
Former Home and Away star Pia Whitesell shows off her insane abs in a tiny crop top and pricy pair of jeans as she poses in the closet of her $57 million LA mansion
She is known to be a Pilates Queen, practising the method almost every other day.
And former Home and Away star Pia Whitesell showed off the fruits of her labour in a selfie on Thursday.
The Aussie actress flaunted her killer abs in a tiny crop top.
Pia, 41, took to the social media platform on Thursday to promote a US denim brand on her story.
In the snaps, she posed in her closet inside her $57million dollar LA mansion while wearing a strappy black top that showed off her cleavage and exposed her tiny waist.
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The mother-of-two also donned a relaxed pair of light-wash jeans.
'Tess - curved leg silhouette, low-rise waist, relaxed yet defined,' she captioned the post, tagging premium Los Angeles denim brand SLVRLAKE in the caption.
In a boomerang clip, she revealed that she was 'obsessed' with the jeans, which retail for US$299 (AU$465).
She accessorised the low-key outfit with an array of flashy jewels - a diamond tennis bracelet, a diamond cross necklace, along with a gold watch and set of rings.
Pia recently showcased her incredible sense of style when she attended the Stagecoach Festival in California.
She turned heads in a 'cowboy take me away' shirt from TWP valued at $1,050.
She added to the look with a 'beep beep' mini skirt by Simon Miller priced at $545.
Pia accessorised the ensemble with a Prada suede shoulder bag coming in at a whopping $6,100, and a wide-brimmed felt cowboy hat and knee-high suede boots.
She wore her signature brunette locks styled in soft, cascading waves that framed her face effortlessly, while her makeup allowed her glowing complexion to take centre stage.
It comes after she shared footage enjoying some fun in the sun with her Hollywood talent agent husband Patrick, 59.
'Happy day of love completed,' Pia captioned the video, adding two heart symbols and a cross, indicating the romantic nature of their outing.
The couple, who tied the knot in a private ceremony in 2021, have kept much of their relationship off social media, making the rare video all the more special for her 400,000-plus Instagram followers.
The romantic clip appears to have been taken during a quiet getaway, with blue skies and picturesque scenery in the background.
Pia's transformation from soap star to international jet setter was complete after she tied-the-knot with the Hollywood heavyweight Patrick Whitesell in 2021.
Patrick is the Executive Chairman of William Morris Endeavor and is believed to have a net worth of around USD $600 million.
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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Flying shoes, a viral BLM speech and that leather jacket: Q+A's most memorable moments
After 18 years, the national broadcasters flagship program, Q+A, is dead. ABC confirmed the axing on Wednesday, a day after staff were warned of cuts. The ABC's news director, Justin Stevens, said it was time for the broadcaster to 'rethink how audiences want to interact and to evolve how we can engage with the public to include as many Australians as possible in national conversations'. The weekly discussion program was launched in 2007 by executive producer Peter McEvoy and host Tony Jones, and in its early years was highly influential, regularly making headlines and setting the news agenda. Let's reflect on some of its most memorable moments. Actor Meyne Wyatt's powerful monologue, in June 2020 at the height of global Black Lives Matter protests, recounted his experiences across the spectrum of racism – from micro-aggressions to outright hatred. 'Silence is violence. Complacency is complicity. I don't want to be quiet. I don't want to be humble. I don't want to sit down,' so part of his speech, pulled from his semi-autobiographical play, City of Gold, went. It racked up more than three million views, and saw him included on 2021's Time100 Next list of emerging leaders. 'It was last minute; George Floyd had died, #BlackLivesMatter was at its height. Q+A wanted to focus on the treatment of Aboriginal people here,' Meyne told Guardian Australia in 2022. 'I was aware I was representing – I had to bring it.' An audience member hurled his shoes at John Howard, the former prime minister who signed Australia up to the Iraq war, after demanding he defend his decision to send 2,000 troops to support the US-led 2003 invasion. 'That's for the Iraqi dead!' Peter Gray shouted as he flung the shoes during a 2010 episode of the program. Gray was then escorted from the studio. Howard had a close relationship with George W Bush and Australia was one of the first countries to commit troops to Bush's 'coalition of the willing'. 'I thought it was justified,' Howard said during the broadcast. 