
Kendall and Kylie Jenner are 'drunk' on vodka as they model tiny bikinis while frolicking on the beach
Kendall Jenner and Kylie Jenner got drunk on the beach and filmed a hilarious moment of them having fun during their tropical getaway to Turks and Caicos.
On Thursday, Kylie took to Instagram to share a video of her and her older sister scantily clad in tiny, string bikinis as they played on the beach with their friends.
In her caption, the Kylie Cosmetics founder, 27, wrote that they enjoyed 'drunk beach walks' as they ran around barefoot in the sand and during their recent trip.
They were drinking Kylie's Sprinter vodka beverages.
The beginning of the clip began with Kendall, 29, holding up an item she found in the sand and asking their fans to 'comment below' to let her know if it's a 'rock or coral.'
The pair were overcome with giggles as they kissed the pebble and then Kendall threw it into the ocean.
Their post comes shortly after the sisters shared rivaling, topless swimsuit photos seemingly during the same trip.
They all laughed loudly in amazement at how far she launched the rock into the waters.
Then, they continued digging up more rocks, naming them and giving each a kiss before filming each other letting them go 'free' into the turquoise waters.
In the clip, Kylie donned a tiny, black string bikini top while Kendall was seen wearing a barely there, red bikini top paired with black, cheeky bottoms.
On the same day, Kylie also shared a compilation of four photos showing her and her sister Kendall posing knee-high in the waters as the sunset illuminated their silhouettes.
In the sweet snapshots, the pair appeared to be playing around in the water before wrapping their arms around each other in a hug.
'She's my childhood that can never be lost,' the entrepreneur wrote in her caption alongside an infinity symbol emoji.
Missing her daughter, Kylie also shared a previously snapped selfie of her and seven-year-old Stormi Webster, whom the reality TV star shares with her ex-boyfriend, rapper Travis Scott. In addition to Stormi, Kylie and Scott are also parents to son Aire, three.
The internet personality's recent posts were shared and her 'drunk' beach video was filmed as the bombshells recently went on a sibling beach vacation together.
The pair were overcome with giggles as they kissed the pebble and then Kendall threw it into the ocean. In the clip, Kylie donned a tiny, black string bikini top while Kendall was seen wearing a barely there, red bikini top paired with black, cheeky bottoms
On the same day, Kylie also shared a compilation of four photos showing her and her sister Kendall posing knee-high in the waters as the sunset illuminated their silhouettes
In the sweet snapshots, the pair appeared to be playing around in the water before wrapping their arms around each other in a hug. 'She's my childhood that can never be lost,' the entrepreneur wrote in her caption alongside an infinity symbol emoji
In addition to having fun and relaxing on their getaway, the pair also kept their hundreds of millions of Instagram followers well updated as they partook in sexy photoshoots and shared sexy swimsuit thirst traps.
Earlier this week, the two sisters shared rivaling topless snapshots as they showed off their super toned bikini bodies.
Just earlier this week, Kendall joined her sister Kylie and her boyfriend Timothée Chalamet for the NBA playoffs game in New York City.
The supermodel then traveled back to the West Coast to join best friend Hailey Bieber for a sushi dinner date in Los Angeles.
Sometime during her busy week of traveling, Kylie and Kendall had another fun, chaotic ordeal as seen in a clip of the latter chipping one of her front teeth during their private jet flight.
The sisters laughed hysterically over the shocking moment as Kylie filmed her sister observing a small, white fragment on her finger and asking her: 'Did my nail come off, or was it my tooth?'
