to the 68-year-old actress, Katerina. Upon being submerged, she stopped thrashing. She later revealed she thought the eels were “paid actors” and attempted to give them stage directions. “No, no, darling, more menace,” she cooed underwater, according to a lip-reader hired by the production. She emerged with all five stars, looking mildly annoyed. She was immediately anointed the season’s folk hero.
Producers saved their most sadistic trial for the penultimate challenge. Called “The Labyrinth of the Minotaur’s Shadow,” it was a three-part, individual immunity trial. Contestants were blindfolded, strapped into a rotating cage filled with Aegean sea water, and tasked with retrieving five plastic stars while submerged with live, non-venomous but highly disconcerting Mediterranean moray eels. i'm a celebrity... get me out of here greece season 15 vp3
For the uninitiated, the Greek edition of the global hit franchise has always possessed a unique flavor. Where the UK version leans on camaraderie and Australia’s relies on sheer terror, Greece’s iteration—filmed on a remote, unforgiving outcrop in the Saronic Gulf—adds a volatile third ingredient: philotimo mixed with melodrama. Season 15, however, was a beast of its own. Dubbed the “VP3” (Viewing Pack 3) by producers to signify the final, unbroken 72-hour sprint to the crown, this was less a reality show and more a descent into a sun-scorched psychological thriller.
As one producer told us off the record: “We didn’t make a show. We just pointed cameras at hell and hoped someone would laugh.” Mission accomplished. Now, get them out of there. In a season already defined by record-breaking heat,
But the knockout came from Takis, the basketball enforcer. Looking not at the camera but into the flames, he admitted that his fear of octopuses stemmed not from the animal itself, but from a childhood incident where a stuffed octopus toy fell off a shelf during his parents’ divorce. “It looked like the fight,” he said, crying. “All those arms, pulling in different directions.” For a moment, the game stopped. There was no winner, no loser—only five broken people in the dark, listening to the Aegean lap against the shore.
The finale, aired live from Athens, saw Katerina the actress crowned Queen of the Jungle. Her victory speech lasted forty-five seconds, most of which she spent asking the host if he knew a good dentist in Kolonaki. The influencer got a skincare deal. Takis started a podcast about emotional intelligence in sports. Viewers watched in near-silence for 45 minutes as
But the legacy of Season 15, VP3 is not in the crown. It’s in the raw, unfiltered document of human collapse and unexpected grace. In an era of polished reality TV, the Greek jungle offered something primal: hunger, terror, absurdity, and the strange, fleeting intimacy of shared misery. The final shot of VP3 wasn’t the confetti or the trophy. It was the abandoned camp at dawn—a half-eaten fish skeleton, a single sequin from Eleni’s shirt, and the fire pit, still smoldering.