
Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split
A BIG Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival.
Telly stars Rosie Williams and Nathan King admitted they were "devastated" by their break-up, when it was announced in February.
5
5
5
Rosie, 29, told fans she had hoped her "luck had changed" but confirmed she and Nathan, 24, are now just "friends".
But fans have speculated that the pair are back on, after they went to a festival over the weekend.
Nathan shared videos of the event on his social media, including a clip of Rosie.
Online, one person wrote: 'Nathan shared a video of him at a (festival?) of Rosie dancing. Are they back together?'
Replying to the comment, another Big Brother fan recalled how Nathan had left a kissing emoji beneath one of Rosie's TikToks 'a couple of weeks ago.'
Someone else wrote: 'They must be back on.'
Announcing their split earlier this year, Rosie had shared a message alongside a picture of Glen and Jill from the cult BBC comedy Nighty Night.
She wrote: "Lots of you asking about Nathan and I. It is true, we're no longer in a relationship but we are still friends.
"So yeah, unfortunately, I'm very aware that my earlier posts aged like milk.
Big Brother's Nathan and Rosie 'break up live on air', claim fans as he makes brutal comment about their relationship
"It's not how I wanted things to go in the slightest and I'm devastated that it didn't work out as I genuinely thought my luck had changed, but here we are.
"Believe it or not, it was the realest thing I've ever experienced and I have nothing but love and gratitude for everyone who has been supportive.
"Thank you so much my dear friends xx."
Nathan went on to repost her heartfelt statement about their split to his own Instagram account.
Rosie, a dental assistant, and former Royal butler Nathan met during last year's series of Big Brother.
Despite their five-year age difference, the pair formed a close bond which then progressed into a romantic relationship.
5
5

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


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Inside the British monarchy's history of mistresses - good enough for kings and princes to bed but not posh enough to marry, writes CHRISTOPHER WILSON
Kings and princes have had their mistresses since the dawn of time – women deemed desirable enough to share a royal pillow, but not posh enough to become a wife. Some, like King Charles II's bedfellow Nell Gwyn, ended up as duchesses, while others like William IV's Mrs Jordan ended their lives penniless and destitute. By its very nature being a royal squeeze is only a temporary assignment, not a job for life. And by the 20th century the British royal family reckoned it had devised a foolproof plan to get rid of their discarded lovelies. Put simply, it was to pay them to shut up and go away. Depending on the woman, this strategy was the gateway to fame and fortune – or the road to perdition. Take Beryl Markham, for instance, the flexible mistress who took two royal brothers – King Edward VIII and Harry, Duke of Gloucester – to bed. The tall, angular daughter of a horse-breeder, she was part of Kenya's Happy Valley set, and landed her royal double when the brothers came to Africa on tour in the 1920s. In one glorious season she alternated between both men before settling on the dimwitted, gullible Harry Gloucester who, back in England, set her up in a hotel outside the back gate of Buckingham Palace. Soon she was telling Harry that he was to be the father of her child, and the royal machine was set in motion – Harry, desperately in love, was separated from her and packed off on a tour of Japan. Beryl gave birth to a son, and Harry's mother Queen Mary arranged for Beryl to be summarily paid off and sent away. Harsh treatment? Not necessarily. Beryl not only secured a lifetime's pay-check from the Palace for her entanglement with Harry, she had the last laugh too. The child wasn't Harry's at all, and if he'd bothered to count the months from one to nine, he would have realised it couldn't be. But off the back of these strenouous bedtime activities, Beryl became rich and – later as a pioneer aviatrix – famous. Decidedly less fortunate was Kiki Preston, glamorous scion of the super-rich Vanderbilt family who lived in Paris and snared the oversexed George, Duke of Kent on his first visit to the city of love. Kiki was mad, bad and dangerous to know, introducing the Duke not only to her bed but to addictive substances such as cocaine and morphine. George became addicted to both the woman and her drugs. When he returned to London Kiki followed, but