
Alison Hammond, 50, shares rare picture of toyboy lover David, 27, as loved-up couple enjoy summer holidays together
The This Morning presenter, 50, took to Instagram to share the loved-up snap of her with David, 27.
Boasting large smiles, Alison appeared smitten and happy-than-ever with her age gap lover as they set off on their holidays together.
The pair could be seen hugging for the camera while the sun shone down on them as they coordinated their outfits.
Alison wore a blue blouse while David opted for a blue shirt as they both donned black sunglasses and caps to protect them from the UV rays.
She captioned the sweet post with love heart emojis: 'Happy holidays to you all. Remember always choose love.'
Alison tends to keep her relationship private, with David sparingly featuring on her social media profiles.
She first went public with the Russian masseur and model in April 2024 by posting a series of pictures online with him.
Previously speaking about their relationship, Alison explained how David is very supportive of her and her TV career.
She told Heat magazine: 'He loves it. He just supports me. Anybody who I bring into my life supports me and whatever I do. They're so happy for me.
'I don't like to go into detail about him, because it's my private life, and I want to respect his life as well. But you know I'm loved-up, everyone knows that!'
When asked about whether she would like to get married, the star didn't rule it out, saying: 'I'd never say no. I might marry myself...'
Meanwhile, directly addressing their age gap, she told Good Housekeeping in January: 'I can see how, on paper, you'd notice the age difference.
'But honestly, when we see the word "toyboy" written about us, it bears no relation to what we have at all.
Previously gushing over David, Alison said: 'He just supports me. Anybody who I bring into my life supports me and whatever I do. They're so happy for me'
'Yes, I'm 22 years older than he is, but if you saw us together, you'd understand. People have said to me: "We get it now." He's so mature and sensible, and I'm so not.'
She added: 'And the things he says to me...they're just so lovely. It's like a jigsaw; we fit and it all comes together.'
Alison's son Aidan, 20, has also given her relationship his seal of approval and has even given her advice.
They both appeared on ITV gameshow Romesh Ranganathan's Parents' Evening last year when Alison admitted she 'overshares' with her son.
The pair were asked certain questions and had to vote who was better at each topic, with one question being: 'Who's better at giving advice?'
Aidan believed he was better at advice which shocked Alison at first before she then partly agreed saying: 'When it comes to relationship advice you're very good!'
But she added: 'But when it comes to career advice I'm not sure!'
They were then asked who was the biggest oversharer and both voted for Alison - with Alison admitting: 'Yeah maybe I overshare a little bit. I'll probably overshare in the show!'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
3 minutes ago
- The Independent
Bend It Like Beckham sequel planned more than 20 years after first film
Director Gurinder Chadha OBE has announced that a follow-up to her hit film Bend It Like Beckham is currently in development. Chadha revealed she has finally found a "fantastic story" for the sequel after 23 years of searching, inspired by the significant growth of women's football. The new project is targeting a 2027 release, which will coincide with the original film's 25th anniversary and the FIFA Women's World Cup in Brazil. Chadha hopes to reunite the original cast, including Parminder Nagra and Keira Knightley, and has enlisted US women's national team manager Emma Hayes to collaborate on the script. The original 2002 film, made on a budget of £3.5 million, grossed almost £60 million worldwide and is widely credited with inspiring a generation of female footballers.


