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Katie Price moans ‘oh my god I'm so ugly' as she shows off BALD eyelids after removing fake lashes and make-up

Katie Price moans ‘oh my god I'm so ugly' as she shows off BALD eyelids after removing fake lashes and make-up

The Irish Sun2 days ago
KATIE Price has moaned 'oh my god I'm so ugly' as she showed off her bald eyelids after removing her fake lashes and make-up.
Snapchat
to share a video of a more natural look.
4
Katie Price moans 'oh my god I'm so ugly' as she shows off bald eyelids
Credit: Snapchat
4
Katie - who went under the knife yet again earlier this year - recently spilled the beans on the work she has had done
Credit: Getty
"So tomorrow I'm going to get them tinted and lashes put on.
After speaking and playing with her dog for a few minutes,
next
day.
"A little transformation," she exclaimed before saying how weird her eyes looked.
Katie Price
She then told her followers that she was off to dinner and to watch Love Island later.
But before she went she added: "I need to get my lips done again, look how thin they are.
"I just hate everything about myself today. Everything."
The former glamour model
over the years on cosmetic procedures.
Most read in Showbiz
as she showed off a colourful beach dress.
Katie stood with her dark locks up in a high ponytail and captioned her clip: 'I think I'm starting to love Maxi dresses! All outfits from
Katie Price's £10k facelift looks tighter than ever as she ditches her bra to model new dresses
"I will choose 2 people at random and send you the outfit you love best xx I hope you loved this video.'
She then asked people to vote whether she should keep or return the maxi dresses she showed off.
The TV star opted for
Sources close to the star claimed she was less than impressed with her 'pixie ears' following the procedure.
Katie Price's Surgery: A Timeline
1998
- Katie underwent her first breast augmentation taking her from a natural B cup to a C cup. She also had her first liposuction
1999
- Katie had two more boob jobs in the same year, one taking her from a C cup to a D cup, and then up to an F cup
2006
- Katie went under the knife to take her breasts up to a G cup
2007
- Katie had a rhinoplasty and veneers on her teeth
2008
- Katie stunned fans by reducing her breasts from an F cup to a C cup
2011
- Going back to an F cup, Katie also underwent body-contouring treatment and cheek and lip fillers
2014/5
- Following a nasty infection, Katie had her breast implants removed
2016
- Opting for bigger breasts yet again, Katie had another set of implants, along with implants, Botox and lip fillers
2017
- After a disastrous 'threading' facelift, Katie also had her veneers replaced. She also had her eighth boob job taking her to a GG cup
2018
- Katie went under the knife yet again for a facelift
2019
- After jetting to Turkey, Katie had a face, eye and eyelid lift, Brazilian bum lift and a tummy tuck
2020
- Katie has her 12th boob job in Belgium to correct botched surgery and a new set of veneers
2021
- In a complete body overhaul, she opts for eye and lip lifts, liposuction under her chin, fat injected into her bum and full body liposuction
2022
- Katie undergoes another brow and eye lift-and undergoes 'biggest ever' boob job in Belgium, her 16th in total
2023
- Opting for a second rhinoplasty, Katie also gets a lip lift at the same time as well as new lip filler throughout the year
2024 -
Katie has her 17th boob job in Brussels after revealing she wanted to downsize. She performed at Dublin Pride just days later and surgeons warned the lack of recovery posed a risk of infection
At the time,
Turkey
for her first New Year's procedure: fixing her pixie ears.
'She thinks they need correcting after her recent facelift. She's having her ears removed, then re-stitched in place and pinned back so that they don't stick out."
She made the confession in a Snapchat video, where she opened about her cosmetic procedures.
4
Katie thought her eyes looked so strange without lashes
Credit: Snapchat
4
Katie recently attended The Future is White Fox Party
Credit: Getty
"
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Midfielder, manager, meme: The many faces of Roy Keane
Midfielder, manager, meme: The many faces of Roy Keane

Irish Examiner

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Midfielder, manager, meme: The many faces of Roy Keane