emissaries of the duke's father King George V knocked on her door and told her to go away. She did. Legend has it that Kiki took away not only royal money but the prince's child. For years it was whispered that 'Kiki had borne George a son', and then given the child away. But for once the rumour mill was wrong – a royal bastard was indeed born in 1926, but he wasn't George's child – or Kiki's. The father was, once again, the dimwit Harry, Duke of Gloucester and the mother Violet Evans, daughter of a Canadian coal magnate who came to London and, with her money and good looks, had been swept into the royal circle. In this case, responsibility for the child was shuffled off onto a fellow cavalry officer, Ian Karslake, who married Violet and took her to Switzerland where the baby was born before being given away to an adoption agency. The Karslake marriage soon foundered and, overcome with remorse at the loss of her only child, Violet committed suicide in 1951, gassing herself in her bedroom. By an eery and tragic coincidence, Kiki Preston had led the way by throwing herself off a New York hotel balcony five years earlier. But by far the most bizarre royal mistress tale comes from Marjory Haddon, an electrifying brunette who bedded a prince - then got paid just £5 to go away. Marjory was the wife of an Indian Army officer who was part of the royal entourage accompanying the future king Prince Albert Victor, known as Eddy, as he made a three-month tour of the Indian sub-continent in 1890. That the sex-mad prince had an affair with Marjory is beyond question – lawyers for the royal family later bought back the steamy love letters he'd sent her in a desperate attempt to damp down publicity over the affair. But for Marjory, that wasn't enough. She came to London – abandoning her husband and three other children – claiming that her newborn son Clarence was Prince Eddy's. He wasn't. But what followed was a mad, confused and dizzying tale worthy of a Hollywood movie. King George V received letters demanding money with menaces, as Clarence Guy Gordon Haddon said he wouldn't settle for less than the equivalent of £3,000 a year as the price of his silence Marjory ended up in a Paddington guest house with the probable father of her child, an officer in the Kings Own Scottish Borderers, before locking horns with royal officials and demanding money and recognition. But her royal lover Prince Eddy was already dead, whisked away at the age of 28 by influenza. Having negotiated the return of his letters, courtiers felt confident enough to order Marjory out of the country – buying her a one-way ticket back to India with just £5 spending money. It set the beautiful temptress off on a spiral path, changing her name from Marjory to Mary to Maria - and her husbands just as often. Her husband ended the marriage, whereupon she became entangled with a local doctor which ended up with a notorious divorce case back in 1898. Her slide down the social ladder had begun. She married another soldier – this time a non-commissioned officer in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment - and when that failed, a man called Gorbold who'd worked in the boot trade who took her to Australia. To ensnare him she'd chopped ten years off her age and lied about her parentage. But soon Gorbold died and she returned to London, where in 1912 – now an alcoholic and beset by mental problems – she was arrested outside Buckingham Palace with two loaded pistols in her possession. She said she wanted the royal family to buy two properties she owned. The one-time love of a future king had clearly lost all reason and was bundled away, never to be seen again. That wasn't the end of it. Marjory had convinced her son that he was a royal love-child. Born Gordon Guy Haddon, she'd added Clarence as a first name – Prince Eddy's title was Duke of Clarence and Avondale – and as Clarence Haddon he was to cause the royal family more woe when he published a book titled 'King George, My Uncle', laying claim to his royal bloodline. The madness which had infected his mother had passed to him, and after sending King George V letters demanding money with menaces, Haddon said he wouldn't settle for less than the equivalent of £3,000 a year as the price of his silence. 'Clarence' threatened to walk the streets of London wearing billboards naming the King as his uncle, and was followed by Special Branch police and finally arrested. Let off with a warning, he repeated the allegations and was jailed. He died, still believing the lies his mother had told him – that he was a royal love child – at the age of 52 in 1943.