Times
4 minutes ago
- Times
Have we met? My life as a comedian who can't remember a single face
The plane began to shudder and bounce. I gripped my arm rest as the worst turbulence I'd ever experienced rocked the flight. I thought: 'This is it — this is the moment I'm going to die.' My mind turned to my mum and dad but I was unable to picture their faces. Some people might see their life flashing before their eyes at that moment, but I was unable to conjure up anything. Days before the flight, a comedian I was gigging with told me he couldn't picture things in his head, a condition called aphantasia. I told him I couldn't either. I've never been able to picture anything in my mind's eye. It dawned on me that I had the same thing. I find it crazy that people can think in images. We simply assume our brains work the same way as everyone else's. We're constructing our reality but our constructions of the world are completely different. Mine is all about language. I think in words. The main way in which it affects me is that I've got a terrible memory, particularly when in Edinburgh during the Fringe Festival because there are so many people. I've no idea if they are comedians, audience members or if I'm just madly waving at a stranger. Once, after a gig, a guy started talking to me. He was really friendly but I'd no idea who he was. Because I was at the festival I took a punt and asked him how his show was going. It turned out he was a school friend and he then figured out I'd been talking to him for a quarter of an hour pretending I knew who he was. People think I'm rude. But I'm not rude, I just really struggle to remember faces. If you try to explain aphantasia it sounds a bit mad to a lot of people, as many are unable to conceptualise not being able to see images in your head. • Up to 5% of people can't visualise things. What's that like? When I watch films, I forget what happened. There are a lot of films I've watched two or three times and I wouldn't be able to tell you anything about them. But the main effect aphantasia has had on me is that I have a poor autobiographical memory. I remember little of my childhood. It affects your sense of self. For a few years I was like: 'Why can't I remember who I am?' Later on, when my former girlfriend would ask me about our first date, I couldn't remember the details. It's frustrating. I have a lot of pictures on my phone to help remind me. Finding out I had aphantasia made me realise my 'problems' were because my brain worked in a different way. For ages I would think: 'What's wrong with me?' I'd go to therapy and be asked to visualise something but I just couldn't. Now I can think: 'This is just how my brain works.' It's a hardware issue, not something bad-bad. When I understood that, a lot of the self-recrimination went away. Aphantasia is thought to affect about 4 per cent of the population, 2.7 million people nationwide, and it helps to know I'm not alone. I'm quite emotionally numb in my life, which is apparently a characteristic of people with aphantasia. Because I don't remember moments like other people do — I can't picture them — I feel things a bit less strongly. I can't remember that scene of breaking up with someone, which makes life slightly less intense. When I think of that breakup, I'm not playing it back and feeling the emotionals. Most people experience their memories as some kind of film playing in their head. I don't. I'm quite a dark comedian sometimes, without particularly meaning to be, and I wonder if that's because of my condition. When I started out I was always shocked by the reaction of audiences and I think that's because I'm not seeing the visuals I'm creating. I don't have that visceral reaction to jokes other people do. Instead, I see them as word puzzles. Aphantasia hasn't yet made it into my Fringe show this year. I forgot what a strange thing it was. But there is still a bit of time before it starts, so I can imagine some jokes about it might make their way in. I like to think it makes me a better comedian because all that I have are words.


Daily Mail
4 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Saving money, money, money: Abba Voyage chiefs replace experienced band with cheaper musicians to cut costs
It is the lucrative show that allows Abba fans to experience a concert from the group as they were in their prime – or rather, through digital 'Abbatars' and a glittering ten-piece band. But despite having raked in £300 million in ticket sales, The Mail on Sunday has discovered that the producers of Abba Voyage are cutting costs. They have replaced the live band – which accompanies the four singing avatars of Abba – with cheaper musicians. The show has attracted more than 2.5 million visitors since it opened in 2022 at the Abba Arena in London 's Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, and it has contributed £1.5 billion to the economy. The original line-up of musicians – to accompany the avatars of Agnetha Faltskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad – was put together by former Klaxons singer James Righton, husband of Keira Knightley. He scoured the globe for a band that could bring the group's hits to life, hiring the likes of singer-songwriter Victoria Hesketh, known as Little Boots, on the keyboard. 'The [band was] always brilliant and had amazing players,' Righton told NME magazine at the time. 'This band had to step up to being as good as the original line-up.' However, neither Righton nor any of the musicians who worked with Abba members Benny and Bjorn in Stockholm to bring the extravaganza to life still work at the 3,000-capacity arena. 'Now it is a huge success with sell-out audiences, the bosses have begun cost-cutting and have even replaced the band with cheaper musicians,' one worker said. 'If something as successful and lucrative as Abba Voyage is cutting corners, there is not much hope for the rest of the industry.' Last month auditions took place for new performers after an open call for 'a full-time contract with our live band at the Abba Arena'. The advert said: 'We are searching for professional guitar, bass, keyboard, saxophone, drums and percussion players, as well as female-identifying singers of the highest quality. Ability to read sheet music is a bonus.' Workers fear that the quality of the show will be compromised when the new musicians take over in December. Abba Voyage, a 95-minute run-through of 20 of the band's greatest hits, took five years and an estimated £15 million to make. One of the most iconic moments in the show is when the four avatars are silhouetted against vintage footage of Abba winning the Eurovision Song Contest in Brighton in 1974. Originally billed as a temporary structure, the Abba Voyage venue is not slated to be earmarked for housing redevelopment until 2029. Abba were approached for comment.