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Times
an hour ago
- Times
You'll never want to leave — it's one of Barbados's prettiest hotels
I'm lying beneath the dappled shade of a hot pink bougainvillea and out of the corner of my eye I can see a hummingbird among the flowers. Ahead, on the rippling blue Caribbean Sea, I can just make out a yacht with sails passing across the bay. As I read, I'm ever so slightly aware of the first hint of thirst. I do not wish to move — not for quite some time. So it is good that at this moment a tray is lowered beside me. 'Sorrel sorbet?' It hits the spot, as do the iced water, fruit on a skewer and the cool, scented towel, all of which arrive as if by magic. When I first told friends I was coming to Cobblers Cove on Barbados's Platinum Coast — the most sought-after section of the west coast, with its lush, tropical beaches — I quickly discovered that this jewel of a boutique hotel is, firstly, pretty famous (everyone seemed to know someone who'd once gone) and, secondly, the subject of much envy. 'Forget sightseeing. You won't be able to bear to leave the hotel,' said one friend who'd been last spring (Alan Titchmarsh was checking out as she checked in). Another friend had been on honeymoon and let out an actual sigh as I mentioned it. Judi Dench has been coming for years and Sigourney Weaver has also passed through its distinctive coral stone portals. Later in our stay we would, with the help of the watersports team, become really quite adventurous (or my teenage son Tom would anyway). But for the first couple of days we just triangulated the space between the terrace (which was our favoured sunbed spot), the palm-fringed white-sand beach and the tables by the pool for lunch. Occasionally we swam out to a small pontoon, painted in the distinctive pink and white colours of the hotel, with a little Cobblers Cove flag flying from it. Directly in front of the hotel terrace there's a reef for snorkelling, and another one a minute or so down the island's most peaceful, secluded-feeling beach. No one these days likes to admit to wanting to fly and flop. But when you can flop in such style at a hotel just a 45-minute drive from Bridgetown airport, with plenty of direct flights from London, it would be daft not to give in. So flop we did. Known as the Great House, or Camelot, Cobblers Cove was built in the 1940s. In 1968 the house was bought by the Godsal family, who turned it into a luxury boutique hotel. The original pink building still stands and houses two of the grandest suites, as well as the library. Ten years ago Hugh Godsal inherited the hotel from his father and decided to update it with the help of his wife, Sam de Teran, as creative director. Helpfully, she had a background in design (the skiwear label she founded in the Nineties was worn by Sophie Marceau in the Bond film The World Is not Enough). Known as the Great House, or Camelot, Cobblers Cove was built in the 1940s. In 1968 the house was bought by the Godsal family, who turned it into a luxury boutique hotel. The original pink building still stands and houses two of the grandest suites, as well as the library. Ten years ago Hugh Godsal inherited the hotel from his father and decided to update it with the help of his wife, Sam de Teran, as creative director. Helpfully, she had a background in design (the skiwear label she founded in the Nineties was worn by Sophie Marceau in the Bond film The World Is Not Enough). Her task was a delicate one: updating a beloved hotel without losing its charm. For this she turned to her friend of 20 years, the interior designer Lulu Lyle, of Soane Britain (and 10 Downing Street fame), to take on the main house, including two suites and the library room. 'Lulu has a whimsy and joyfulness that suits this perfectly. Rattan isn't really a thing on the island, so Lulu brought it in,' de Teran says. Curtains in Soane's Scrolling Fern design billow out through the room's French windows, frilled Soane sofas in green nestle between well-stocked bookcases and malachite backgammon tables sit amid rattan tables and baskets of ferns. It's a gorgeous space to linger in before dinner or during one of those brief tropical showers. While the key elements of the decoration here came from England, the paintings are local, as are the crafts commissioned by De Teran. The distinctive metal chairs in the restaurant and by the pool were inspired by ones created by Oliver Messel, the Hollywood set designer who moved to Barbados in the 1960s. Messel reimagined first his own house, Maddox, and then several others on the island, before designing many of the houses on Mustique. 'I went looking for a metalworker who could make chairs with the kind of curly arms I'd seen,' De Teran explains. 'Someone introduced me to Elvis. He looked at my rough sketch and said: 'That's Mr Messel's monkey chair', and he pulled out a drawing. It turned out he'd made the originals all those years ago. He was in his late eighties and it took him two years.' Lovely though all this is — and it really is very gorgeous — a huge part of the hotel's charm lies in its stunning tropical gardens. Originally, they were laid out by the designer Niki Farmer, herself a protege of Iris Bannochie, the Gertrude Jekyll of Barbados. There have been tweaks since. 'It's like a stage set in a way,' De Teran says. 'You need to see the sea from the drawing room to always have a sense of somewhere else to go.' The distinctive green Bajan monkeys are particularly fond of the gingers, as well as stealing the bananas, and are great fun to watch. On the sole afternoon when the skies were overcast, we sat out on the private terrace in front of our suite and two of them ran within inches of our wicker chaise longues, then proceeded to treat us to a display worthy of a David Attenborough documentary. It might all sound rather genteel so far but one of the joys of Cobblers Cove — and perhaps one of the reasons there was quite a clutch of teenagers staying while we were there at Easter — is the watersports team, led by Bradley, who used to represent Barbados at swimming. Each suite can book Bradley's speedboat for half an hour each day, whether to explore the coastline or do something more active. One day we asked to swim with turtles and were taken to a spot where we could do just that. Then we realised that you could take waterskiing lessons as part of the session, so Tom did that. The coaches are used to dealing with beginners and in the second session he managed to stand, skimming