
Kylie Jenner goes topless under sexy black robe after shock admission about her breast implants
Kylie Jenner put on a busty display in a series of sultry snaps that were shared to her Instagram page on Saturday.
The beauty mogul, 27 - who recently got candid about her breast implants - struck a variety of poses while taking snaps in the reflection of a mirror.
The mom-of-two donned a black, satin robe that was partially open at the front and loosely secured with a belt which tied around her waist.
Jenner's long, dark locks were parted in the middle and effortlessly flowed down past her shoulders in elegant curls.
Her makeup was glammed up for the spontaneous photo session and comprised of a layer of mascara on her lashes as well as a light shadow around her eyes.
A warm blush was added to her cheekbones while a nude-colored matte tint was worn on her lips for a finishing touch.
The post also included a short reel as she showed off the lowkey look while filming inside what appeared to be a hotel bathroom.
Jenner penned in the caption to her 393 million followers: 'having a reaally good hair day.'
It comes just days after the TV personality gave a shock admission about her breast implants earlier this week on Wednesday.
The Kylie Cosmetics founder responded to a fan on TikTok who had asked the reality star to unveil details about her past procedure.
Back in 2023, Jenner admitted to undergoing a boob job when she was only 19-years-old, which had been shortly before she became pregnant with her eldest child Stormi.
A social media user named Rachel Leary uploaded a clip to the platform and also typed out, 'help a girl out @Kylie Jenner. i just want to know how to get them to sit like that, respectfully.'
The star saw the post and then offered her own response in the comment section of the video.
'445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!!! silicone!!! garth fisher!!! hope this helps lol,' Kylie wrote, which prompted the fan to excitedly gush, 'KYLIEEEEE!!! you are the best THANK YOU!!!!'
Dr. Garth Fisher was the same plastic surgeon that Kylie's mom Kris Jenner also went to back in 2011 to undergo a facelift.
The momager recently commented on Fisher's post as she thanked him for performing her facelift over a decade earlier.
'Garth you are a such a superstar class act!! You did my first facelift in 2011... 14 years ago!!!' she began.
'And made it the most amazing experience ever and even gave us access to film so that others could get a peek inside what it's like and not be afraid...'
Jenner concluded with, 'You have taken great care of us always and remain such a close and treasured friend!! Such an incredible talent!!'
Kylie has previously been open about undergoing cosmetic procedures aside from the breast implants, such as getting fillers.
During an episode of The Kardashians in 2023, the reality star opened up about her boob job which occurred when she was age 19.
While having a conversation with close pal Stassie Karanikolaou, the mom-of-two expressed, 'You know I got my breasts done before Stormi, within six months of having Stormi, not thinking I would have a child when I was 20.
'They were still healing,' Kylie said, and then added, 'I had beautiful breasts. Just gorgeous, perfect size. I just wish I never got them done, to begin with.'
However, the Khy founder told her friend that her viewpoint on undergoing surgery has altered since welcoming her daughter Stormi, seven.
The beauty mogul shares Stormi as well as son Aire, three, with ex and rapper Travis Scott.
'I have a daughter. I would be heartbroken if she wanted to get her body done at 19,' Jenner admitted.
'She's the most beautiful thing ever. I want to be the best mom and the best example for her. I wish I could be her and do it all again because I wouldn't touch anything.'
And during an interview with British Vogue last year, Kylie discussed facing judgement over rumors that she had undergone cosmetic surgery when she was a teenager.
'Naturally you're in such a different place,' she explained in regards to being a teen. 'The world put a lot of pressure on a teenager, me, to make the right decisions.
'And I just have to be gentle with myself because although I carried so much responsibility in the moment, I was just trying to do what was best for me. I was just trying my best as a human.'
Kylie has been keeping busy and was spotted attending a Pilates class alongside her older sister Kendall in Beverly Hills on Wednesday.
The beauty mogul showed off her toned midriff wearing a black, busty sports bra as well as a pair of black leggings.
She also jumped to Instagram to share a carousel of snaps from the past week - including a few as she attended a Knicks game with boyfriend Timothee Chalamet.
