Rylan Clark kept his look simple on Saturday as he arrived to BBC studios to host his Radio 2 show, which runs from 3pm-6pm.
The TV and radio personality, 34, was dressed all in black for the appearance, donning a pair of skinny jeans and a basic T-shirt.
He layered a zip-up jumper on top while adding some couture with a Prada baseball cap, which retails for around £300.
He carried a leather holdall with him while heading into the studio for the afternoon, after arriving via black cab.
Rylan hosts the show weekly on a Saturday, and plays three hours of relaxed hits while getting involved with listeners through games and call-ins.
The presenter had a busy weekend as he enjoyed some ice skating the night before with a pal.
He took to his Instagram Stories before the show to share videos of himself enjoying the night, joking that he had 'dragged' friend Kimberley there.
It comes after he was forced to deny rumours of a new romance on social media after fans were convinced they saw another man's leg in a picture posted by Rylan.
Sharing a picture of a chocolate bar resting on a male's leg, many thought that the presenter was hinting at spending time with another.
But clearing things up, he explained that it was only his own leg by writing: 'I'm eating chocolate and it's resting on my leg, not a chocolate ice pack, not someone else's leg, sadly'.
He has been on the market since the breakdown of his marriage to ex Dan Neal, which Rylan speaks about in depth in his book Ten: The Decade That Changed My Future.
Rylan confessed in the memoir that he cheated on Dan during their relationship but had his reasons, believing for years that he was inadequate.
He penned: 'I have no excuses for what I did way back then, but I had my reasons.
'I think for many years I had felt a bit like an imposter. That nothing I was doing was right or not quite good enough.
'And you know, when it's those closest to you giving you this feedback, of course you take it to heart.
'Similarly, someone loving me this way was all I had ever wanted and now I'd found it.
'The reality is that over the course of my relationship I had started to feel wrong: I felt I was wrong for being successful, wrong for being me.'
'There were times when people told me this, and so confirmed my own self-doubts.