across the water as I whooped from the boat. (For those who want a less taxing thrill, the team will also drag you about the bay on one of those giant inflatable sofas.) In the interests of research, I should say that I peeked into the gym (smart equipment, air-conditioning, all in order, so no need to actually use it, I felt), wandered over to the tennis court (lovely setting) and located the spa (it seemed mad to lie indoors for an hour when the weather was so glorious). I also contemplated doing one of the morning yoga sessions, then didn't. We could have explored the island's restaurants — there are some great ones in easy reach — but we loved the chef Jason Joseph's local-inspired menu (he's French-trained but Bajan) so much, we found it hard to make a move. We did, I'd like to make clear, leave the hotel — occasionally, walking 15 minutes down the beach to Speightstown, with its historic buildings, and enjoying sundowners in its bars. Once, I felt sufficiently guilty about our laziness to take a taxi across the island to the wild east side, where we stopped at Bathsheba, with its crashing waves and strange rock formations, then had a drink at an inn. A mongoose — imported to the island to see off pests on the sugar plantations — scurried along on the decking below. Should you wish to be more outgoing, the hotel will arrange private hiking tours, or trips to botanical gardens, grand houses and so forth. For the most part, however, we fell into the gentle rhythms of Cobblers Cove. The experience can be as reclusive or sociable as you choose. There are secluded sunloungers, a pavilion that can be booked for private dinners and no need to mingle at all. However, should you choose (which we did), every Tuesday night there's a cocktail party, followed by a barbecue. Fuelled by the signature rum punch from Stanley's Bar, guests from their twenties to their sixties got up and danced to the (very good) Cuban band. (There's some kind of live music most days.) Between 4pm and 5pm, afternoon tea is served, with piles of little cakes and sandwiches on china plates, with little glass domes on top. Needless to say, this is teen-boy heaven. As we ate, little Carib grackles — the local blackbirds — would gather in the flowering shrubs alongside, hoping for crumbs. There are little water pistols on the tables of the bar and restaurant for shooing away any that get too cheeky, but I never had the heart, even at breakfast where the many courses — I've never seen so many variations on eggs, nor so many choices of bread — brought them hopping along the seafront balustrade. As we left, the heavens opened for the first prolonged downpour of the holiday — a whole hour of rain. I'm ashamed to say I felt glad, otherwise I think I might have wept as we drove away. Details Seven nights' B&B in an Upper Circle Suite costs from £3,310pp through Elegant Resorts. This includes return economy flights with Virgin Atlantic, private transfers and UK lounge access,


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Footy icon Robert DiPierdomenico has opened up about what happened on the night he was filmed dancing like a much younger man in a nightclub clip that has gone viral among AFL fans. The footage shows the 67-year-old tearing up the dance floor with his shirt unbuttoned halfway to his navel as he's filmed by other revellers before he hugs the DJ who's performing at the venue. Footy supporters have gone wild for the footage, leaving comments like 'this video is so iconic', 'this is 10/10' and 'the man is a national treasure'. Now the five-time premiership champion and Brownlow Medal winner has revealed what prompted the wild video, which featured famous Aussie DJ Dom Dolla spinning the decks at one of Greece's most famous islands. 'I was in Mykonos, Dom was playing in Mykonos and found out I was there,' DiPierdomenico explained. 'He asked me to come and play.' AFL icon Robert DiPierdomenico has revealed what happened on the night he was filmed dancing with a famous Aussie DJ in a Greek club (pictured) The 67-year-old (pictured left) was called a 'national treasure' as footy fans lapped up the wild footage of his big night out A quick look at Instagram shows he and his girlfriend Rebecca visited the famous European holiday destination in August last year, with the footy great's partner referring to 'vibrant parties that never end' during their vacation. 'Dipper' is famed for his exuberant personality and has previously talked about how he and his Hawthorn teammates would party in nightclubs until 2am during his playing days. However, life hasn't been too kind to the Hawthorn great in recent times. In January this year his son Dylan was jailed after admitting to 71 instances of fraud as he stole more than $140,000 from a former employer to fund his gambling addiction. During Dylan's case the court heard that his father played down the crime by saying 'it was just money'. DiPierdomenico - who split from his wife Cheryl in 2021 - has also suffered from serious health problems in recent years. A urinary problem that required surgery saw him visiting the bathroom up to 40 times a day and even forced him to wear adult nappies. DiPierdomenico revealed top DJ Dom Dolla (pictured) found out he was holidaying on the Greek island of Mykonos and asked him to come to his show 'Dipper' won five premierships and the Brownlow Medal during his time with Hawthorn 'I was going to the bathroom maybe four or five times and then it went to 10 or 12 times and then 30 or 40 and I did nothing about it,' he admitted in 2023. 'And then, of course, the pain started to come and then I had my operation and now I am 95 per cent back to where I was. 'Incontinence is a big thing in Australia, so I thought I'd put my hand up and let you know that I'm one of those 1.5 million men who suffer from it, but through a few exercises, I'm back - I'm back big-time.' In February this year DiPierdomenico opened up about another health problem that caused him severe pain, even compared to the long list of serious injuries he suffered during his 240-game career. 'Compared to the pain of many of my sporting injuries, shingles was relentless. It put me out of action for nine days,' he said. 'It was horrible to experience personally, and I know some of my loved ones, like my partner and my mum, have also experienced the pain and discomfort of shingles.' Dipper remains heavily involved with Hawthorn and appeared at a club fundraiser alongside fellow team legends Peter Knights and Peter Hudson last week.