The couple - who were first linked in 2023 - have recently been spotted at a few NBA games together, although she did not include the actor in her photo series.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Merab Dvalishvili chokes Sean O'Malley in front of Donald Trump at UFC 316 before jumping over octagon for chat with president in New Jersey
Merab Dvalishvili defended his title in sensational fashion at UFC 316 before jumping over the octagon to celebrate with Donald Trump. The Georgian, who gave O'Malley a rematch having beaten him on the scorecards last year, improved on that performance with a merciless finish. A combination of a neck crank and choke from the north-south position crushed down on 'Suga Sean' forcing him to tap out in the third round. Having been booed by almost all of the Prudential Center crowd, who were particularly hostile on his walk-out and even grabbed him, the champion soon won them around. Secret service on site will have been nervous at the sight of the crazed fighter jumping the cage towards Trump. But they shared a few words and a handshake before posing for pictures. It was a routine copied by a few other fighters on the night and the president, who has used the UFC to help cultivate his image, was only happy to oblige. MERAB TAPPED OUT THE SUGA SHOW!! 😮💨 🇬🇪 🏆 #UFC316 | Saturday | LIVE on TNT Sports & discovery+ — UFC on TNT Sports (@ufcontnt) June 8, 2025 Merab Dvalishvili beat Sean O'Malley in the main event of UFC 316 on Saturday night He had walked out with Dana White to his usual rapturous reception, notably not flanked by Elon Musk as he had previously been before - now the pair are in a public spat and the relationship has turned sour. Trump watched on as Dvalishvili started as he meant to continue, suffocating O'Malley with his pressure forwards. The challenger did well to keep him largely at bay over the first five minutes and also stymied takedowns in an even second round, albeit with Dvalishvili doing enough to win it. Those takedown attempts kept coming in the third and by this point, the famed cardio of the champion was coming into its own. He picked up O'Malley like a doll and with a grin on his face, dumped him back down to earth. Dvalishvili was working away with elbows on the floor and then slipped an arm under O'Malley's neck, securing a nasty, twisting kind of choke while readjusting the angle to press his chest down on the face. That was all she wrote and Dvalishvili may now hopefully be adding some finishing finesse to what was a deadly but not always entertaining style. Afterwards he said: 'I'm on top of the world, I'm a world champion. I came from nothing. 'It doesn't matter what you have as long as you know where you go and you have a goal. Please, believe in your dreams. Everything is possible. 'He was well prepared. I knew he was going to make changes. Every time I lost, I made a big change and I learned from it. But I'm getting better and better. Now it's my time.' He also went on to confirm a fight with Corey Sandhagen will be next. In the co-main event, Kayla Harrison dominated Julianna Pena, forcing a tap with eight seconds on the clock in the second round. It was a kimura submission and would have almost certainly broken the former champion's arm, had she not sensibly quit.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Sir Nick Faldo: Donald Trump always picks up when I call
The last thing Sir Nick Faldo wants to do after four days of talking about golf is more of the same. But when it is the president of the United States ringing to dissect the latest major's talking points, it is a call you have to take. 'He always calls me Nicky,' Faldo tells Telegraph Sport, explaining that the pair have struck up an unlikely bromance. A routine, which Faldo estimates has happened nearly 30 times, started at the beginning of his TV work with US broadcaster CBS. 'So when I started TV, out of the blue, a Monday after a tournament, I remember I was down hitting golf balls and it's Donald, back when he was just a businessman,' Faldo says while beginning to transition into a Trump impression before thinking better of it. ''Nicky,'' Faldo says, pretending to be Trump, his giant hand now a fake phone. ''Nicky, how did he blow that tournament? You wouldn't have done that, Nicky. You'd have done this, you'd have done that, Nicky.' 'Over 10 years, that happened two or three times a year out of the blue,' Faldo, back as himself, adds. A close, personal relationship with the president of the US could be exploited for any number of reasons. For Faldo, it has simply become a party trick. 'For fun, I could be anywhere in the world and if somebody was talking about this and that, I'd say: 'I'll call him'. And I always get through. Honestly. One hundred per cent of the time.' Phone calls are frowned upon on the putting green of The Berkshire in Ascot, where Faldo is hosting the Husqvarna Invitational, so, sadly, there is no opportunity to put his claim to the test. 'Nicky, Nicky, how did he win this?' There is one chat, however, that stands out from the rest for Faldo. In 2019, Tiger Woods completed one of sport's great comebacks to end an 11-year wait for his 15th major by becoming Masters champion for the fifth time. While it was a brilliant day for Woods, it quickly became an uncomfortable scenario for Faldo and his CBS colleague Jim Nantz. 'By now, he's the president,' Faldo says. 