logo
Jeremy Clarkson's daughter makes family decision despite ‘difficult' pregnancies

Jeremy Clarkson's daughter makes family decision despite ‘difficult' pregnancies

Wales Online09-07-2025
Jeremy Clarkson's daughter makes family decision despite 'difficult' pregnancies
Jeremy Clarkson became a grandfather for the second time when his daughter Emily welcomed her daughter Xanthe into the world in December, and could see his family extending again in the future
Jeremy Clarkson's daughter Emily hinted she could be open to another child in the future
(Image: David M Benett/for Simon & Schuster UK )
Jeremy Clarkson's daughter Emily suggested she has made a huge family decision. The podcaster believes her children are 'not all here' yet, despite admitting she had 'difficulties' during her last pregnancy.
Podcaster Emily and her husband Alex Andrew welcomed baby Xanthe into the world in December. Their first daughter, Arlo, was born in February 2023.

Emily has previously spoken of how she struggled with hyperemesis gravidarum during the pregnancy. The condition causes prolonged periods of severe nausea and vomiting.

She described the second pregnancy as 'the hardest thing I have ever been through'. Writing on social media, Emily explained she was left feeling 'physically sick' at everyday things, such as the 'smell of my daughter's hair' or the thought of eating an avocado.
She said: 'It has been the hardest thing I have ever been through, harder in my second pregnancy than my first, due largely to the devastating guilt I felt not being able to be there in the way I wanted for my first daughter whilst making my second."
Emily Clarkson says she had a 'difficult' second pregnancy
(Image: David M Benett/for Simon & Schuster UK )
Article continues below
Emily explained her physical symptoms did eventually ease during the pregnancy. Although she confessed she hadn't had a single vegetable, glass of water, or a 'day unmedicated' throughout the term.
And while she has been open about her struggles last pregnancy, the podcaster told former The Only Way is Essex star Kate Ferdinand that she would be open to another child. On her Should I Delete That? podcast, Emily admitted 'there's room' in the family for a third.
She said: 'I look at my kids sometimes on the sofa and I think, 'I'm not sure you're all here'. Like I'm not sure they're all here yet.'

When asked if she was considering another baby, Emily replied: 'I would like to. For sure, in some capacity. My pregnancies were really difficult so I'm not sure what that will look like.
'But when I look at the sofa, I'm like, 'There's room. I don't think you're all here yet'.'
Emily Clarkson outside Downing Street
(Image: PA Archive/PA Images )

Kate shares children Cree and Shae with former England footballer Rio Ferdinand and is step-mum to Lorenz, 18, Tate, 16, and Tia, 13, from his marriage to his late wife Rebecca Ellison. She joked she would 'have a breakdown' if she and Rio had another child.
She added: 'I look at the sofa and it is absolutely full, there is no more space, we are done. I think I would have a breakdown, I'm already driving like a bus because that's the only way we're going to fit in the car.'
Emily is Jeremy's oldest child and has followed in her father's footsteps by carving out a media career. As well as hosting a podcast, she has released two books, Can I Speak to Someone in Charge? and Dear Pretty Normal Me.
Article continues below
As well as Emily, Jeremy shares son Finlo, 28, and daughter Katya, 24, with ex-wife Frances Cain.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jeremy Clarkson slammed by fans for controversial pub change
Jeremy Clarkson slammed by fans for controversial pub change

Rhyl Journal

time32 minutes ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Jeremy Clarkson slammed by fans for controversial pub change

