logo
Essex model Jodie Marsh tells court why she took meerkat to pub

Essex model Jodie Marsh tells court why she took meerkat to pub

BBC News25-04-2025

Former model Jodie Marsh defended taking a meerkat called Mabel to the pub as she appealed against a licencing decision involving her animal sanctuary.Ms Marsh was at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on Friday to fight the refusal of an application for a wild animal licence to keep lemurs.The media personality, who trained as a bodybuilder, said online trolls were behind much of the criticism of Fripps Farm in Lindsell, near Braintree, in Essex.Ms Marsh, 46, said: "When I was bodybuilding they trolled me for that, when I was modelling they trolled me for that; now it's the animals."
Uttlesford District Council rejected her application in September 2024. At Friday's hearing, Ms Marsh's lawyer, Paul Oakley, asked her about a report, prepared for the council by vet Dr Stephen Philp, which raised questions about whether it was appropriate to grant the licence.Ms Marsh said the vet was "basing his evidence off my trolls and neighbours".Mr Oakley asked her about a comment she made in an interview with Nigel Farage on GB News that she took a meerkat called Mabel to the pub "four nights per week".Ms Marsh told the hearing: "That was banter, that was me being funny."She said she had taken the meerkat to a pub "on a few occasions" when the animal was being hand-reared.Ms Marsh added: "It's not illegal to take a meerkat in a pub".
She was asked about an incident where she lifted a goose by the neck while filming a video about ducklings."I plopped it [the goose] on to the pond," she said.Ms Marsh said it had not been hurt in the incident, and she had stopped it attacking the ducklings. She told the court the animal sanctuary was "not overstocked, we have that in writing from Defra who are the only people who matter when it comes to animal welfare".Asked by Mark Smith, for the council, about issues of noise in relation to lemurs, Ms Marsh said "the noise was never a factor"."We're all set in five acres of land," she said.She added that her application "didn't get rejected because of noise - it got rejected because I touched a goose by its neck and took a meerkat to bed with me".Ms Marsh appeared in the ITV series Essex Wives in 2002 and went on to feature in several reality shows and magazines.She founded Fripps Farm, which looks after animals including alpacas, emus and reptiles, in 2020.She has previously spoken of how she has helped fund the animal sanctuary through her use of the website OnlyFans.In 2023, she told BBC Essex that OnlyFans was "amazing" and "paid my staff wages for the first year".The case was adjourned part-heard until May 28, when it will resume at Colchester Magistrates' Court.
Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Porn Britannia, Xi's absence & no more lonely hearts?
Porn Britannia, Xi's absence & no more lonely hearts?

Spectator

time3 hours ago

  • Spectator

Porn Britannia, Xi's absence & no more lonely hearts?

OnlyFans is giving the Treasury what it wants – but should we be concerned? 'OnlyFans,' writes Louise Perry, 'is the most profitable content subscription service in the world.' Yet 'the vast majority of its content creators make very little from it'. So why are around 4 per cent of young British women selling their wares on the site? 'Imitating Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips – currently locked in a competition to have sex with the most men in a day – isn't pleasant.' OnlyFans gives women 'the sexual attention and money of hundreds and even thousands of men'. The result is 'a cascade of depravity' that Perry wouldn't wish on her worst enemy. In business terms, however, OnlyFans is a 'staggering success', according to economics editor Michael Simmons. 'Britain's sex industry brings in far more to the economy than politicians are comfortable admitting'; OnlyFans might just be Britain's most profitable tech start-up. 'If we are going to wage a moral war on porn,' Simmons argues, 'we should at least be honest about what we're sacrificing.' Louise and Michael joined the podcast to discuss further (1:21). Next: could Xi Jinping's time be up? Historian Francis Pike writes about the unusual absence of China's President Xi. China-watchers have detected some subtle differences from the norm in Chinese media, from fewer official references to Xi to changes in routine politburo meetings. So, could Xi Jinping be forced to step down? And if so, who is on manoeuvres and why? Francis joined the podcast alongside former diplomat Kerry Brown, professor of China Studies at King's College London (22:31). And finally: is the era of the lonely hearts ad coming to an end? Tony Whitehead provides his notes on lonely hearts columns this week, writing about how, 330 years after they first appeared in print in Britain, they may soon disappear. Francesca Beauman – who literally wrote the book on the subject, Shapely Ankle Preferr'd – and Mark Mason join the podcast to provide their favourite examples, from the serious to the humorous (35:13). Hosted by William Moore and Lara Prendergast. Produced by Patrick Gibbons.