'And I've got this relationship with him. So, imagine, 20-30 times he's called me and we'd chat, chat, chat, chat. No big deal. 'It's the 2019 Masters. Tiger's just won. And you know, they played in the morning, we're done at 2.30pm and so now Jim Nantz and I – we're in Butler Cabin and we've got five hours of TV to fill. 'You've got producers in your ear, cameras are rolling, everything. And one of the ladies from CBS leans over to me and goes, 'I have a call from the president of the United States for you, sir...'' Faldo, with a smirk, imitates waving the phone call away with his hands. 'I say, 'Oh, tell him to call me on Monday.'' Faldo then takes on the role of the producer, gawking, eyes wide and white. 'She goes, 'no, it's the president of the United States'.' ''It's fine, tell him that I'm busy, I'm on with Nantz!''. The CBS studio falls into stunned silence. 'So anyway about 4pm, and luckily I'm out of my chair, and my phone rings and I've got the president of the United States on the line. I've got Donald saying, 'Nicky, Nicky, how did he win this? How did he win this? How did he do that?' 'I go back: 'Do you realise that I'm live on flipping TV! Do you mind!' 'So my claim to fame is that he called two golfers on that day, and Tiger was second.' Faldo's appearance at Republican rally The Faldo-Trump relationship has now moved beyond just the phone call stage. Last year, Faldo took up Trump's offer to attend a rally in Montana, where he now resides in Bozeman. The then-Republican candidate thanked Faldo and his wife, Lindsay De Marco, for their support, telling his adoring crowd that politics could be the next step for the former golfer. 'This guy is a major golfer. He is a major friend of mine. One of the best ever,' Trump proclaimed. 'He could take people, he'd play the best players in the world, and they would always fold in front of him. In fact, I think I need to bring him into government because we like to get other people to fold.' Trump: And one of our greatest golfers in the history of. I'm a golfer, I love golf. This guy is a major golfer. He's a major friend of mine, one of the best ever. They knighted him in in England or in UK. I'd like to bring him into government. Nick Faldo. — Acyn (@Acyn) August 10, 2024 De Marco, an ardent Trump supporter, headed straight for the now-US president after the rally and the three posed for a photograph together. Faldo, however, was more concerned with stamping out any speculation that he could be entering front-line politics. 'To all those overly concerned. Before I head out the door this morning into the great outdoors of Montana to cast a fly in the river, I will make a short and sweet statement about former president Donald Trump's tongue-in-cheek compliment of my competitive fortitude,' Faldo posted on social media. 'For those who took his comments seriously, I must say that I am amused that I need to clarify and announce that I have zero interest in and no intention of taking a political position.' But this swift distancing should not be mistaken for a lack of interest in politics. Faldo Farm in Montana is where he calls home and he watches the news there every morning. More often than not, the news cycle centres around Trump. 'Well, we quite like the guy,' Faldo says. 'I quite like the guy. I get on fine with him. Boy do they get wound up with that stuff, but day-to-day it's very good out there.' 'Britain is struggling' Faldo may have grown up in leafy Hertfordshire, but he has no plans to return home to the UK. And it was a walk down one of the UK's wealthiest high streets that reaffirmed to him that the nation is in trouble. 'We walked down Eton high street because we used to live near there and it's looking a bit rough,' he says. 'You know, things have gone down. The shops are closing, there's boarded up windows and I'm disappointed to see that the country is struggling, to be honest. And, I mean, that's a shame.' So, could the UK learn from Trump's America? 'You've got to say the attitude [in the US] is good,' Faldo says. 'It's back to the good old psychology of life. You've got to be seeing good things and saying good things. Self-hypnosis is really powerful, you know?' Pushing out his bottom lip, and hunching over his putter, he continues. 'If you're saying life is miserable and I'm fed up then, guess what, life is going to be miserable and you're going to be fed up. But if you wake up in the morning and think, 'What opportunities have I got today?' or 'What am I going to enjoy today?' 'It's a simple trick. I do it. What am I going to enjoy doing today? Then you go completely at it and you're already looking forward to doing something that you are going to enjoy.' There is something else Britain could adopt from the US, too, it turns out. 'The best thing about America is that you can turn right at a set of traffic lights [even if the light is red]. That's very useful. It just makes sense. You arrive at the junction and you can just keep going. They should bring that in over here, but left.' Faldo's criticisms of his adopted country are, on the other hand, rather minor. And both relate to food. 'The worst [thing about the US], oh my goodness. Well probably the bread. Now we're being told not to eat their bread because of all the impurities that they've discovered. 'I'll tell you the other bad thing about America is that you go for breakfast in New York, and they chop the melon in a certain way. And you go to California, you go 2,000 miles away, and they chop it the same. 