Thomas Skinner’s Wild Strictly Come Dancing Routine Leaves Fans Stunned, Amy Dowden Speaks from the Heart While His Wife Looks On in Disbelief

Strictly Come Dancing viewers were left reeling on Saturday night after Thomas Skinner‘s salsa routine went viral for all the wrong reasons.

The TV personality, 34, took to the dancefloor in week two of the hit BBC competition with professional partner Amy Dowden, 35, performing to Dizzee Rascal’s hit track Bonkers as his wife Sinead proudly watched on from the audience.

However, within seconds of the performance kicking off, fans flocked to X (formerly Twitter) to blast Thomas’s dance skills, exaggerated facial expressions, and his constant tongue movements.

One unimpressed viewer fumed: ‘Watching Tom Skinner try and dance is actually making me feel sick. PUT YOUR TONGUE AWAY PLEASEEE.’;

‘@strictly it’s hurting my eyes make it stop (prayer hands emoji) Tom Skinner.’; ‘The way I feel genuinely ILL watching Tom Skinner oh my god.’;

‘Tom Skinner, dear on dear. It’s not your fault you can’t dance, but stop sticking your tongue out. Last thing anyone wants to see on a Saturday night.’;

Strictly Come Dancing viewers were left reeling on Saturday night after Thomas Skinner's salsa routine went viral for all the wrong reasons

+12
View gallery

Strictly Come Dancing viewers were left reeling on Saturday night after Thomas Skinner’s salsa routine went viral for all the wrong reasons

The TV personality, 34, took to the dancefloor in week two of the hit BBC competition with professional partner Amy Dowden, 35, performing to Dizzee Rascal's hit track Bonkers

+12
View gallery

The TV personality, 34, took to the dancefloor in week two of the hit BBC competition with professional partner Amy Dowden, 35, performing to Dizzee Rascal’s hit track Bonkers

‘The Pools game is now the second worst thing I’ve seen today, Tom Skinner trying to dance with those facial expressions won’t erase itself from my memory quickly.’

Despite the criticism, Amy, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023 but was given the all-clear around 18 months ago, was full of positivity as she chatted to host Claudia Winkleman, 53, after the routine.

She said: ‘If I’ve learned anything in the last two years, life is too short, take risks.’

However, their risky salsa didn’t win over the judges, who awarded the pair just 13 points – one of the lowest scores of the night.

Amy also admitted she was slightly nervous during rehearsals due to Thomas’s intense ‘concentration face’.

She said: ‘It was okay until we had to do lifts and I was high up there and he had his eyes shut,’

However, the dancer added that she does ‘trust’ him before turning to him and gushing: ‘I’m so proud of you!’

Meanwhile, Thomas’s supportive wife Sinead took to her Instagram Stories earlier on in the evening to share a snap of the glitzy dancefloor as she waited excitedly for her husband to perform.

+12
View gallery

+12
View gallery

+12
View gallery

+12
View gallery
However, within seconds of the performance kicking off, fans flocked to X (formerly Twitter) to blast Thomas's dance skills, exaggerated facial expressions, and his constant tongue movements

However, within seconds of the performance kicking off, fans flocked to X (formerly Twitter) to blast Thomas’s dance skills, exaggerated facial expressions, and his constant tongue movements

Despite the criticism, Amy, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023 but was given the all-clear around 18 months ago, was full of positivity as she chatted to host Claudia Winkleman, 53, after the routine

+12
View gallery

Despite the criticism, Amy, who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2023 but was given the all-clear around 18 months ago, was full of positivity as she chatted to host Claudia Winkleman, 53, after the routine

She said: 'If I've learned anything in the last two years, life is too short, take risks'

+12
View gallery

She said: ‘If I’ve learned anything in the last two years, life is too short, take risks’

It comes after the Daily Mail reported that Strictly stars are reportedly supporting Thomas amid accusations from fans that bosses ‘want him out first’.

The former Apprentice star is one of this year’s controversial signings for the BBC show, with viewers previously calling for him to be axed from the lineup.

Thomas started his stint in the competition on a bad footing when he grabbed a journalist’s phone (before handing it back) and stormed out of an interview during the annual press day.

He then admitted to having an affair on his wife Sinead in an emotional interview.

