Watch Olen Julkkis... Päästäkää Minut Pois! Season 19 Official

For fans of the genre, this season is essential viewing. For everyone else, it’s proof that the Finnish version has quietly become the best adaptation of the format—less cruel, more absurd, and ultimately, more kind.

The turning point came when the wrestler Marko, after losing a trial, walked back into camp and announced, “I am not a jungle person. I am a hall person. I need a hall.” He voluntarily left the show, but not before giving a farewell speech that compared the jungle to the 1997 European Wrestling Championships. It was oddly moving. watch olen julkkis... päästäkää minut pois! season 19

Every great season hinges on casting, and Season 19 delivered a brilliant dichotomy. On one side, we had the legacy celebrities: a beloved 90s pop star whose last hit came before most of the TikTok audience was born, a retired Olympic wrestler with a legendary temper, and a veteran soap opera actress known for her imperious off-screen persona. On the other side, the new blood : a controversial influencer whose entire brand is “unfiltered chaos,” a reality TV veteran from Selviytyjät Suomi , and a radio host famous for his cynical, metropolitan wit. For fans of the genre, this season is essential viewing

The tension was immediate. The influencer, Lotta, declared on day one that she would “hack the bushtucker trials” by refusing to participate—a strategy that backfired spectacularly when the camp’s food rations were reduced to a single spoonful of rice per person. The wrestler, Marko, responded with a 20-minute monologue about “Sisu” that became an instant meme. I am a hall person

In the pantheon of reality television, few formats have the enduring, almost primal grip of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! For Finland, the local adaptation, Olen Julkkis… Päästäkää Minut Polt! , has carved out its own unique identity—less focused on tabloid scandal and more on the quiet, creeping psychological toll of hunger, insects, and the relentless Finnish summer humidity (which, while not Australian, is surprisingly effective at breaking the spirit). Season 19, which aired in late 2024, was not merely another installment; it was a masterclass in slow-burn storytelling, a generational clash, and an unexpected lesson in national humility.