'I think there were errors made after the military operation ended. I think there were too few troops and I think a mistake was made in disbanding the Iraqi army. But I will continue to defend … the original decision on the basis on which it was taken.' At that point, Gray stood up and threw his shoes – mimicking the shoe-throwing protest against Bush in Baghdad in 2009. A criminologist and former detective in the audience lectured politicians in 2024 for failing women and putting politics above the reality of deaths caused by domestic violence. 'How dare you! How dare you go into politics, in an environment like this, when one woman is murdered every four days, and all you … can do is immediately talk about politics? That is just disgraceful,' Vincent Hurley said to federal senators Murray Watt and Bridget McKenzie, and NSW opposition leader Mark Speakman. 'For God's sake, how long do we have to listen to politicians like you … high-horsing about? 'I went to 20 domestics in one night when I was in the police. I held a 10-year-old child in my arms who died from the stabbing from her father … You don't need a royal commission. That money needs to go into frontline services – now.' The clip, shared on ABC's social media went viral, garnering millions of views. Germaine Greer's 2012 crack about former prime minister Julia Gillard is infamous. Greer was responding to an audience question about Gillard's image. She initially defended the first female prime minister as an administrator who got things done, then went on to say: 'What I want her to do is get rid of those bloody jackets! … They don't fit … You've got a big arse, Julia. Get over it.' In a later interview with Channel Nine, Gillard said the incident made her feel 'sorry' for Greer. From 'being the feminist for our times, to end up talking like that for cheap laughs about another woman was a really sad thing,' Gillard said in 2014. Q+A became the most complained about ABC program of 2023, with a single November episode on the war in Gaza receiving almost 1,000 complaints, most of which accused the show of pro-Israel bias. That episode was particularly sensitive, host Patricia Karvelas had said at the start, and was recorded without a live studio audience, and with heavy police presence outside. The tense episode featured Labor MP Tim Watts, former ambassador to Israel Dave Sharma, Israel & Jewish Affairs Council chair, Mark Leibler, Australia Palestine Advocacy Network president, Nasser Mashni, and UN special rapporteur, Francesca Albanese. After the program, Albanese told Crikey the standard of Australia's media discourse was 'very basic'. Many viewers accused Karvelas on social media of not questioning members of the panel – especially Mashni and Albanese – fairly, or giving them equal time to speak. An investigation by the ABC's ombudsman said the episode presented highly polarising views in a fair and balanced way. The program as a whole received 2,100 complaints in 2023, according to ABC's ombudsman. Audience member Duncan Storrar laid out his situation in 2016: 'You're gonna lift the tax-free threshold for rich people. If you lift my tax-free threshold, that changes my life. That means that I get to say to my little girls, 'Daddy's not broke this weekend. We can go to the pictures'.' His question to then assistant treasurer Kelly O'Dwyer continued: 'I've got a disability and a low education, that means I've spent my whole life working for minimum wage … Rich people don't even notice their tax-free threshold lift. 'Why don't I get it? Why do they get it?' The part-time truck driver then became the focus of savage media coverage, particularly in the Newscorp press. ABC broadcaster Jon Faine grilled the outlet on its 'value system'. Many rallied online in support of Storrar, who thanked them, but told ABC's Media Watch, 'I didn't want this'. National director of lobby group GetUp!, Simon Sheikh, lost consciousness live on air in 2012. He slumped over the desk, before sitting back up after a few seconds and being helped off stage. He later posted that he was in hospital. Labor's climate change minister at the time, Greg Combet, rushed over to help. Liberal MP Sophie Mirabella, sitting right next to Sheikh, looked on in surprise and was criticised on social media for her reaction. GetUp! urged people to stop criticising her. 'It was an extraordinary circumstance and everyone was shocked,' the group said in a statement shared online. Mirabella said later: 'I thought initially he was just bent over laughing, because that's what you see, and turned around to try and get a better look and I – like everyone else on the panel – was just stunned.' Yassmin Abdel-Magied and Jacqui Lambie clashed in 2017, after the Tasmanian senator said all Muslims who supported sharia law should be deported from Australia, in a Trump-style ban. The author and Youth Without Borders founder responded that she was frustrated by uninformed comments about Islam, and that people were 'willing to completely negate any of my rights as a human being, a woman, as a person with agency simply because they have an idea about what my faith is about'. Lambie said: 'There is one law in this country and it is the Australian law … it is not sharia law, not in this country. Not