When Manchester rapper Aitch signed up for I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! this year, many assumed it was the usual combination of adventure, exposure, and a chance to entertain a nation.
But the 25-year-old’s true motivation is far more intimate — and far more moving.
He’s doing it for Gracie.
Not a manager.
Not a record label.
Not the cameras.
But for the 13-year-old sister he adores with every fibre of his being — a girl he describes with a softness rarely heard from a chart-topping artist:
“She’s the most perfect girl I’ve ever met.”
This isn’t a publicity line.
It’s his truth.
A superstar on stage — but just a big brother at home
To the world, Aitch is a fast-rising UK rap star with millions of streams, global tours, and a loyal following.
But ask him about Gracie, and all that bravado melts away.
His voice shifts.
His posture softens.
His priority becomes unmistakable.
Those close to the family say that when Aitch is home, he is not the confident performer seen in music videos — he is simply Harrison, the older brother who lets Gracie braid his hair, chooses softness over spotlight, and seems to glow whenever she walks into the room.
In private moments, he has said:
“She taught me more about life than any success ever could.”
Why he really joined the jungle
For Aitch, the jungle isn’t a career challenge — it’s a platform.
A chance to speak for families like his.
A chance to show the nation the joy, not the fear, associated with Down Syndrome.
A chance to rewrite narratives that have stayed unchanged for too long.
He wants parents hearing the diagnosis for the first time to feel hope, not dread.
He wants the world to understand the light Gracie brings into every room.
And he wants her to watch him on TV — shocked, delighted, laughing — because he told her he was “going to L.A.” so she wouldn’t spoil the surprise.
“She’s a chatty mouth,” he joked lovingly.
A brother who knows his sister to the bone.

The song that became a love letter
In 2022, Aitch released My G — a song that became an anthem of unconditional love.
But what most listeners didn’t know at first was that every line, every lyric, every beat was dedicated to Gracie.
The opening message said it all:
“You have the biggest heart in the world. Don’t change for no one.”
And Aitch made a decision few artists would ever consider:
He handed all profits from the track to the Down’s Syndrome Association.
Not for praise.
Not for headlines.
Simply because he wanted to give back to the community that embraced Gracie as one of their own.
A brother’s mission disguised as a reality show
As Aitch prepares to face spiders, heights, cold nights and cameras rolling 24/7, he’s carrying something far heavier than a backpack:
A message.
A purpose.
A promise to his sister.
“He doesn’t care about the fame side of it,” one close friend said.
“He wants the world to see the beauty he sees in Gracie.”
For Aitch, every challenge in the jungle is an opportunity —
to break stigma,
to spread understanding,
to show that Down Syndrome is not a disadvantage,
but a different kind of brilliance.
The boy who became a man the day Gracie was born
Aitch has always been talented.
He has always been ambitious.
But it’s clear that his deepest growth didn’t come from the industry —
it came from being a big brother.
He speaks of Gracie with pride, not pity.
With admiration, not worry.
With love, not fear.
And that love is leading him into the jungle, step by step, challenge by challenge, with a purpose bigger than any crown.
Because to Aitch, fame will fade —
but being Gracie’s brother is forever.