TOM Skinner has shown off an impressive body transformation ahead of his Celebrity Apprentice stint.
It was confirmed earlier this month that Tom, 34, will return to his TV roots after joining the line-up of the upcoming special series.



He first shot to fame on The Apprentice in 2019 and Tom will star alongside big names including AJ Odudu and Jake Wood later this year.
And Tom has been getting into shape before his return to TV. He took to Instagram to share snaps showing off his huge arms in a series of gym selfies.
He captioned his upload: “Slow progress is better than no progress.
“Stay positive and don’t give up. Train quietly and let your success be the noise.”
Fans rushed to praise Tom, with one writing: “You’re giving it 110% and grafting hard at the gym.”
Another said: “Looking amazing Tom, do what you do best.”
And a third added: “Really impressive Tom.”
Last month Tom was forced to defend his criminal past after trolls branded him a “hypocrite” after he witnessed a robbery at Greggs.
Tom told fans he’d seen four people walk out of the shop with various items without paying for them.
He slammed the individuals for stealing while wearing designer gear – and furiously said “what’s happening” to the state of the country.
But some followers were quick to bring up Tom’s own criminal behaviour – including his arrest in 2011, prior to appearing on Lord Alan Sugar‘s show.
Thomas was previously in trouble with the law over handling stolen goods.
In 2011 he was sentenced in court after being charged with dishonestly handling 4,992 tubes of Body Shop cleansing gels worth nearly £40,000 and having 2,000 diazepam tablets.
In response to fans calling him out, Thomas took to his X account to say that he’s made mistakes and owned them.
He wrote: “Still finding it mad that people are actually having a go at me on Twitter because I pointed out that Greggs got robbed whilst I was in there.
“And then bringing up my past. Yes I did get arrested when I was younger, in fact I get arrested several times. And been charged and paid the price for my convictions. I wrote a book about it.”
