
Jermaine Jenas opens up on text messages that got him sacked from the BBC and reveals marriage troubles led to scandal
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
JERMAINE Jenas has spoken out about his exit from the BBC for sending X-rated text messages to colleagues.
The former England footballer, 42, revisited the scandal that cost him his high-paid telly gigs on The One Show and Match of the Day.
Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter
Sign up
5
Jermaine Jenas has spoken candidly about his sacking from the BBC
Credit: YouTube
5
Katherine Ryan was a guest on his podcast with Derek Chisora
Credit: YouTube
5
Jermaine split from wife Ellie in March
Credit: Getty
It also ultimately led to the collapse of his marriage to his wife of 14 years, Ellie, with the pair announcing their split in March.
Speaking with comedian Katherine Ryan and professional boxer Derek Chisora on his Let Me Tell You Something podcast, he said: "I broke a vow. I feel my level of punishment was up there. I had to take it and have some broad shoulders and handle it, and I feel like I did that."
Jermaine likened his messages to Fifty Shades of Grey lothario Christian Grey, continuing: "It was sexting, as simple as that, but it was initiated to me and then I responded.
"It wasn't just me going out of my way and it definitely 100 percent wasn't 'me 'if you do this I will help you in your work'.
"There was no power element to it going on."
He then admitted his personal life and marriage weren't in a good place at the time, though he insisted it was no excuse for his behaviour.
"There's a lot of stuff with me and Ellie where we weren't in the best place ourselves," he said.
"And things were just spiralling a little bit. In no way is that blame. I'm fully accepting responsibility.
"I dealt with it wrong and got heavily punished for it by losing pretty much everything that I had at that time."
Though the fallout of the messages was costly, Jermaine claimed the BBC had him "locked in a creative prison".
Jermaine Jenas opens up on split from wife Ellie and reveals he never wanted to separate
He was sacked in an excruciating online meeting with HR and senior corporation execs, including being shown a string of X-rated messages he'd sent.
He told The Sun at the time: 'I am ashamed, and I am deeply sorry."
In the same interview, he confessed to lying to wife Ellie during a family holiday and sneaking off to take a Zoom call with BBC bosses over his X-rated messages.
In 2023, Jenas and Ellie clashed as he started spending more time socialising with his One Show work colleagues.
The pair had explosive rows but, Jermaine admitted they quietly worked through their issues with the help of couple's therapy.
Heartbroken ex-model Ellie announced the couple were separating in March.
She wrote: "I never imagined I would have to share something so personal with the public, but given the situation, I feel it's necessary.
"After 16 years together and 4 wonderful children, Jermaine and I have decided to part ways.
"We will remain friends and continue to co-parent. We kindly ask that you respect our children's privacy during this challenging time.
"Thank you, Ellie."
The pair had been married for 14 years and share two daughters, Geneva and Olivia, and son, Jacob.
Jermaine also has an older daughter, Sancha, from a previous relationship.
Jermaine Jenas Scandal Timeline
JERMAINE Jenas was dismissed in August for sending inappropriate messages to the women he worked with.
Here's what happened:
August 22 The BBC receives complaints about Jenas workplace behaviour, in regard to text messages.
August 22 - Jenas was sacked by the BBC amid allegations he sent inappropriate messages to a female colleague.
The presenter is taken off air from both Match of the Day and The One Show.
Other colleagues begin to come forward.
Jenas responds to BBC sacking: "Right now I can't talk about it. I can tell you I'm not happy - there are two sides to every story - and I'm going to be speaking with my lawyers on the issue."
The BBC responds to Jenas' sacking: "We can confirm Jermaine Jenas is no longer part of the presenting line-up."
In an exclusive interview with the Sun on Sunday, Jenas revealed he wanted to say sorry to girls he texted but the BBC blocked him.
September 7 Jenas denies new claim he bombarded waitress with unsolicited explicit texts while working at World Cup for BBC.
November 24 Jenas apologises to wife "for all the BS" over text scandal as he vows to save their 13-year marriage.
