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Love Island: Here's What Actually Went On Between Megan And Tommy

Love Island: Here's What Actually Went On Between Megan And Tommy

Graziadaily31-07-2025
In a Love Island first, the islanders have spilled news from the outside world, just days from the final. In a shock twist this season, dumped islander Megan Clarke returned to the villa alongside Blu Chegini. In a chat on Wednesday's episode, she gave the villa the DL about speaking with dumped islanders Tommy Bradley and Lucy Quinn on the outside.
It all unfolded when Dejon spoke to the boys about how he thinks Megan is acting differently since her return. Blu chimed in, saying he heard Megan had been in touch with Tommy on the outside. As a quick reminder, Tommy left the villa with Lucy, but more recent reports have suggested that the pair have split.
According to Blu, 'Megan and Tommy were speaking before they came in here. I've heard it... When Tommy and Lucy were in Tape [the London club], cracking on... she was fuming.'
In last night's episode, Megan admitted she had sent some 'flirty' texts to Tommy and that the pair had been 'talking' while she was on the outside. When Megan first left the villa, she expressed support for Tommy's new pairing with Emily Moran, but admitted that she was emotional about their breakup in the villa - more than was shown on TV.
'That day me and Tommy called it off and it looked like I cried for all of three seconds and then was laughing again,' she told Closer magazine. 'That made me look insane. I did cry more, I promise. That wasn't a great day for me, to be fair. It gets on top of you sometimes. More so than not, I was very cheery and laughy, but that was a tough day.'
That said, there's nothing to suggest Megan and Tommy actually got back together or are planning on rekindling when Megan leaves the villa for a second time. According to eagle-eyed social media users, many believe he's back with old Love Island flame Emily Moran with reports claiming Lucy and Tommy have parted ways.
How did Tommy end up being the playboy of the villa? That's an entirely different debate...
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Tommy Fury: £10 million Love Island star who almost lost it all
Tommy Fury: £10 million Love Island star who almost lost it all