ONCE upon a time in Cork, a baby was born who would grow up to terrify not just opposition midfielders, but also his own teammates, his managers, and presumably the postman if he happened to take pause and congratulate himself on doing an honest day's work (It's his job!!). His name was Roy Keane. It's almost impossible to imagine he was once a baby, but a baby he presumably was. Once. That Roy Keane was the embodiment of a certain kind of '90s masculinity: The clenched jaw, the permanent scowl, the gait of a man who has just discovered his pint is off. He wore his rage like a birthmark. And woe betide anyone who crossed him. Patrick Vieira learned this the hard way in the Highbury tunnel, in a scene that resembled less a pre-match meet-and-greet and more the opening of a particularly gritty Scorsese movie. This Roy Keane was small in stature but had the presence of a colossus. In a glorious era for midfielders, he was — to my mind at least — the best. In his pomp, he was a joy to watch, but like nitroglycerine to handle. You worried for him the way you worried for a prodigal son. Roy Keane as a Sky Sports pundit. Picture: Naomi Baker/Getty A late-night phone call could mean many things: A man-of-the-match performance at the San Siro; a reverse-charges SoS from a police station in Salford; a request for 20 quid to be posted over to Manchester. Believing in Keane the footballer was easy. Trusting Keane, the young man, was much harder, mostly because we had no clue who he was. For years, Keane's aura was that of a man who might physically disintegrate if he so much as smiled. It simply wasn't done. Smiling was for the soft. If you wanted warmth, you could go sit by a radiator. Keane was here to win football matches — and possibly the moral high ground — by any means necessary. There is one clip from the evening he won the PFA Footballer of the Year award for the 1999/2000 season where, with literally no other options available to him, the shape of his mouth betrays him, and his face contorts into what would be ruled by any credible court of body language a human smile. That's my only recollection of him ever doing it outside of the act of a teammate scoring a goal. But time, that great equaliser, eventually gets even the fiercest of midfield generals. And so, here we are in 2025, looking at Roy Keane — still with the beard, still with the occasional glint of menace — but now one of the most beloved figures in sports media. A man who has, almost accidentally, become a sort of national treasure. And not just a national treasure at home here in Ireland, but, weirdly, in a transcendent nod to improved Anglo-Irish relations, the UK, too. How did this happen? What alchemy transformed Keane from the most combustible footballer of his generation to the man whose every withering remark on Sky Sports is immediately clipped, shared, and immortalised on TikTok by teenagers too young to remember him two-footing Alf-Inge Haaland into next month? To understand Keane, we must first understand ourselves. And since that's never going to happen, best sit back, relax, and happily join me in the surface-level deconstruction of the most fascinating Irish public figure since — you've guessed it — Michael Collins. Roy Keane, the Midfield Magician Roy Keane was never content to play football in the same way the rest of us played: As a hobby, a lark, or a means of justifying a curry afterwards. No, Keane treated every match as a moral referendum. Either you were up to the standard, or you were a disgrace to the shirt, the city, and possibly humanity itself. It was this intensity that powered Manchester United through the greatest years of their modern era. You think Keane was happy to win? No. Happiness was for people who didn't want to win the next game. Satisfaction was weakness. He was, in his own way, a sort of footballing monk — celibate not in the usual sense, but from joy itself. Roy Keane as Manchester United in 1999. Picture: INPHO/ALLSPORT There were signs that it was not ever thus. In the early years for Nottingham Forest, Ireland, and