5
Exes Ellie and Jermaine share four children together
Credit: Instagram
Hashtags

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


NBC News
43 minutes ago
- NBC News
An indie band is blowing up on Spotify, but people think its AI
An indie psych rock band has amassed more than 850,000 listeners on Spotify in a matter of weeks and generated buzz throughout the music industry — but nobody is exactly sure if it's real or not. The Velvet Sundown, a band bent on 'Saving Modern Rock,' according to its Instagram account, has even some music industry veterans confused. The images put forward by the band all look like they were created by AI. The music? That's harder to say. Rick Beato, a music producer with more than 5 million subscribers on YouTube identified what he called 'artifacts, particularly in one of the track's guitar and keyboard parts. He said that can indicate a song was created by AI. 'This is having a lot of problems and I suspect that it may be because this is an AI track,' Beato said in a YouTube video, after running one of The Velvet Sundown's songs through Apple's Logic Pro track splitter. 'Every time you have an AI song, they are full of artifacts.' Whether the band is real, fake or something in between, its emergence and the broader debate about it add to a growing concern about the future of art, culture and authenticity in the era of advanced generative artificial intelligence. Many major tech platforms have already seen floods of AI-generated content, while AI influencers are becoming increasingly common on social media platforms. Velvet Sundown appears to have first emerged in June, according to its social media profiles. On Spotify, the band has a 'Verified Artist' badge, offering some sense of authority. On X, The Velvet Sundown teased an upcoming album 'Paper Sun Rebellion,' and nodded to questions about doubts about the band's origins. Aside from the quick rollout of songs, its uncannily plasticine promotional images of band members have prompted accusations of AI use as well. In a video announcing the release of its upcoming album 'Paper Sun Rebellion' later this month, the band pushed back against accusations that they aren't 'real,' stating in one video that 'you believed the lie, and danced to it anyway.' 'They said we're not real,' the account posted. 'Maybe you aren't either.' The band's Spotify bio claims that the group is composed of four people: singer Gabe Farrow, guitarist Lennie West, Milo Rains, 'who crafts the band's textured synth sounds,' and percussionist Orion 'Rio' Del Mar. Farrow also allegedly plays the mellotron, which is an electro-mechanical instrument that plays pre-recorded sounds when its keys are pressed. 'There's something quietly spellbinding about The Velvet Sundown,' their Spotify bio states. 'You don't just listen to them, you drift into them. Their music doesn't shout for your attention; it seeps in slowly, like a scent that suddenly takes you back somewhere you didn't expect.' Questions about the band's origins were further complicated after other social accounts purporting to represent the band began rejecting claims that the band was using AI-generated images or music, as well as a person who spoke to Rolling Stone claiming to be connected to the band who called it an 'art hoax.' That person later admitted in a Substack post that his claim to represent the band was itself a hoax. The Velvet Sundown said that the person quoted in the article is not affiliated with them in 'any way.' 'He does not represent us, speak for us, or have any connection to this project,' The Velvet Sundown said in a statement to NBC News via Instagram. On Thursday, the social media accounts tied to the band's Spotify account posted that 'someone is trying to hijack the identity of The Velvet Sundown by releasing unauthorized interviews, publishing unrelated photos, and creating fake profiles claiming to represent us.' The Velvet Sundown's YouTube publisher Distrokid did not respond to requests for comment. Spotify also did not respond to a request for comment. The band's meteoric rise highlights modern issues around AI, and how difficult it can be to verify what is and is not real on the internet. Last year, Google researchers found that AI image misinformation has surged on the internet since 2023. A Consumer Reports investigation found that leading AI voice cloning programs have no meaningful barriers to stop people from nonconsensually impersonating others. According to the music streaming app Deezer, which uses its own tool to identify AI-generated content, 100 percent of The Velvet Sundown's tracks were created using AI. Deezer labels that content on its site, ensuring that AI generated music does not appear on its recommended playlists and that royalties are maximized for human artists. 'AI generated music and AI bands may generate some value to the user, so we still want to display that,' Alexis Lanternier, the CEO of Deezer, said. 'We just want to make sure that the remuneration is taken in a different way.' Every week, about 18 percent of the tracks being uploaded to Deezer — roughly 180,000 songs — are flagged by the platform's tool as being AI generated. That number has grown threefold in the past two years, Lanternier said. Suno and Udio, both generative AI music creation programs, declined to say whether The Velvet Sundown's music was created using their software. 'I think people are getting too far down the rabbit hole of dissecting, is it AI, is it not AI? And forgetting the important question, which is like, how did it make you feel? How many people liked it?' said Mikey Shulman, CEO and co-founder of Suno. According to Suno's rights and ownership policy, songs made by its users who are subscribed to its higher tier plans are covered by a commercial use license. That allows them to monetize and distribute songs on platforms like Spotify without attributing them to Suno. 'There are Grammy winners who use Suno, you know, every day in their production,' said Shulman. Recently, Grammy Award-winning record producer Timbaland launched an AI artist named TaTa with his new entertainment company, Stage Zero. He told Billboard that TaTa, who created a catalog of AI-generated music through Suno, was neither an 'avatar' nor a 'character.' Suno was one of two AI companies sued last year by major record labels — including Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group — who allege that the companies infringed on the labels' recording copyrights in order to train their music-generating models. About a year into the legal battle, however, the music labels have begun talks to work out a licensing deal so that Suno and Udio could use copyrighted recordings by compensating the artists for their work, according to a Bloomberg report published last month. It's a trend that's become worrisome to artists like Kristian Heironimus, who is a member of the band Velvet Meadow (not to be confused with the now-viral The Velvet Sundown). 