Why OnlyFans has young British women in its grip
Why OnlyFans has young British women in its grip

Spectator

time9 hours ago

  • Spectator

Why OnlyFans has young British women in its grip

The porn star Bonnie Blue offers a straightforward explanation for her decision to join OnlyFans. She was in her early twenties, married to her teenage sweetheart, pursuing a career in recruitment and living in Derbyshire, the county of her birth. As she told an interviewer last year: 'I used to work an office job, nine to five, sit in rush hour, get given 20 days' annual leave. And for a while I'd accepted that. I was like 'OK, this is what life is. This is as good as it can get.'' But Blue (whose real name is Tia Billinger) wondered if life might not have more to offer her. So she left her husband, moved to Australia and pursued a new business idea: having sex with hundreds of (in her words) 'barely legal' teenage boys and uploading the footage to subscription-based, content-sharing platform OnlyFans. 'I just wanted a better life,' she insists. And, in her opinion, OnlyFans gave that to her. Now 26, Blue has become world famous for the escalating depravity of her stunts. She was planning to host what she called a 'petting zoo' event this weekend, in which as many as 2,000 men would be given sexual access to her over 24 hours, all on camera. She cancelled the stunt after an online backlash, but promised to replace it with the 'craziest, largest livestream ever' instead. OnlyFans is the most profitable content subscription service in the world. Subscribers pay monthly fees to creators in return for access to images, videos and personal interaction via messaging or video calls. Yet even though the platform generated £4.5 billion in gross revenue last year, the vast majority of its content creators make very little from it. The mean annual income is less than £1,000. Not only are most OnlyFans creators not as rich as Bonnie Blue, who claims to make £1.5 million a month, most of them are barely covering the costs of their electricity bill. And yet the site continues to attract enormous numbers of would-be stars. Britain is host to 280,000 creator accounts, giving us one of the highest concentrations in the world. Eighty-four per cent of those accounts are run by women, and if they are all (give or take) between the ages of 18 and 34, then we can estimate that just shy of 4 per cent of young British women are selling their wares on OnlyFans. Of course, not all of them will be behaving like Bonnie Blue, but these figures nevertheless demand some kind of explanation. Men and women with the same kind of psychological weakness can now mutually exploit one another online It's not as if the work is pleasant. You don't make it big by selling the softcore stuff. The latest competition among top creators is over who can have sex with the most men in a day. In December, British OnlyFans star Lily Phillips – also, oddly, from Derbyshire – filmed herself having sex with 101 of her subscribers in a London Airbnb. In the resultant documentary, titled I Slept With 100 Men in One Day, the cameraman entered the bedroom at the end of the event and was so appalled by the smell that he retched. Phillips herself was reduced to tears by the experience, but this did not deter other women from attempting to beat her record. In January, Bonnie Blue (of course) claimed to have had sex with 1,057 men in 12 hours, and last month Australian creator Annie Knight was hospitalised after a stunt involving 583 men. Whatever OnlyFans is, it isn't easy. For creators like Blue, Phillips and Knight, their 'work' is gruelling, disgusting, painful and dangerous. If you're a beautiful and cynical young woman intent on becoming rich, it would surely be far easier to seek out a wealthy husband, particularly given the fact that a history of prostitution – online or offline – will make most eligible men run a mile. OnlyFans is to the marriage market what a criminal record is to the job market, and yet a significant number of young British women have jeopardised their future relationship prospects. Why? Mental illness of some kind, perhaps – a crushing sense of insecurity or a drive towards self-harm. Or maybe creators have the gambling addict's inability to weigh up risks vs benefits. It's also possible that some are so desperate for cash they're willing to risk their children or even their grandchildren one day coming across their most hardcore content (in this regard, OnlyFans is a riskier proposition than 'normal' prostitution, since the images remain in circulation forever). I suspect there's something else at play, too, and it can best be understood by looking at the other side of the OnlyFans exchange – the men paying for it all. Online porn is a classic example of a supernormal stimulus: that is, an exaggerated stimulus that elicits a stronger response than the natural, evolved stimulus it resembles. The relationship between normal sex and online porn is similar to the relationship between normal food and the most ingeniously designed ultra-processed food. Both porn and junk food are supernormal stimuli that scramble the brain, inducing not only a heightened response, but also a desire for more stimulation – the 'once you pop, you can't stop' effect. I'm reliably informed by various male writers – Sophocles, Kingsley Amis, Russell Brand – that being possessed of a young man's libido feels like being chained to a lunatic. And that's in normal circumstances, without the addling effects of tech. Female sexuality functions differently. Yes, women watch online porn too, and some of them end up addled by it. But when women seek out erotic stimulation it's much more likely to be in the form of smutty novels, which – while they might encourage unrealistic expectations – are hardly addictive. The online super stimulus that really knocks women sideways is not the consumption of sexual content, but the production of it. Women want to be beautiful as fiercely and obsessively as men want to get laid. I'm generalising, of course, but if you're in any doubt about the strength of this kind of female desire, look at the size of the cosmetics and fashion industries. Female vanity is not new, and nor is it surprising. Beauty profoundly affects how you're treated in many areas of life. People who are conventionally unattractive suffer all kinds of adversity: they are more often passed over for promotion and more likely to struggle to make friends. Being ugly is not a trivial misfortune – which means, conversely, that becoming more beautiful can radically improve a person's life. No wonder so many women are obsessed with achieving the perfect glow-up. And bear in mind that silvered glass mirrors did not become widely available until the 1830s. Before then, most people would go their entire lives without seeing a clear image of themselves. They would see blurry images in water or other partially reflective surfaces, and they would know from the responses of other people whether or not they were beautiful. But they could not minutely examine their appearances in the way that a mirror or a photograph permits, and nor could they elicit worldwide admiration in the way that the internet permits. Image-based social media is a supernormal stimulus for women, particularly young and attractive ones. Posting a sexy selfie is a guaranteed means of attracting sexual attention from men and 'You go, girl' compliments from other women, all of which induce a fizzy feeling of self-esteem in a woman evolved to cherish her own beauty. OnlyFans then goes a step further, giving women access to the sexual attention and money of hundreds or even thousands of men. Most women are not vulnerable to this temptation, in the same way that most men are not vulnerable to becoming porn addicts. But thanks to the technological sophistry of OnlyFans, men and women with the same kind of psychological weakness can now find their counterparts and mutually exploit one another online. The result is a cascade of depravity, as the likes of Bonnie Blue compete for more and more of what they are addicted to: sexual attention. Blue insists that she neither wants nor needs our pity, and I'm sure that the men who pay for her content would say the same thing. But I think we should offer them pity anyway. Being on OnlyFans is a curse I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy, whatever side of the interaction they find themselves on.

