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| Relief ... Duncan smiles after he's told he's out |
Businessman became the sixth to be evicted from the show, just a day after Lady C's shock exit.
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| High-lights and lows ... Duncan talks to Ant and Dec about his experiences |
He said: "There was just some little things; she would start shouting all these [insults] and it was just unforgivable. It was one thing and then another. And Tony would always react when she said something to him. She started on Tony's children and she was getting a bit personal."
During his twenty-one days in camp, Duncan developed a close friendship with Spandau Ballet frontman Tony Hadley. The pair's bitter feud with the Jamaican aristocrat has dominated the series.
"She's not a Lady," he growled, his face like thunder as he watched back a VT of one of their many spats.
Like other departed contestants Yvette Fielding and Brian Friedman, Duncan also implied that more had gone on in camp than viewers had seen at home. Things worsened between the Royal biographer and the rest of the camp when Duncan and actress Jorgie Porter refused to be her servants as part of a challenge.
He said: "She took that very personally, which she shouldn't have done."
Adding that camp was "much happier" without her, he also shot down a suggestion they could clear the air away from the show. "I think my life is better not having her in so I won't see her again," he said.
Duncan was the sixth person to be voted off the show, and although he admitted he was surprised to last a whole twenty-one days, he also hoped he could win.
He said: "I would have been happy to stay until the end."


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