'I've been working for like, six years just constantly releasing music, working my day job,' Heironimus said. 'It is kind of disheartening just seeing an AI band, and then in, like, what two weeks, [have] like, 500,000 monthly listeners.' The creep of generative AI into music and other creative industries has incited backlash from those who worry about the devaluation of their human work, as many AI developers have been known to scrape data from the internet without human creators' knowledge or consent. Beyond ethical debates about the consequences of the AI boom on human labor, some online worry about the rise of low-quality AI slop as these tools grow increasingly capable of replicating voices, generating full-length songs and creating visuals from text prompts. Heironimus said there are similarities between his band, Velvet Meadow, and The Velvet Sundown, beyond just the names. One of the members pictured in The Velvet Sundown's Spotify band photo, for example, looks similar to a photo of Heironimus when he used to have long hair, he said. The bands also fall within the same genre, though Heironimus described The Velvet Sundown's tracks as 'soulless.' Shulman, of Suno, said most streaming music is already 'algorithmically driven.' 'People don't realize just how depersonalized music has become, and how little connection the average person has with the artist behind the music,' he said. 'It's a failure of imagination to think that in the future, it can't be a lot better.' But Lanternier, of Deezer, argues that as AI continues to evolve, streaming platforms should also be trying to ensure artists can make enough royalties to survive. 'People are not only interested in the sound. They are interested in the whole story of an artist — in the whole brand of an artist,' Lanternier said. 'We believe that what is right to do is to support the real artist, so that they continue to create music that people love.'


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
The Sean 'Diddy' Combs verdict attracted a spectacle of influencer stunts and tricks
The verdict in Sean "Diddy" Combs' sex-trafficking trial attracted what you'd expect at the end of a high-profile celebrity court case in New York: dozens of news camera crews, hundreds of curious bystanders and a mass showing of law enforcement. Overshadowing them all was a sea of influencers, content creators and provocateurs, who came out en masse for the trial's verdict on Wednesday. Combs was acquitted of racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking, but found guilty of lesser charges. The streets surrounding the federal courthouse in downtown Manhattan attracted stunts that included hostile — and livestreamed — debates, Diddy-inspired costumes and celebrants spraying one another with baby oil (which Combs' use of in various sex acts was a frequent topic of testimony). The spectacle was the latest example of how high-profile celebrity trials with real-world consequences have become the perfect breeding ground for online content creators to go viral online. 'It's been great. I've been able to monetize incredibly,' Armon Wiggins told NBC News. 'I've gone viral exponentially, all over TikTok, YouTube. I've landed, you know, talk show placements on TMZ.' Wiggins posts videos with witty commentary on pop culture on YouTube, amassing more than 285,000 subscribers. He temporarily moved to New York from Los Angeles in May to cover the trial daily, posting breakdowns of the daily proceedings on his YouTube and TikTok channels. Wiggins said he's gained more than 60,000 YouTube subscribers since he started covering the trial. Similarly, Michelle Bracey of Manhattan found her niche covering Combs' trial. As with Wiggins, Bracey attended the trial daily and posted her independent analyses on her TikTok account, miss_knockout, cultivating a following for her humorous takes. When the trial began, she said she had 9,000 followers on TikTok. She now has more than 40,000. "This is a life-changing moment for me personally," she said. "This opened up the doors to a lot of things, like my music, people offering me shows, people offering me stuff for my music." Bracey said she tries to keep her work "professional" and avoids the pitfalls of other content creators whom described as "clout chasers," pointing to several antics throughout the day. Roughly an hour after the verdict was announced, a group of people who appeared to support Combs' partial acquittal danced and sprayed one another with baby oil. Video NBC News captured of the celebration shows a woman removing a wig while a man drizzled baby oil on her from a nearby ledge. The participants were largely framed online as fans of Diddy. Most of them appeared to be influencers and new media figures who were there to create content. The woman in the video appears to be an influencer who goes by the alias Crackhead Barney and has more than 114,000 followers on Instagram. Crackhead Barney did not immediately return a request for comment. In one video outside the courthouse, the woman asks Sneako, a streamer who has nearly 1 million followers on X and has been tied to the rapper Ye, to pour baby oil on her, and Sneako offered small bottles of baby oil to fans. Wiggins also took part in the baby oil spectacle. Throughout the day, two men with opposing views on the Combs conviction also drew particular attention. One man in a denim jacket and sunglasses questioned a man in a red shirt and bucket hat on whether Combs is going to prison. The man in denim yelled that 'he beat her," referring to Combs' longtime girlfriend Cassie Ventura who testified at the trial. 'It doesn't matter,' the man in red said. 'He beat her, he kicked her,' the man in denim shouted. 'And she liked it, how about that?' the man in red screamed back. Ventura testified that Combs beat her on multiple occasions and text messages showed she confronted him several times over it. After he attacked her at a Los Angeles hotel in 2016, Ventura wrote to Combs that she was not a rag doll, she's 'somebody's child,' according to messages entered into evidence. Other celebrity legal battles, including the defamation suit between actors Johnny Depp and Amber Heard and the shooting of Megan Thee Stallion by fellow rapper Tory Lanez, have similarly provided an opening for online creators. Some of the influencers who spoke with NBC News on Wednesday said that, now that the Combs trial had concluded, they plan to cover other high-profile cases, including the ongoing legal battle between actors Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni and the case against Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. "This is just the very beginning, and it will evolve," Wiggins said. "And I think at some point, the courts will have to adjust to that too, you know, and they will have to section off spaces for influencers."