Thomas confessed to Daily Mail’s Katie Hind last week that the cheating scandal has been ‘awful for my poor wife to read it all’ as he came clean on the affair.

However, he put on a brave face as he made his dance floor debut with Amy Dowden last Saturday.

The Sun previously reported that Strictly fans are convinced bosses ‘want him out first’, in turn forcing the other stars to rally around him.

An insider told the publication: ‘Tom is just your average person who’s been flung into a frenzy of hate ever since signing up to Strictly.

However, their risky salsa didn't win over the judges, who awarded the pair just 13 points - one of the lowest scores of the night

+12
View gallery

However, their risky salsa didn’t win over the judges, who awarded the pair just 13 points – one of the lowest scores of the night

Meanwhile, Thomas's supportive wife Sinead took to her Instagram Stories earlier on in the evening to share a snap of the glitzy dancefloor as she waited excitedly for her husband to perform

+12
View gallery

Meanwhile, Thomas’s supportive wife Sinead took to her Instagram Stories earlier on in the evening to share a snap of the glitzy dancefloor as she waited excitedly for her husband to perform

‘He’s rising above it all, but of course, it would get anyone down.

‘That’s why the support from his Strictly co-stars has meant so much to him.

The source added that Thomas has turned out to be one of the most popular members of the cast and that they are all ‘very protective of him’.

A Strictly source said: ‘It’s bonkers to suggest that dancing to a multi-platinum number one single is any sort of disadvantage.’

BBCAmy DowdenStrictly Come Dancing
0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
Loretta Lynn’s Granddaughter & Willie Nelson’s Son
Read More

THE NIGHT THE DUET DIED: Loretta Lynn’s Final Song Beside Conway Twitty Still Haunts Country Music — A Goodbye the World Never Saw Coming.Saw Coming. It happened quietly, without fanfare — a night that began like so many others for two of country music’s greatest voices, and ended as the closing chapter of one of its most beloved partnerships. When Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty walked onstage together for the final time, no one in the crowd realized they were witnessing the end of an era — the night the duet, as the world knew it, died. The year was 1988. The place: Nashville, under the soft golden lights of a charity concert meant to celebrate country’s classic voices. Loretta and Conway had performed together hundreds of times, their chemistry effortless, their harmonies as natural as breathing. But that night, something felt different. Loretta was quiet backstage — not nervous, but reflective. Conway, too, seemed distant, pacing the hallway with a look that friends later described as “heavy, like he knew something the rest of us didn’t.” When they took the stage and the opening chords of “Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man” filled the room, the audience erupted. For a moment, time folded back — the magic, the laughter, the playful glances that defined their duets returned as if nothing had changed. But then came their final song: a tender, stripped-down version of “Feelins’.” The crowd fell silent as they began. Loretta’s voice quivered just slightly; Conway’s baritone softened, trembling with something unsaid. Their eyes met for a moment longer than the lyrics required — two souls bound by music, by friendship, and by years of shared triumph and heartache. When the last note faded, they didn’t bow. They simply stood there — looking at each other, smiling through tears — before walking offstage hand in hand. “That was the last time,” Loretta later told a friend. “We didn’t know it, but maybe we did. It felt like goodbye.” Just months later, Conway Twitty would fall ill and pass away unexpectedly in 1993, leaving Loretta shattered and the country music world in mourning. She would go on to perform again, of course, but she never truly sang those duets again — not the way she did when Conway was beside her. In the years that followed, that final performance became legend. Fans still trade bootleg tapes and faded photographs, calling it “the night the duet died” — not because the music ended, but because something sacred was lost with it. “There’ll never be another Conway,” Loretta once said softly in an interview. “And there’ll never be another us.” Their voices — hers like sunlight through lace, his like a river’s low hum — blended in a way that no producer could recreate and no era could replace. Together, they gave the world songs of love, laughter, and longing that felt achingly real because they were real. Now, decades later, when “After the Fire Is Gone” or “Feelins’” plays on the radio, there’s a pause — a quiet ache that sweeps over anyone who remembers. Because deep down, everyone who loved them knows: that night in Nashville wasn’t just a concert. It was a farewell whispered in harmony — the sound of two legends singing their last truth. And when they walked off that stage, country music was never the same again. Video

It happened quietly, without fanfare — a night that began like so many others for two of country…