United, there were moments when the mask slipped, and the Mayfield kid was exposed. The over-the-top-of-the-shoulders celebration was a surrender to momentary joy, which lasted seconds. The rest was fury. Alex Ferguson, no stranger to darkness himself, eventually found Keane's relentless standards too much to endure. Their split was less amicable divorce and more Sid and Nancy. And Roy, naturally, saw nothing strange about this. He expected the same from everyone else that he demanded of himself: Total commitment and, ideally, no smiling. Both his exits — from Saipan, and later from United — were 'Where were you when' moments of tragic history. I recall leaving a college exam early to use a phone box in order to call a friend and confirm the news. I had no credit. That would've disgusted Keane. 'No credit? Give me a break.' Everyone remembers the night in Turin. For those of us who were really paying attention though, there were equally impressive nights in Bolton, Stoke, Newcastle, and Leeds. Roy Keane did not discriminate. He was an equal opportunity destroyer. Roy Keane, the Manager Having spent years glaring at people for a living, Keane took up managing them, first with Sunderland and then Ipswich. And while his record was respectable, the stories emerging were of a man bewildered by mere mortals who didn't share his evangelical zeal. One anecdote has it that when a Sunderland player dared to show up late to training, Keane simply turned his car around and drove home. Because if they couldn't be bothered, neither could he. This is known in management circles as 'sending a message,' but in Keane's case, it was likely much less performative in its motive, and just a very practical expression of disgust. Roy Keane as Republican of Ireland manager in 2017. Picture: Niall Carson/PA Wire Another tale recounts Roy sitting in the canteen, glowering into a cup of tea while young professionals crept past like mice in a haunted house. 'Good morning,' they'd squeak, and he'd nod imperceptibly, as if granting them a reprieve from execution. But even Roy must have sensed he was not built for the modern game's mood enhancers and sports psychologists. So, he drifted away from the dugout and into something altogether less obvious: punditry. Roy Keane, the Accidental Comedian The early signs were unpromising. Here was a man so famously laconic he once made Ryan Giggs look like Graham Norton. Surely, he'd be a disaster in front of the cameras. And yet somehow it worked. Because, in an age of bland punditry, Keane was refreshingly honest. He didn't do hyperbole. He didn't do platitudes. He'd watch a half-hearted back-pass, scowl, and pronounce it 'shocking'. Or he'd hear the suggestion that a player needed an arm around the shoulder and look as though he was about to call security. Soon enough, Sky Sports realised they'd struck gold. Keane didn't just provide analysis — he provided theatre. Stick him next to Micah Richards, the permanently giddy labrador of the studio, and you had the perfect double act: Micah cackling, Roy sighing with existential despair. It was like watching an old married couple — if one half of the couple believed the other should be dropped from the squad. One particularly telling moment came when Richards declared that he 'loved football'. Keane responded with an arched eyebrow and the words, 'You love football, yeah? I love winning.' It was the most Keane sentence ever uttered. And yet, paradoxically, the more unimpressed he appeared, the more we loved him for it. Roy Keane, The Redemption In any other sphere of life, this would be called a 'rebrand'. But Keane is too sincere, too committed to his principles to consciously rebrand. What's happened instead is a sort of collective reappraisal. We've all decided that he was right all along, even if we'd never survive 10 minutes in his company. Because the modern footballer — cocooned, pampered, massaged — stands in such contrast to Keane's old-school values that watching him skewer them has become such a cathartic respite from a reality spent surfing