Metro
an hour ago
- Metro
Horror fans ‘terrified' after disturbing VHS recordings appear in US towns
Horror film fans are going to be sleeping with one eye open after a series of very disturbing VHS recordings started appearing in the US. Users on Reddit, Instagram, and TikTok are still desperately seeking answers for the unexplained videos… but it seems no one can help. In a number of States, people are discovering VHS tapes featuring three hours of different horror scenes, which they reckon could be part of some new twisty marketing campaign for an upcoming movie. Having taken to social media to exchange findings and theories, it was soon realised that the videos all showed the same footage, which has also appeared on YouTube. On YouTube, we can see that the three-hour, 42-minute-long feature has been filmed in black and white and with night vision cameras. Titled 'WHITEFACE' and uploaded on June 27 in a bid to attract people with more knowledge, the VHS has already clocked up 1,000 views on the one platform alone. In the description, the uploader notes six locations where tapes have been found so far. These include a Hollywood video store, a bar in Nashville, a thrift store in Orlando, and an art gallery in Virginia. Meanwhile, over on TikTok, horror fanatics are losing their minds with all the speculation. TikToker Nicolas Curcio's video, currently with over 18,000 likes, sees him dissect the events, describing it as: 'This is either one of the best art projects ever or a case of the possible first-ever real found footage horror film.' For context, 'found footage horror' is a subgenre of horror films that 'uses a style of filmmaking characterised by the use of 'discovered' video recordings.' The recordings are typically presented as if they were made by the characters themselves. It's a genre that has had huge commercial success in the past, famous examples being 2007's Paranormal Activity, 2014's Creep, and, more recently, Late Night with the Devil, released in 2024. The TikTok creator goes on to say the discovered VHS footage does not contain any recognisable actors, but it mostly appears to be just a guy with a white-painted face wandering around LA. At one point, he's around Universal Studios. In some of the creepier moments, he films random people or even follows them home and into unlocked houses, harassing one woman at a bus stop for 30 minutes as she tries to ignore him. While some believe the whole thing is 'fake', others think it could be a student film that's made its way online. However, sceptics reckon it's even too amateurish for that, given that 'Whiteface' has no titles or end credits, nor is it edited. In the comments of the semi-viral TikTok video, people had plenty of thoughts. '$5 this is viral marketing for a movie that's going to drop later this year', declared @portiaisheeere. 'feels very fake especially 2 being found at similar times, starting on reddit and no real footage', @gargledmesh countered. 'it's 3 hours long and back in the day it was hard to edit tape to tape, so it could be an unfinished project – therefore even the lack of credits. now anyone can edit just on their phones, back then it was a different story', speculated @thedearone_. 'Quite clearly viral marketing for a movie lol nothing will ever top Blair witch though these companies have been trying to mimic it for years gets boring when everytime the film they're trying to get you to watch is boring', @bluish vented. The Blair they were referring to is, of course, 1999's horror/mystery movie The Blair Witch Project, which followed three students who vanished after venturing into a Maryland forest to film a documentary on the local Blair Witch legend. Only their footage was left behind. At the time, the indie flick had so many people convinced it was actually real, largely thanks to the prior release of a mockumentary titled Curse of the Blair Witch, which was also presented as 100% genuine, featuring interviews with so-called family members of the students and historical experts. More Trending Basically, the doc set the whole thing up, and it took a lot of people a while to realise it was just a marketing ploy, which is what some believe is happening again with Whiteface (2025). Having none of it, however, TikTok's @bbgst blasted: 'why is everyone so doubtful these days, why not just believe instead of thinking its a movie marketing thing or something'. So, what do you think? Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Reservoir Dogs and Kill Bill: Vol. 2 actor Michael Madsen dies aged 67 MORE: Cash Me Outside girl Bhad Bhabie sued for $674,452.40 MORE: Charlize Theron, 49, details 'amazing' one-night stand with a 26-year-old