Edinburgh Live
an hour ago
- Edinburgh Live
BBC Antiques Roadshow expert 'highly moved' by mum's heartbreaking story
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info An Antiques Roadshow expert had an emotional reaction as he learned about a "very courageous" woman who spoke of her late son. During the BBC show filmed at Tredegar House in Wales, Marc Allum encountered a guest presenting a unique Status Quo themed tapestry. She shared: "Well my son was Status Quo mad, absolutely Status Quo mad. In the old days it was records they brought out. "I remember those!" Allum replied in recognition as she added: "CD's came later. And as time went on, we had to go out and buy it for him because he was disabled, he was in a wheelchair. He had an accident at 18." The lady explained further after being sensitively questioned by Allum: "A motorbike accident, paralysed from the chest down. No feeling from here down. "So he really couldn't use his limbs," he noted, leading her to clarify: "No, he could move his arms but he couldn't move his fingers. No use of his fingers." (Image: BBC) "That's a sad story," acknowledged Allum, pondering the tapestry's connection with her son. She revealed to Allum: "He was told he wasn't capable of doing anything and he didn't for five years". "After five years, he began doing a few things, tapestry was one of them. "As we'd pass through my kitchen, there at my kitchen table would be his wheelchair, and he would say 'thread me a few needles'. "And he used his teeth to push it through the tapestry and he would turn the whole frame over, it was on a swing, and pull it through with his teeth." The expert remarked: "That is unbelievable. So your son executed this entire tapestry with his teeth. "I mean, obviously I can see it lists all the albums, song titles and it's quite clearly dated. I think what would be fantastic would be if Status Quo got to know about this as well. "I think they would be absolutely massively impressed by the devotion of a fan who went to this kind of trouble." As the woman presented a photograph of her son, who had sadly passed away 20 years after his accident at the age of 39, the expert observed: "He looks to be a happy soul," to which she replied: "Oh he was so happy, he was a happy boy." The expert pointed out that the tapestry remained unfinished, prompting the woman to emotionally confirm: "No, it was never finished. Lots of people have asked if they could finish it for me and I've said no, it's not finished because he died. (Image: BBC) "And it was only after he died that I actually looked at the titles and he never repeated a title but he did towards the end and the title was So Ends Another Life." The expert acknowledged, "And I can see that final line at the bottom," as the woman added, "Yes, so he knew." He was visibly moved after confirming the name Colin Thomas Booth belonged to the guest's son. "I have to say I'm so highly moved, it's all I can do to carry on, to be honest with you", Allum said. "And the fact you've come here today to talk to me about this, I think is wonderful. "It's a testament to his achievement, producing something like this which I think is absolutely incredible. "This thing is priceless. I think it is an amazing thing. "Also, you've been very courageous to come and talk about it, so thank you very much." Antiques Roadshow is available to watch on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Clarkson's Farm star Kaleb Cooper suffers painful injury as he updates fans from A&E
Kaleb took to his Instagram Stories to outline his exact injury medical emergency Clarkson's Farm star Kaleb Cooper suffers painful injury as he updates fans from A&E CLARKSON'S Farm star Kaleb Cooper has revealed he's in A&E after suffering a painful injury. The 26-year-old, who is Jeremy Clarkson's handy-man on the hit Amazon Prime series, was rushed to hospital following a game of football. Advertisement 3 Clarkson's Farm star Kaleb Cooper has revealed he's in hospital Credit: PA 3 He captured a snap of his swollen ankle on social media Credit: Instagram 3 Kaleb, 26, then told how he had fractured his ankle Credit: Instagram Kaleb captured his swollen ankle on a video captured to her Instagram page, before revealing he had suffered a fracture. The farming contractor then showcased his limb clad in a black protective boot following an X-Ray, and simply commented: "Not good." Yet a video uploaded shortly afterwards offered more hope for Clarkson's Farm fans, showing the Diddly Squat Farm employee hobbling around in a checked shirt. He told the camera: 'I may be hobbling around as I've fractured my ankle, but I'll still be at the 3 Counties Show on the Sunday, setting up on the Thursday. Advertisement "I'll be doing talks throughout the day, and Hawkestone Cider will be there. So, do pop along and say hello. I'm looking forward to it.' "Even though I may be hobbling around I'll be there - don't you worry! I'll be there." He then proved it was back to work as normal as he captured some hens in their coop. Kaleb's profile rocketed to fame following the release of the show in 2021. Advertisement