The I'm A Celeb campmates got an eye-full on Tuesday morning when a huge banner with Matt Hancock's name flew above their heads.
Since joining the ITV show, former Health Secretary Matt Hancock has received endless backlash online - and now one pilot has taken action.
Mr Hancock's arrival into the jungle sent shockwaves among showbiz fans following his failures throughout the Covid pandemic, and his ruling-breaking following the exposure of his affair with Gina Colangelo while strict social-distancing measures were in place.
While some I'm A Celebrity fans have warmed to the MP after he confessed that he's in search of 'a bit of forgiveness' after his failures, others are still utterly fuming.
Mr Hancock's controversial deal with ITV has sparked a petition against the MP as Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice launched a campaign titled 'He's no celebrity - stop Matt Hancock appearing on I'm A Celebrity'.
The petition, which currently has over 45,000 signatures, has garnered enough attention that the website, namely 38 degrees, were able to fly an anti-Matt banner over camp on Tuesday morning.
The huge banner, which measured at 35 metres, read the words 'Covid Bereaved Say Get Out of Here'.
It was flown over the ITV show's base camp on the NSW/QLD border in Australia.
A spokesperson from the petition site explained that the plane was 'hired and sent out to make sure Matt gets the message'.
Speaking to Daily Star, they said the pilot suggests that the 'banner was spotted' by the I'm A Celeb campmates.
The CEO of 38 Degrees, Matthew McGregor, told the publication that their banner makes their message 'crystal clear' to Mr Hancock.
McGregor said that the MP should be giving the group answers they deserve rather than 'playing games for dingo dollars, plastic stars and a £400,000 paycheck.'
It comes after fans have blasted Mr Hancock after he failed to even discuss his dyslexia bill once on screen so far in his first week on I'm A Celebrity.
MP Hancock has been asked by several members of the camp why he is in there and has not even used the word dyslexia in those conversations, let alone talked of his Bill going through Commons.
Some viewers are questioning whether he has even mentioned it at all whilst in the jungle.
Asked by the Mirror if it was true Hancock had failed to discuss dyslexia so far, a spokesman for ITV would only say: "It is not possible to show everything that happens in camp due to time constraints, we're a 60-75 minute Entertainment show.
"It is always our intention to produce a show that is a fair and accurate representation of life in camp."
Fans of the show have also picked up on the lack of dyslexia discussion despite Hancock's claims going in to put it on the agenda.
When he was preparing to go into camp, Hancock insisted this issue was a more motivating factor than his £400k pay cheque.
Hancock himself is dyslexic but was only diagnosed at the age of 18, after he left school.