LinkedIn, seeing the worst of everybody. He is anti-performative. A Beckettian masterpiece. He doesn't scream 'Look at me/Don't look at me' like so many public-facing narcissistic men often do, instead he says, 'What the fuck are you looking at?' On prime-time TV. In doing so, the man once synonymous with football's darker impulses — rage, spite, retribution — has become the game's conscience. He is the last link to a time when men drank pints after training and tackled as if their mortgage depended on it. He has become, dare I say it, a role model. Just one you cannot turn your back to. Roy Keane, the Meme If you'd told a younger Roy Keane that one day he'd be immortalised in memes, he'd have looked at you with the same expression he reserved for a young Gary Neville. But memes are the currency of modern fame, and, accidentally or otherwise, Roy is minted. There he is, his face contorted in disgust, captioned: 'When someone says they 'gave it 110%.'' Or sitting with his arms folded, the unspoken louder than a vuvuzela: 'Just do your bloody job.' Teenagers who never saw him play nowadays know him only as The Angry Bearded Man. And in a way, that's a triumph. Because if there's one thing Roy would appreciate, it's consistency. Whether he's breaking up play or breaking the nose of a lippy pseudo-hard man in a Cheshire pub, he's never pretended to be anything he's not. Authenticity, that's his superpower. Roy Keane, The Softening You might be tempted to believe, watching Roy gently chuckle at Ian Wright's gags, that he's mellowed. But I suspect he's just found a new outlet. Once, his rage-fuelled tackles. Now, it fuels soundbites and viral clips. And occasionally — only occasionally — he lets the mask slip. You see him talk about Cork, about family, about his dogs. About the things he genuinely hates, like smiling, parties, fireworks, and leaf blowers. Murdo McLeod's 2002 portrait of Roy Keane is one of the artworks featured in the Crawford Art Gallery's 'Now You See It...' exhibition. Picture used with permission from the Crawford Art Gallery And for a fleeting moment, you glimpse a gentler Roy, the man behind the scowl. Then someone suggests a player 'had a good game despite losing 3-0', and the eyebrow shoots back up, the voice goes higher than a Jordan Pickford clearance, and you remember he is a man of standards. He is, and always will be, Roy Keane. Less a pundit than an elemental force, reminding us that standards matter, that excuses are for losers, and that nobody should ever, ever smile when they're 2-0 down. Roy Keane, the (reluctant) National Treasure There's a temptation to assume Roy secretly enjoys all this adulation. The podcasts. The live appearances. An upcoming movie. But it seems more likely that he endures it in the same way he endured team-building exercises: With stoic resignation. And that, really, is the secret of his charm. He hasn't changed as much as the world around him has. We've softened. So has he, but not much. And in our cosseted modernity, he's the last authentic holdout, grumbling from the sofa, refusing to tolerate mediocrity. It's what makes him special. It's why a generation who never watched him harangue the otherwise untouchable Eric Cantona now hang on his every word. And it's why — though he'd scoff at the idea — he has become something well beyond beloved. He is essential. And finally…Roy Keane, the Metaphor Roy Keane's evolution is proof of two things. That time does funny things to a man's reputation and that we love truth tellers in hindsight. From a safe distance. Preferably behind a screen, or on a stage, where our own insecurities are hidden, safe from prosecution. But if Roy has taught us anything (other than the fact that he's ultimately right about everything), it's that sometimes the truth hurts. And sometimes the truth comes with a Cork accent, a magnificent beard, and a look that says: 'I'm not angry. I'm just disappointed.' Which, if you know Roy Keane, is roughly the same thing. Read More Roy Keane: England players were having a chat like they were in Starbucks