in my day.' To which Abdel-Magied protested: 'You don't know anything about my religion,' adding that Islam specified the precedence of 'the law of the land that you are on'. Then-host Tony Jones had to intervene: 'Can I say, shouting at each other does not help. So please stop.' Lambie told Abdel-Magied to 'stop playing the victim. Your ban got lifted, get over it.' Abdel-Magied later wrote about the furious public response to her comments, describing herself as 'the most publicly hated Muslim in Australia'. A pro-Putin member of the audience was dramatically booted out of the studio in 2022 by then host Stan Grant after he asked a pro-Russia question. The audience member asked: 'As someone who comes from the Russian community here in Australia, I've been pretty outraged by the narrative created by our media depicting the Ukraine as 'the good guy' and Russia as 'the bad guy'.' 'Believe it or not, there are a lot of Russians here and around the world that support what Putin is doing in the Ukraine, myself included. Since 2014, the Ukrainian government together with Nazi groups like the Azov Battalion have besieged the Russian populations in the Donbas killing an estimated 13,000 people according to the United Nations,' he went on, prompting shouts of 'lies' from the audience. 'My question is: where was your outpouring of grief and concern for those thousands of mostly Russians?' Grant corrected the figures, noting the UN figure referred to the number of people killed in the conflict on both sides to date, and after a brief discussion the program moved on to other issues. But a few minutes later, he brought the conversation back: 'Something has been bothering me, I have to admit … people here have been talking about family who are suffering and people who are dying. You supported what's happening, hearing that people are dying. Can I just say – I'm just not comfortable with you being here. Could you please leave?' The audience applauded, as the audience member initially resisted, then left the studio. Grant said the question was not vetted by producers. The pro-Russian audience member said it was 'not true' the question was unvetted, but that he had made an 'addition' when asking it. Malcolm Turnbull's famous leather jacket made frequent appearances with the former prime minister on the Q+A panel. When Turnbull appeared on Q+A without the jacket, it made headlines. He later auctioned it for charity on eBay and raised $1,800 for Sydney's Wayside Chapel.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
People are just now learning the little-known Monopoly rule that could make the game end twice as fast
People have been left gobsmacked after discovering a lesser-known Monopoly rule that has the power to change the entire game - and make it end twice as fast. The host of the Triple M Breakfast radio show, Australian-born Beau Ryan, revealed the nifty trick during an episode that aired earlier this year. The instigator of hundreds of festive family rows, Monopoly is a popular board-game that's as well-known for its hours'-long play time as it is for sparking squabbles among competitive players. And while partly due to the impatience of its participants, some of the anguish in Monopoly can be blamed on its elusive rules - with many around the world seemingly playing by different guidelines. Speaking during the show, broadcast to Sydney locals, Beau said he'd had a huge 'realisation the other day' during a game with his son - in a clip shared on TikTok. Taking his turn, Beau found his piece landing on Park Lane, one of the more expensive and sought after 'properties' on the board With a higher value and rent afforded to other players who land on the square, it's often snapped up by strategic players, but not Beau on this occasion. He was shocked then, when after announcing he wouldn't be buying it, that his son piped up and said he'd like to purchase it instead. Baffled by the bid to buy the property, Beau said 'Hang on champion, you can't buy that, you didn't land on it.' Responding and correcting his father on the rules of the game, Beau's son said he could buy via 'auction'. Refusing to take the bait, the radio host was initially convinced his son was lying and only allowed him to buy the property when upon looking up the rules, realised he was right all along. 'I said that's not the rules but then I got them - and it is in the rules,' he continued. 'If anyone playing lands on a property in Monopoly, and they don't buy it, the other plays can auction it,' he said, astounded by the discovery. Equally baffled, fellow co-host Cat Lynch said: 'I didn't know that. You've blown my mind.' Having made the discovery, Beau wasn't convinced that the auction rules was something worth incorporating into gameplay. 'It ruins the game mate,' he countered. 'Because if you're not sure an then they say they're buying it, it turns into sort of an alpha situation.' A clip from the breakfast show, that aired in April this year, has since been shared on TikTok, where hundreds of exasperated Monopoly fans dashed to the comment section to express their surprise. 