'You go across Europe and every country is a little bit different. They go for the same across the whole country.' Melon aside, there are other things Faldo misses about home, with the British sense of humour and its television shows top of the list. Would I Lie To You? being a particular favourite. 'It's embarrassing if you can't keep up your club speed' On Faldo Farm, he sticks to a morning routine that begins at 5am before the rest of the household is awake. Faldo remains dedicated to his hobby of fly fishing while TikTok has become an unlikely source of inspiration for the 67-year-old to stay fit. 'I love TikTok,' he says. 'I'm an obsessive TikToker. I'm always telling Lindsay, 'My TikTok doctor said this', or, 'my TikTok chef said that'. 'I look at all these exercises and I think to myself, 'oh, I can try this' and 'oh, I can try that.'' Slapping his stomach, which sounds incredibly solid, he adds: 'I'm just trying to get this big blooming lump to keep moving and to keep the speed up. That's the hardest thing. As we get older, it gets embarrassing if you can't get the blooming club speed up.' Away from his punditry and assiduous fitness routine, Faldo's chaotic calendar also includes designing golf courses and running the Faldo Series, an event which promotes junior golf events. It is a sharp contrast to his idyllic farm life. 'When I'm at home, I'm at home. But when I'm on the road, I'm busy. In two different worlds,' Faldo says before parting with some suitably folksy advice. 'You've got to enjoy what you're doing. I know that much. And if you're not enjoying it, find something and jump ship because we don't know how long we've got. 'And if the worst comes to worst, get yourself some puppies. Because every day is a great day with puppies.'


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
EastEnders' Bradley Branning star unrecognisable with different job 15 years on
Charlie Clements, who played Bradley Branning in EastEnders has undergone a dramatic transformation since departing the soap, and has now switched his career entirely Charlie Clements has undergone a remarkable transformation, now sporting glasses and a beard, a stark contrast to his on-screen EastEnders persona. The actor who brought Bradley Branning to life started on the BBC One soap in 2006 before leaving in February 2010. Charlie 's dramatic exit from EastEnders took place in its first-ever live episode, marking the show's 25th anniversary, where his character fell to his death from the Queen Vic's roof while being chased by the police. Bradley had pledged to protect his wife Stacey after she murdered her rapist Archie Mitchell, and the couple had devised a plan to flee together. However, their getaway plan went disastrously wrong when Bradley attempted to scale The Vic to dodge the police. His hasty escape attempt ended in tragedy, leaving his wife a widow and sending shockwaves through Walford. The groundbreaking episode captivated nearly 20 million viewers. Over a decade after his EastEnders days, Charlie decided to step away from acting, admitting that, like everyone else, he needs to "pay his bills". In May 2024, he announced to his Instagram followers: "Aware that some may be less interested in my golf related activities! But for those who are go follow me at @charlieclementsgolf." His dedicated golf page showcases his new life as a greenkeeper, featuring photos of him honing his golf swing. In a recent post, the ex-soap star revealed: "In my career as an actor I've had some incredible opportunities and moments.. "But since starting out as a Greenkeeper a year ago, this is up there with the best of them... Touching the hallowed turf of Centre!" Known as the unsung heroes of the golfing world, greenkeepers play a vital role in preserving the game's manicured greens and fairways, overseeing tasks from smoothing out sand traps to grooming the plants that border the course. Charlie was recognised for his work during his time on EastEnders, scooping the Most Popular Newcomer award at the 2006 National Television Awards. Following his dramatic departure from EastEnders, Charlie continued to make his mark in the entertainment industry. He played Jake O'Reilly in Casualty and in 2017, he appeared in the documentary Elizabeth and Her Enemies, portraying the Earl of Essex. Off-screen, Charlie married his long-term girlfriend, Rebecca Clatworthy, in 2018 and the pair have three children. In addition to his acting prowess, Charlie has a keen eye for photography, frequently sharing photos of landscapes and nature on his Instagram page. However, like many during the pandemic, Charlie faced the need to adapt. During the lockdowns, he temporarily put his acting career on hold to support his family. He worked in a restaurant during the initial lockdown and later at a garden centre during the second. Speaking candidly on Loose Women, the actor explained: "Acting is my first love and career choice, but at the end of the day, I'm a jobbing actor. I've got bills to pay and a family to support like everyone else." Back in February, Charlie reflected on his EastEnders success on Instagram, writing: "Reminded today that 'I died' 15 years ago today which makes that little thing even older.!!! As EE turns 40 I remind myself how fortunate I was to work on such an institution at such a young age and will be forever thankful to those to who made it possible." He concluded: "Happy birthday EE, I am immensely proud to have been a small part of you."