Times

time6 hours ago

  • Times

Tommy Fury: £10 million Love Island star who almost lost it all

At the end of 2019, Tommy Fury — professional boxer, half-brother of Tyson, reality TV star — was living 'dreams. Fantastic! Better than fantastic!' That summer, aged 20, he'd appeared as a contestant on Love Island because, 'My fight had got cancelled. I could do with a holiday. I haven't got money to go. Don't forget — I'm not Bill Gates's son. I don't come from millions of pounds.' Once there, he'd met and fallen in love with a fellow contestant, fashion influencer Molly-Mae Hague. The two made it to the final of the dating show, ending up in second place, then left Love Island to find themselves well-defined pectoral muscle deep in celebrity and lucrative financial opportunities. Fury and Hague cashed in, literally and figuratively — Hague signed, among other things, a £500,000 deal with fast fashion outlet PrettyLittleThing — while sustaining their love affair. Fury — unbeaten at the time he went on Love Island — resuscitated his boxing career in December 2019, fighting, and beating, Przemyslaw Binienda. During that fight, he injured his hand — catastrophically, as it would turn out. Can he remember the exact punch? 'I felt it. I was in bad pain. But when you're in front of 20,000 people and you're amped up… I mean, that was the punch that won me the fight.' When he took his gloves off in the dressing room and looked at his hand, he realised he'd done something serious. 'My hand was like a balloon. Next day, I went to the best hand surgeon in the UK and he told me that I needed surgery, there and then.' But Fury — still only 20 and unaware that an injury could be anything other than something you shake off — did not have surgery immediately. Instead, he 'brushed through it, kept fighting, [cortisone] injection after injection'. In 2023, having fought and beaten the YouTube stars Jake Paul then KSI, and having felt pain during that latter fight despite three cortisone injections, Fury decided he must finally have the surgery. At which point Fury's world — his dream life, his 'better than fantastic' life — came crashing down. 'Yeah.' You fell apart — is that fair to say? 'Oh, completely. I woke up one morning. I remember it clear as day. I had the surgery, and I woke up in the hospital bed, didn't know where I was, from all the medication. I looked down and my hand was all taped up, in a cast, and I thought, 'Yikes.' ' Unable to train, unable to box, unable to do the one thing that had anchored him and driven him through life to that point, Fury started drinking. Hard, constantly, to a point where, 'I didn't even recognise myself. I'm an athlete. I pride myself on being in shape. I pride myself on being a superman, you know. I just didn't recognise that person that I was. I was fat. I had no grip strength. I was eating rubbish. I'd walk down the road and you wouldn't even think I was a boxer. I lost everything. Boxing gave me this identity as a superman, an alpha male, and when I couldn't do that any more, I didn't feel like I was an alpha male. I didn't feel like I was The Man — everything went with it.' 'Everything' included Molly-Mae Hague and Bambi, the daughter they'd had 18 months earlier in January 2023, who promptly moved out. Fury sank as low as he could possibly go, drinking 'in the days, in the evenings. Excessively. A lot.' He 'woke up crying most days'. He rattled around the big, beautiful family home he and Hague had bought together, desperately lonely. 'I was. Completely.' • Read more boxing stories Which was when a BBC documentary crew moved in. Tommy: The Good. The Bad. The Fury is the result, a series which tracks Fury's efforts to get his boxing career — and by extension, his family — back. 'Get myself back. Because I wasn't who I am.' I've only seen the first episode, but it's a sweet, painful watch — the shiny, smiley, professionally shallow, endlessly glamorous reality TV star reduced to a state of screaming vulnerability in the mausoleum of the house he once shared with his child and partner. Cooking eggs. Eyes lighting up when he FaceTimes his kid to say, 'Night night,' flicking back to dull and haunted the very moment the call ends. You watch it and you really want things to work out for Fury — even though those of us invested in his 'story' (which I am, with no apology) sort of already know. They have. They do. Neither Fury nor Hague has confirmed it — I'm assuming the big reveal on their rapprochement is exclusive to either Fury's BBC documentary or season two of Hague's Prime Video show, Behind It All. But the couple and their child keep being spotted out and about, looking very together again, very rapproched. I am, of course, going to ask Fury all about that. Fury and I meet at the Moss Side Amateur Boxing Club in Manchester, a proud, noble, smelly, traditional boxing gym built by the Moss Side community from the ruins of the 1981 riots. It has produced multiple champions. Fury turns up a little late — something went wrong with his car. He's 26 years old, handsome and fragrant, piercingly twinkly-eyed and hench. His out of shape, miserable drinking era is, apparently, behind him. He asks for water, and tells me he's trying to drink six litres a day as a detox. Don't you just spend your whole time peeing, I ask. He doesn't dignify that with an answer. 'Water is the number one thing for the body,' he replies. I'd heard it was quite good for you, I say. 'People don't drink enough of it.' He chugs some in front of me, then chugs an entire bottle of something electrolyte-y as a chaser, sucking the air out of the plastic bottle in his enthusiasm. He grins at me, when he finishes. Tommy Fury grew up 'ten minutes from here'. His father, John Fury, is of Irish Traveller descent, a boxer himself, also father — from his first marriage, with Amber Fury — to former heavyweight champion Tyson. Tommy Fury's mother, Chantal, is a podiatrist; his brother Roman — also a boxer — is older by two years. What was childhood like? • Read more TV reviews, guides about what to watch and interviews 'Boxing family. Obviously, my dad went to jail for a long time, when I was eight or nine.' In 2011, John Fury was sentenced to 11 years for forcing his fingers into another man's eyes during a fight at a car auction. What are Fury's memories of that? 'I didn't really know what was going on. One day, my dad just wasn't coming home.' Chantal told Fury John was ' 'working away'. That was the line, for about three years of the sentence.' When did Fury realise that wasn't entirely true? 'When I went to the jail. Ha!' I assume Fury could box before he could walk, that his childhood — dominated by Tyson's success — was devoted to it… But I'm wrong. 'I was going to be a rugby player. I had trials for Lancashire. I played for the 'gifted and talented' rugby league squad. But then, around 14 or 15 years old, it completely changed. 