ULRIKA Jonsson, 54, delighted her social media followers yesterday as she shared a daring bathroom selfie.
The Celebs Go Dating star took to her Instagram Story to post a sizzling shot in her black bra, which highlighted her intricate inkings across her arms and collarbone.
Posing in her bathroom, the presenter pulled a sultry look while her blonde hair fell in a tousled style.
Hours later, Ulrika shared another glam bathroom selfie but this time she was clad in a black silk nightie.
Captioning the shot, she cheekily wrote: “When you come home under the influence of alcohol, with a face of makeup on and you think you look cute but actually you’re just p****d”.
The E4 star had been enjoying an evening with her Celebs Go Dating co-stars and shared several shots with Towie’s Chloe Brockett.
In November, Ulrika shared a sweet selfie with her rarely-seen son Cameron as she enjoyed a break from Celebs Go Dating filming.
The presenter, 54, took to her Instagram Story at the time to pose for a rare photo with her 27-year-old son from her first marriage to John Turnbull.
Captioning the beaming shot, she penned across it: “When your boy meets you in between filming”.
Ulrika is also mum to Bo, 21, Martha, 17 and Malcolm, 13, who she welcomed with their respective fathers – Markus Kempen, Lance Gerrard-Wright and Brian Monet.
Last year the TV star hit back at a nasty troll who made comments about how her children have all been fathered by different men.
Ulrika shared the rude message which read: “Four children. All with different fathers. Such a mixed up world we now live in.”
Furious, Ulrika told her followers: “We have another Karen amongst us. You know the ones with two followers and a***hole for a mouth.”
It came shortly after she offered support to Stacey Solomon, who has also been cruelly criticised for having her children with different fathers.
Writing in her column for HOAR, she explained: “For me, it wasn’t just about the humour of it. It was meant to injure. To hurt and, above all, to shame a woman. I didn’t particularly want to be associated with the label because I felt no sense of shame. At all.
“My simple history was made to look and seem complicated by the fact that my life had worked out differently to normal expectations — to the ‘norm’.
“The simple truth — which applies to both me and Stacey — is that we are good, caring mothers. We chose to have our children — we longed for them, regardless of the circumstances of their creation.”