Scots teacher sacked after pupils found OnlyFans account says subscribers skyrocketed after scandal broke
Scots teacher sacked after pupils found OnlyFans account says subscribers skyrocketed after scandal broke

Scottish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Scots teacher sacked after pupils found OnlyFans account says subscribers skyrocketed after scandal broke

She revealed hundreds of new fans have flocked to her X-rated page BOOMING & BUST Scots teacher sacked after pupils found OnlyFans account says subscribers skyrocketed after scandal broke A PHYSICS miss struck off for selling racy pictures insisted there are other Scots teachers on OnlyFans. Kirsty Buchan, 34, claimed parents would be 'surprised' by how many classroom staff are anonymously flogging naked snaps online. 2 Kirsty worked as a Physics teacher at Bannerman High School in Baillieston, Glasgow Credit: Facebook 2 She told how her 14-year-old son Nathan fully supports her Credit: Kirsty Buchan And she revealed hundreds of new fans have flocked to her X-rated page after she was removed from the teaching register by regulators on Monday. Mum Kirsty, of Coatbridge, said: 'I've noticed a boost in my subscribers, a couple hundred more. 'It's crazy. You'd be surprised at how many teachers are doing it. 'I'm only known because I've got the balls — or rather the boobs — to do what I do and own up to it. 'A lot of people do it with a mask on to remain anonymous. 'There's teachers doing OnlyFans just the same way there's teachers drinking and taking drugs.' Kirsty's sexy sideline was exposed in December 2022 when a link to her 'Jessica Jackrabbit' profile on the adult subscription site was shared with schoolkids. It led to complaints and her resignation from Bannerman High in Baillieston, Glasgow. Now the General Teaching Council for Scotland has ruled she 'used her profession as a selling tool' — while her old school was regarded as 'synonymous with having an OnlyFans teacher'. ONLY STARS ON IT AS WELL CELEBRITIES have also turned to Only Fans to boost their former Olympic skater Elise Christie, 34, set up an account after retiring. The Foundations singer Kate Nash, 37, posts pictures of her bottom to support touring costs. Singer and actress Lily Allen, 40, flogs photos of her feet and says it makes her more cash than Spotify. Kurts Adams Rozentals, 22, an Olympic hopeful canoeist, posts content to help with training costs. Kirsty today appeared on Good Morning Britain and revealed she is still backed by former pupils and teacher pals. Teacher and OnlyFans star fired after students discovered she filmed herself having sex in classroom speaks out She told presenter Susanna Reid: 'I've had messages from all my old colleagues, and all the school kids still support me to this day. I've still got that bond with them.' And she stressed son Nathan, 14, fully supports her work. She revealed: 'I asked him what he'd do if anyone he knew saw me naked and made a comment to him. He said he'd say, 'shut up or I'll hit you with my wallet'.' The GTCS said it did not comment on individual cases.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store