'I went to the boxing gym one day, and never came out of it. I didn't want to play rugby again — all I wanted to do was fight. There's just nothing like it. When you and another person are in that ring, trying to shut off each other's lights…' I ask him when he realised he was good at boxing — but he says he didn't. He isn't. 'I'm not the best boxer out there; I'm not even a great boxer.' What he is, he says, is disciplined and determined. He doesn't accept a 'no', he says. 'Like, everyone telling me, 'We've already got a star in the family. Tyson is the guy! Leave it alone.' ' You're a handsome man, I tell him. Weren't you worried about getting your face mangled? Not at all, he says. He's never thought of himself as handsome. 'No! I don't understand it. When I went on Love Island, seeing all these comments afterwards when people started saying it, I'd be like, 'Who are they looking at?' ' The decision to go on Love Island strikes me as a bit odd, I tell him, given that Fury's boxing career was taking off. He explains that a fight in summer 2019 had been cancelled — and he'd wanted that free holiday. He didn't think it would affect his standing in the boxing community, because he didn't think he'd be in the show for longer than a few days. How did it happen at all, I ask. 'I spoke to a guy,' he says, with the opaqueness of a retired MI5 agent recollecting getting tapped up at Cambridge. Did he watch the show beforehand? 'No. I never even watched my own series back. I went into it blind. I didn't know what it was; I didn't know what it bought; I didn't know the attention that it had. I packed two pairs of trainers, four pairs of shorts and two T-shirts. You can ask anybody from the villa, I was borrowing everybody's clothes. I just didn't know what was going on. I was clueless.' Falling in love was not on Fury's agenda either — but then, in his first week, Molly-Mae Hague entered the villa (as a 'bombshell', a contestant designed to cause ructions). Was it love at first sight? 'Yeah. As soon as I saw her, it was game over. She's the most beautiful girl I've ever seen in my life. Inside and out. She is the best thing that's ever happened to me.' Did she feel the same? 'She probably thought, 'Who is this guy? What is he doing near me?' I think if I was going on a date with myself, I'd be a bit like that.' The expression on Fury's face is, at this juncture, so dopily smitten, so very not filled with the anguish of a man trying to win his true love back around — I have to ask if they're back together. Hague left Fury in 2024, around five months after Fury's hand surgery, amid his drinking. (He insists it wasn't alcoholism, though it sounds like it to me. 'I was drinking to suppress certain feelings,' he tells me, and, 'When I started, if I had one drink, I'd have a hundred.') In addition to that, the internet swirled with rumours of Fury's infidelity — rumours Fury vehemently denies. Those cheating rumours must have hurt? 'It didn't hurt me because I knew it was all bollocks. People can think whatever they want about me. I don't care. When I wake up in the morning and I've got my missus there and I've got my baby in the next room, I've got money in the bank and I'm fit and well, why have I got time to worry about what someone is going to comment on the bottom of a picture?' OK, so you are back together, I say. Fury makes a gleeful show of sealing his lips together. You so obviously are! Fury smiles in a way I suspect he hopes passes for enigmatic. He'd always wanted to be a father, he tells me. Bambi Fury is now two and a half and being her dad is, Fury says, 'the best thing, the best title. I could be world heavyweight champion, it will not even come close. That baby is everything.' He'd love to have more kids. 'Obviously, I'm not the one giving birth. But all I ever wanted to do from when I was a young boy, I just wanted to have a family and do my boxing and look after them. My family is everything. I don't care what happens in my life. I don't care if boxing goes. Because if it were to happen again, I've got my family.' But when it went before, you lost them. 'Yeah. I was so low. I could hear things echoing. I was alone. I wouldn't go down that road [again].' He may not have to risk it — not for a while, anyway. Fury's hand is healed, he can fight again, at the level he did before the injury. Part of the BBC documentary's arc is the build-up to a fight with Darren Till, scheduled for the start of 2025, but Fury pulled out of it because… 'It wasn't a pull-out! It was due to a gentleman who I'm not even going to mention not being able to do business. So Darren Till can go and swivel.' In May this year, Fury beat Kenan Hanjalic in Budapest, thereby marking his official comeback. I ask Fury if he'd let his daughter watch him fight. 'She watches me fight on TV. But I would never take her on fight night. Boxing, it's no place for a baby, not a baby girl anyway.' Hague was in the crowd when he fought Jake Paul in 2023, but spent the entire time with her head on her legs, so she wouldn't have to see anything. Can his mum, Chantal, watch him fight? 'No. She listens to my fights on the radio.' Fury tells me he doesn't care about money — potentially an easy thing to say, given that he and Hague topped a Love Island rich list published earlier this summer by The Sun. Fury was at No 1, with an estimated worth of £10 million; Hague was No 2, at £8 million. But, he says, 'Money is not my God.' God is, though. Fury is devoutly Christian. 'If you ask me who is my king and who is my saviour? It's Jesus Christ and God.' Fury says that as long as Jesus knows who he is and who his family are, who cares what everyone else thinks? Who cares about the internet trolls? 'Opinions are like arseholes. Everybody's got one.' What does he want next from life? 'I'd love to give Bambi a sibling.' How many kids would you have, ideally? 'Forty.' How does Hague feel about that? 'Me and Molly have had private conversations. I don't think she's quite on track for 40.' He tells me he's not secretly good at anything, apart from snooker and singing in the shower. He loves nature — he doesn't think people know that about him. I ask Fury how he'd feel if Bambi went on Love Island. 'Oh, that's a good question. I don't even want to think about that.' He shakes his head. I mean — you couldn't stop her, really, could you? Given everything, given how you and her mother met? 'I'd do my f***ing best! I don't know. I don't know! I'll support her through anything.' Boxing? Bambi's got Fury blood running throw her veins, after all — and women's boxing is a blossoming sport. It's not beyond the realms of possibility, surely? Tommy Fury looks even more horrified by that idea than he was by the prospect of her becoming a contestant on Love Island. 'No. She's too pretty to be a boxer.' He smiles. 'I'm going to take the black eyes and the broken ribs and the broken hands, so she doesn't have to.' Watch Tommy: The Good. The Bad. The Fury on BBC iPlayer and BBC3 from August 19