'Hold on a minute. Is this an Australian rule?' one viewer asked in disbelief. A second couldn't believe that it was the first some players were hearing of it, writing, 'how does no one know this, it's designed to make the game 2x quicker.' Another wrote: '99 per cent of people haven't read the rules of monopoly. Monopoly is an AWFUL game but if you play with the actual rules - all the rules - it's bearable and doesn't last hours.' 'Monopoly has been banned in my parents house since 1978 after one bro flipped the table and the other bro (banker) got into a fist fight,' one chimed. And it seems Beau's claims were correct. A clip from the breakfast show, that aired in April this year, has since been shared on TikTok, where hundreds of exasperated Monopoly fans dashed to the comment section to express their surprise According to the official Monopoly rules: 'Whenever a player lands on an unowned property he may buy that property from the Bank at its printed price [...] If he does not wish to buy the property it is sold at auction by the Banker to the highest bidder.' Monopoly fans were treated to a number of genius tactics last year, when money saving expert Martin Lewis shared his clever tricks for winning the game. Sharing the strategies on his ITV show, Martin Lewis: How to Win at Board Games, the money saving expert explained that there are several things you can do to beat other players and improve your odds. His first tip is to buy as many properties as possible during the early stages of the game. Martin said that it was also important to calculate the return on investment on each property, meaning how much you purchased it for versus how much you can earn back from rent. However, not all properties are created equal. Although the most expensive ones start out being the best investment, this changes once houses and hotels are added. Those wanting to win should aim to purchase the three light blue cards which are The Angel, Islington, Euston Road and Pentonville Road, as these can generate the most money once hotels are added to them. After that, he recommends swooping up the orange cards comprising of Vine Street, Marlborough Street, and Bow Street. Martin highlighted that these are the properties that players are most likely to land on after they've just gotten out of jail. The worst set to buy in his opinion are the pricey greens - including Bond Street, Oxford Street, and Regent Street. Therefore, Martin shared, it is vital to buy one of each colour, so you can block opponents and have some leverage when it comes to doing deals later down the line. Martin added that if you have cards that are not part of a set, you should mortgage them to the bank for extra money to buy houses, since they're unlikely to generate much income for you.


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
I've found the perfect summer top from M&S, and I'm even more excited now I can finally shop there online again
IT can be heard to find a versatile top to style up for day or night without resorting to the same old T-shirt. So it's no wonder there's a new option from Marks & Spencer that has fashion fans all excited. 3 3 Mum-of-two Irene is among them, and took to her Instagram page to share a look at the top in question. The £35 option comes in cream or black, and features a "classic round neckline" and button up back. But it's the detail on the hem that really ups the wow factor - a gorgeous fringe trim. "How cute is this top from Marks & Spencer?" Irene captioned her Instagram Reel. In the video, she teamed the cream top with a pair of wide-legged cream trousers, metallic sandals and a straw beach-style bag. She added some cute jewellery and wore her hair in loose, beachy waves. And other people were quick to add to Irene's praise of the top. "Love this!" one wrote. As another agreed: "It's truly cute!" "Fringe trims give this elegant top a fun, free-spirited twist," M&S said of the Collection top on their website. Shoppers run for summer's 'wow factor' denim jacket in M&S, it's set to go viral "The textured detailing adds movement and flair, perfect for lifting everyday outfits." Shoppers haven't been able to nab anything from M&S online for over a month, following a damaging cyber attack over Easter weekend in April. Personal data of customers, which may have included names, email addresses, dates of birth and postal addresses, was taken in the attack - after which M&S halted online orders. But now the outlet is once again accepting online orders on certain products - with "more of our fashion, home and beauty products will be added every day", John Lyttle, M&S managing director of clothing, home and beauty, said. In a statement posted on social media, he added: "We will resume deliveries to Northern Ireland and Click and Collect in the coming weeks. "Thank you sincerely for your support and for shopping with us." Luckily enough, the fringe top is one of the products available to buy from the M&S website now. However, due to demand, delivery will take around 10 days.