In the latest season of Clarkson's Farm on Amazon Prime Video, the main focus for Mr Clarkson and co was getting his pub - The Farmer's Dog - up and running. Clarkson announced last August that his pub would be all British, but admitted he was struggling to find certain ingredients. Despite the initial quick turnaround of getting his pub up and running, his attempts to go "all British" hit a wall. It looks like this year's harvest will be catastrophic. That should be a worry for anyone who eats food. If a disaster on this scale had befallen any other industry, there would be a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth. He posted on X, formerly known as Twitter: "We are attempting to go all British for the food at my pub. But we are struggling to find black pepper grown here. Can anyone help?" Following this, the latest series depicts signs up in the pub declaring that the pub is 100% British, which means there is no ketchup served there. However, Condimaniac took up the challenge to create a 100% British ketchup and then aimed to get it stocked at the Farmer's Dog. The condiment company behind the creation of a 100% British-sourced ketchup has declared victory in its bid to provide a ketchup for Jeremy Clarkson's pub. On Instagram, co-founder Kier Kemp said he was really impressed by the pub. "It is not just a gimmick for them they do really live and breathe this 100% British thing," he said. Mr Kemp also added it was one of the 'best wholesale clients I have ever dealt with'. "The team there, the Diddly Squat farm shop that's on site and the pub, everyone I have met is super lovely," he said. "I am glad that I can report they are actually nice people. It is not always like that." However, fans took issue with the fact that the Diddly Squat seemingly made them relabel their product to include their own brand. Recommended reading: On a recent TikTok showing the creation of the sauce and bottle, fans blasted the decision. One said: "Hate that they made you get a new label for it". Another commented: "As if they made you relabel it" Whilst someone else replied: "I don't think it's right to make the label change, it's YOUR sauce promoting HIS business, he doesn't need to be on the label that big anyway. Newsquest has approached Diddly Squat Farm for comment.

Lauren Goodger displays her sunburnt boobs in plunging bikini top as she flogs games to fans in her garden after sharing surgery regrets
Lauren Goodger displays her sunburnt boobs in plunging bikini top as she flogs games to fans in her garden after sharing surgery regrets

Daily Mail​

time43 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Lauren Goodger displays her sunburnt boobs in plunging bikini top as she flogs games to fans in her garden after sharing surgery regrets

Lauren Goodger displayed her sunburnt boobs in a plunging bikini top as she flogged a series of games to her fans in her garden. The reality star, 38, has been making the most of the UK heatwave by stripping off and relaxing in the sun - after sharing that she has 'ruined her looks with surgery'. Taking to her Instagram on Tuesday, she put up a Story where she was visibly sunburnt on her chest. She was wearing a cream and khaki bikini and full glam whilst enjoying the weather. Lauren, who found fame on The Only Way Is Essex in 2010, told her fans about a series of cash-grabbing games which can earn them up to £80. She admitted she spends a lot of time 'pointlessly scrolling', but fortunately there's actually a benefit that comes with it. Speaking to her followers, Lauren said: 'Hi guys, if you're like me and just waste loads of time scrolling on pointless apps, well then this is for you. 'You can earn up to £80 just by playing games. There's over three million subscribers and it's all over Trustpilot, it's completely trusted.' Lauren then encouraged her fans to sign up by sharing the link in her post. The telly personality seems to be embracing self-love just weeks after admitting that she thinks she has 'ruined her looks' with plastic surgery. Earlier this year, she revealed her plans to have her breast and bum implants removed this year. And speaking to The Sun, Lauren admitted the surgery she has undergone has left her thinking her body looks 'abnormal'. Lauren said she thinks her 'massive boobs and bum' have made her look bigger than she actually is and shared her plans to look like her old self again. The reality star expressed regret about getting the work done and insisted she plans to have all of it removed or reversed. Lauren said: 'I've ruined my looks with surgery - I hate my fake boobs and bum now. 'I feel like my body looks abnormal - I don't need these massive boobs and massive bum. She added: 'When I look at myself naked in the mirror, all I see is lumps and bumps everywhere.' In May, Lauren revealed she is having her 'heavy' breast implants removed and can't wait to go back to a 'natural look'. She admitted her breast were 'perfect' before although now they simply 'make her look big' while opening up about her breast-reduction journey on Instagram. After years of desperately wanting to get her cosmetic surgery reversed, Lauren revealed she had finally plucked up the courage to put plans in place for later this year. Sharing her plans in an exclusive interview with Daily Mail, she said: 'I was terrified [of getting it done] which is what I'm working on, I'm working on that. 'I've delayed it for a year now. I was meant to get the implants out and I want them out because that will transform me. 'It's not even about my weight, it's more my boobs and bum. If I could get rid of them I'd feel and look so much better.'

Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important
Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Why Jeremy Clarkson's discovery of 'genuinely alarming' effects of climate change is so important

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... For a long time, I quite liked the bloke-ish bonhomie of the 'classic' Top Gear, with Jeremy Clarkson, James May and Richard Hammond. I didn't particularly mind Clarkson's near-to-the-knuckle jokes, dodgy comments about truck drivers or his dismissal of climate change. He could sometimes make me laugh – and you can't agree about everything. However, his horrendous 'slope' remark – about an Asian man on a bridge they had built over the River Kwai – and his decision to punch a Top Gear producer because of the lack of hot food after a day's shooting both created a sour taste that has lingered. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It wasn't just the potential racism of the slur. It was also the fact that this was a man who had laboured alongside them; it was a sneering betrayal. And as someone who has worked with people known, in all seriousness, as 'the talent' – who were sometimes anything but and comically so – I almost felt that highly entitled punch myself. READ MORE: Demise of hybrid cars in Norway shows how UK is falling behind in technological race Jeremy Clarkson has been a vocal campaigner during farmers' protests about Labour's changes to inheritance tax but is also voicing the concerns of many about the effects of the changing weather on food production (Picture: Carl Court) | Getty Images Clarkson facing 'catastrophic' harvest But Clarkson is still not without redeeming features, including a willingness, for all his bombastic on-screen persona, to change his mind. In 2019, he revealed he had encountered a 'graphic demonstration of global warming' after getting stuck on a boat in a dried-up river in Cambodia. He told The Sunday Times: 'It's the first time that we've ever admitted to there being global warming. It was alarming, genuinely alarming.' More recently, his Prime Video show, Clarkson's Farm, appears to have done a great deal to educate people about the reality of farming and has also revealed a different side to his personality. Last year, while rather optimistically suggesting 'science will solve it eventually, always does', Clarkson told the Guardian that working on his farm, Diddly Squat (a great and very 'Clarkson' name), had made him realise that the effects of climate change were 'happening really fast'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'That's what always surprises me. In the last five years, I've noticed a dramatic change here... It hasn't snowed for five years. We probably get a minute of sleet. We used to get snowed in every year,' he said. While saying this, he apparently smirked and said to his interviewer 'I'm like a Guardian reader's wet dream, aren't I?' – a remark that sounds like a jibe but is begrudgingly conciliatory to people he normally disagrees with. On Friday last week, he wrote on social media: 'It looks like this year's harvest will be catastrophic. That should be a worry for anyone who eats food. If a disaster on this scale had befallen any other industry, there would be a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth... Normal weather would help. It never stopped raining in 2024 and never started in 2025.' Many farmers have been hit by floods, drought or both in recent years (Picture: Carl Court) | Getty Images Farms hit by extreme weather It is a message that many farmers would like the rest of us, particularly those living in cities, insulated as we are from the realities of food production, to hear. A survey published last month by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU) found that 86 per cent of farmers had been affected by extreme rainfall, 78 per cent by drought and more than half by heatwaves. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Just 2 per cent had not experienced some kind of extreme weather. Some 84 per cent had experienced a reduction in crop yields or livestock output, and three-quarters had seen a fall in their incomes. Tom Lancaster, the ECIU's land, food and farming analyst, said: 'Farmers are on the front line of climate change and this research reveals what impact that is having on them and their businesses. From lost crops and livestock to soil erosion, farmers are battling these impacts across more fronts than most with repeated heatwaves, droughts and periods of extreme rainfall all taking a toll on farmer confidence.' This, he said, called the UK's food security into question. 'We need to be taking these risks more seriously, with more support for farming to adapt and build resilience, as well as more urgent action to help farmers reduce their own emissions.' Global food prices set to rise Similar problems are being faced by farmers all over the world. In a study published in June by the leading journal Nature, Stanford University academics estimated that, for every degree Celsius of global warming, the world's ability to produce food would fall by 120 calories per person per day. One of the researchers, Professor Solomon Hsiang, warned that 'when global production falls, consumers are hurt because prices go up and it gets harder to access food and feed our families'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It is currently thought the world is on track for about 2.7C of warming by 2100 – well above the 1.5C and 2C limits suggested by scientists to avoid 'dangerous' consequences. Unless and until we reduce carbon emissions to net zero, our climate will keep on getting hotter, less temperate and less benign. While many viewers, including me, may have thought that Clarkson was being himself on Top Gear, he has spoken about playing a caricature of himself, 'a comic creation'. However, his Clarkson's Farm persona seems more like the real person and, fortunately, that is someone who, when confronted by the reality that our climate really is changing, is able to see it for what it is. Ironically, his Top Gear character may help him persuade people – who, for various reasons, are still reluctant to accept that climate change is a problem – to face the increasingly obvious facts that farmers are confronted with on a regular basis.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store