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The active call girls, whores, hookers, clubs, brothels and brothel apartments, as well as information about home visits, hotel visits, office visits, escort, companion service and hostesses

Maybe not. Streaming services (ITVX, Hulu, etc.) have the season in similar or better upscaled quality without the disc cost. Only grab the BD9 if you want a permanent, offline copy or cherish the original broadcast extras.

Dolby Digital 2.0 is the only option – no 5.1, which is fine given the show’s stereo commentary and pop music cues (though some songs may be replaced due to licensing). Ant & Dec’s quips are crisp, and the ambient jungle sounds (insects, rain, campfire crackle) have decent separation. It won’t test your home theater, but it’s perfectly serviceable.

The trials were nastier (hello, eating fish eyes), the camp politics sharper, and the celebrity meltdowns more raw than in earlier seasons. This was the year the show stopped being a novelty and became a ratings juggernaut. The BD9 format (a standard DVD-9 disc re-encoded for Blu-ray players or a high-bitrate 1080p encode on a 9GB single-layer Blu-ray) is an interesting choice for a show shot in standard definition. Let’s be honest: I’m a Celeb in 2004 was captured on 480i/576i digital betacam, not 4K. So the BD9 release won’t magically create detail that wasn’t there.

A solid, no-frills release for a classic reality TV season. The BD9 does its job without flair – much like a contestant who avoids the trials but makes it to the final five. Reliable, but not showstopping. “I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here! Season 3 (BD9)” – the jungle feels closer, the bugs look crunchier, and Ant & Dec’s sarcasm has never sounded clearer. Just don’t expect a 4K safari.