Love Island 2025 champion Toni Laites reveals future plans after historic win
Love Island 2025 champion Toni Laites reveals future plans after historic win

Daily Mirror

time8 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Love Island 2025 champion Toni Laites reveals future plans after historic win

Love Island 2025 winner Toni Laites has opened up about her future after making show history as the first American to enter the UK version of the ITV2 dating show Love Island champion Toni Laites has set her sights on becoming a television presenter. ‌ The 25-year-old stunner made history as the first American participant to enter the UK edition of the ITV2 reality series. ‌ Following a turbulent beginning with partner Harrison Solomon, she ultimately discovered romance with Casa Amor heartthrob Cach Mercer. ‌ Toni and Cach claimed victory after securing 33.5% of the public vote, whilst Shakira Khan and Harry Cooksley finished as runners-up with 26.2% and Yasmin Pettet and Jamie Rhodes placed third with 22%. Discussing her aspirations at the ITV Reality event, Toni revealed: "The love has been insane. I never expected it in a million years honestly.", reports the Daily Star. ‌ "I think for me this is all new. It's a whole new world so I'm still trying to find my feet. "There's a lot of opportunities at hand but I think presenting is my thing. "All the love is so incredible so shout out to the UK." ‌ Following their Love Island 2025 triumph, Toni and Cach secured the £50,000 prize money, which was divided equally between the pair. They have subsequently disclosed precisely how they intend to spend their winnings and the disclosure is guaranteed to earn them additional admirers. ‌ Toni revealed: "I need to pay off my student loans. I want to invest it. I don't want to go on some crazy shopping spree. Maybe some bingo, I do live in Vegas after all!". Cach commented: "Cost of living crisis, I'll save it!". A single PR specialist has forecast that Toni could rapidly emerge as the highest-earning celebrity from the summer series. Chatting with the Daily Star, Rich Wilson suggested that the American star could rake in millions through brand collaborations and television gigs. He stated: "It's very easy to see her as a new regular on our TV screens, and Toni could earn millions through brand partnerships, TV hosting and social partnerships."

Love Islander reveals horrifying moment he found out wife was having an affair with US rap star
Love Islander reveals horrifying moment he found out wife was having an affair with US rap star

Scottish Sun

time9 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Love Islander reveals horrifying moment he found out wife was having an affair with US rap star

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A LOVE Island star opened up about the horrifying moment he discovered his wife was having an affair with a US rap star. He originally featured on the ITV2 show in 2017, but later returned for All Stars. 4 Marcel Somerville is well known for his stints on Love Island Credit: Rex 4 He married ex-wife Rebecca Vieira back in 2022 Credit: Instagram 4 Rebecca was caught being 'unfaithful' to the reality TV star with rapper Slim Jxmmi Credit: Getty Marcel Somerville, 39, tied the knot with now ex-wife Rebecca Vieira back in 2022. Things were going well until January 2024 when Rebecca was caught being 'unfaithful' to the reality TV star with rapper Slim Jxmmi. The pair's messy split made headlines - just before his All Stars appearance last year. Speaking on the Winners Talking podcast, Marcel recalled a pal asking if he could talk to him. Marcel said: "Little did I know, the man's coming to be like, 'Yo Mars, someone's sent me this through to the Blazin' Squad Instagram. "They've been trying to get through to your Instagram, but for some reason they can't get through to your thing." He added: "I'm scrolling through like, 'What is this?' I saw a picture of my ex on my bed. "I was reading the messages, like, 'this is crazy'". The former couple share a son, Roman, who they welcomed back in 2021. Marcel said he called his mum to look after Roman while he and Rebecca spoke. Watch emotional moment Marcel reunites with his son after weeks away on All Stars Slim Jxmmi and his brother Swae Lee comprise hip hop duo Rae Sremmurd. Meanwhile, the 33-year-old star's real name is Aaquil Iben Shaman Brown. The mother of Slim's child, KD, had claimed that Rebecca had sent "intimate messages" to her child's father. KD, took to her social media platforms to share what she had uncovered – even tagging Rebecca and Marcel in the posts for them to see. A source at the time, told The Mirror: "Marcel is absolutely devastated. "Rebecca was his life and he'd changed so many things about his lifestyle to make her happy. "Everything he did, everything he worked for was for his wife and his son. "The poor guy feels like he's in a nightmare and he keeps hoping he'll wake up.'

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