Horoscope today, July 12, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg
Horoscope today, July 12, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

The Irish Sun

time8 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Horoscope today, July 12, 2025: Daily star sign guide from Mystic Meg

OUR much-loved astrologer Meg sadly died in March 2023 but her column will be kept alive by her friend and protégée Maggie Innes. Read on to see what's written in the stars for you today. ♈ ARIES March 21 to April 20 Working with a friend to give a shop or a home, an impressive new look also reveals what rich creative skills you have. If you're single, love sparks fly from the first wave to a new neighbour. READ MORE MYSTIC MEG While passion gets hotter for settled couples taking activity classes. Luck links to a friend from far away getting in touch. Get all the latest Aries horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions . 3 Your weekly horoscope for Saturday ♉ TAURUS April 21 to May 21 You are naturally attracted to an expensive lifestyle. And you need a partner who appreciates this. Your ability to charm people should not be underestimated. If you're single, you can flirt your way into almost anyone's heart. But do remember that sincerity is a key must-have for a long term bond. Get all the latest Taurus horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♊ GEMINI May 22 to June 21 Saturn, planet of determination, is making its presence felt, and both a job and a relationship you may wish you had made more of can be back in the game. Perhaps people will think you are gambling with your heart, but you could prove them wrong. Friends, reunited for the first time this year, have brilliant ideas. Get all the latest Gemini horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♋ CANCER June 22 to July 22 The sun goes deeper into the self-awareness sector of your chart, to give you the extra self-belief to say how you really feel. Instead of saying only what you hope will please other people. Talking freely about the place you would like to live can lead to an important love question. Luck travels in a stretch limo. Get all the latest Cancer horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions ♌ LEO July 23 to August 23 Your gift for friendship and the unusual projects you come up with - especially if a charity fundraiser is involved - make you a natural team player. But you could come across as too independent and only interested in new relationships. Get ready for a surprise wedding that's the opposite of what friends expect. Get all the latest Leo horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions Most read in The Irish Sun ♍ VIRGO August 24 to September 22 With mighty Mars still in your birth sign, love can be the right blend of caring and consideration, and an extra dose of passion, too. Weekend working may not appeal to you, yet could turn out more profitable than you think. Family luck focuses on a talent for music, especially writing songs and singing as a group. Get all the latest Virgo horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions 3 Friends, reunited for the first time this year, have brilliant ideas Credit: Getty ♎ LIBRA September 23 to October 23 Your chart is determined to find you a soulmate. And there's something about you now that draws several candidates like moths to a flame. But as Mercury clashes with the moon, decisions made by minds, not feelings, are the ones to trust. If you are single, a job you have always wanted is out there for you. Get all the latest Libra horoscope news including your weekly and monthly predictions List of 12 star signs The traditional dates used by Mystic Meg for each sign are below. Capricorn: Aquarius: Pisces: Aries: Taurus: Gemini: Cancer: Leo: Virgo : Libra: Scorpio: Sagittarius: ♏ SCORPIO October 24 to November 22 The Uranus and Venus connection in your passion zone, creates an attraction that may be unlike any before. 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Watch the moment Meg furiously slams Helena as fans praise Movie Night for finally exposing ‘two-faced' Islander
Watch the moment Meg furiously slams Helena as fans praise Movie Night for finally exposing ‘two-faced' Islander

The Irish Sun

time9 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Watch the moment Meg furiously slams Helena as fans praise Movie Night for finally exposing ‘two-faced' Islander

LOVE Island fans have praised bosses for finally exposing Helena as a "two-faced" Islander as she went to war with best pal Helena. On tonight's Movie Night, Helena and Harry's conversation about Dejon and Meg not having a spark was aired for the group to see. Advertisement 2 Love Island fans have praised bosses for finally exposing 'two-faced' Helena Credit: Shutterstock Editorial The pair discussed Dejon having a "game plan" and think he's staying with Meg to play it safe. A furious Meg told Helena: "Sound Helena, that's crazy. "My best friend and D's best friend, I think that's a crazy comment to make." Andrada then gave Meg some advice saying: "If it's coming from the best friends, then maybe open your eyes a little bit Meg. Advertisement READ MORE ON LOVE ISLAND "There has been a few whispers around the villa about the spark, I think everyone can see it." Helena tried to explain herself and said: "The thing about the spark, when D's around other people he's very laughy and jokey but when you two are together, it's very mellow." Dejon insisted he has a spark with Meg and wanted to "move on". But fans were delighted that Helena's "two-sided" behaviour was exposed. Advertisement Most read in News TV One wrote: "Helena's friends realising she's two-faced." Furious Love Island fans slam Helena as a 'hypocrite' as she goes to war with Shakira in explosive Movie Night A second posted: "Helena is the worst friend - even Meg isn't safe from her two-faced behaviour." "Helena is so two-faced its insane," a third said. Another added: "Helena is SO two-faced it's unreal." Advertisement Elsewhere fans have demanded Dejon is axed after he a row erupted between him and Andrada on tonight's Movie Night. ITV viewers were left furious after Dejon repeatedly shut Andrada down during their exchange - branding him a "gaslighter". 2 Meg was left furious as she questioned her friendship with Helena Credit: Shutterstock Editorial

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