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Irina Shayk, 39, looks sensational as she shows off her washboard abs in cream bikini

Irina Shayk, 39, looks sensational as she shows off her washboard abs in cream bikini

Scottish Sun2 days ago

Irina Shayk is dating a sporting mega-star again after a brief relationship in 2023
IN GREAT SHAYK Irina Shayk, 39, looks sensational as she shows off her washboard abs in cream bikini
SUPERMODEL Irina Shayk hits the right tone in a new swimwear campaign.
The Russian, 39, showed off her tum in a cream bikini for a shoot in Majorca for El Corte Ingles' new summer collection.
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Irina Shayk showed off her figure in a cream bikini in a Majorca photoshoot
Credit: Capture Media Agency
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Supermodel Irina was posing for El Corte Ingles' new summer collection
Credit: Capture Media Agency
It comes as she has rekindled her romance with gridiron legend Tom Brady, 47, who she dated in 2023.
They last dated four years after her split from actor Bradley Cooper, 50, with whom she shares a daughter, Lea, seven.
She is a model and television personality best known for being one of the faces of Victoria's Secret and, more recently, Rihanna's buzzing lingerie brand, Savage X Fenty.
However, the model has grown globally and walked the runway for fashion brands including Fendi, Chanel, Tory Burch, Vivienne Westwood, and more.
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She also never fails to grace the covers of magazines like Vogue, Bazaar, and Allure.
Due to her high success in the fashion world, Shayk has accumulated quite a fortune.
Her net worth is believed to be around $25million, as per Celebrity Net Worth.
Irina recently displayed her washboard abs in a mirror selfie taken during her time away in the sunny European country.
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Model Irina Shayk wows as she shows off amazing figure in black bikini on Italian holiday

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Rio Ferdinand TNT Sports farewell in full as Laura Woods bids emotional goodbye
Rio Ferdinand TNT Sports farewell in full as Laura Woods bids emotional goodbye

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Rio Ferdinand TNT Sports farewell in full as Laura Woods bids emotional goodbye

Rio Ferdinand is turning his attention away from punditry to focus on his production company and his family as the Champions League final marked his final showing for TNT Rio Ferdinand expressed his gratitude to the TNT Sports team as he brought the curtain down on his time with the channel following the Champions League final. The former Manchester United defender watched on as a pundit for the broadcaster for the final time as Paris Saint-Germain decimated Inter Milan 5-0. Ferdinand announced in the build up to Europe's highest-profile match that his trip to the Allianz Arena in Munich would see him step away from a hectic schedule. The ex-England international spent a decade travelling as part of the BT Sport and then TNT team covering Premier League and European action, and plans to spend more time with his family. ‌ Ferdinand will also work with his management firm New Era and focus more of time on his production company, on which he produces podcasts and conducts interviews. ' Rio Ferdinand Presents' has more than 1.3 million subscribers on YouTube ‌ In the build up to PSG's victory, presenter Laura Woods offered a nod to it being a poignant night for her colleague. The TNT star offered a moment for Ferdinand to reflect. She asked him on air: "Rio, you've just been taking it all in, haven't you?' "Yeah, I have," he replied. "I've been in the city for three days now. It's been a bit of a lads' tour. We've been loving it." ‌ And Ferdinand went on to deliver a gracious speech, paying tribute to those he'd worked with on and off he camera. "I just want to say thank you to everybody that I've worked with," he said. "My job was made a lot easier by the great people and friends that I have worked with and will remain friends for many years. ‌ "As important as the people you see on the screen are the people behind the screen that do all the jobs to get us here and enable us to put our best foot forward are all appreciated. Again, thank you to everybody who has been a part of it." Fellow TNT pundit Steven Gerrard asked if his former team-mate was now going to have a cold beer, Ferdinand replied: "All the beers are on me!" Ferdinand and TNT Sports remain on good terms and it may not be the last time he appears for the broadcaster. The channel will take over FA Cup rights next season, and there may still be opportunities for him to appear as a special guest. ‌ Woods paid a final tribute to Ferdinand before signing off. "From us here at TNT Sport, to you. That is it for your career here, for now," she said. "Can I just say on behalf of all of us - including everyone behind the camera - you've been an absolute pleasure. And personally since I joined, you've been so incredibly welcoming. You'll be sorely, sorely missed."

11 of the most memorable adverts of the 1980s, including ridiculously catchy jingles
11 of the most memorable adverts of the 1980s, including ridiculously catchy jingles

Scotsman

time3 hours ago

  • Scotsman

11 of the most memorable adverts of the 1980s, including ridiculously catchy jingles

These infectious advertising jingles will transport you back to the 80s Sign up to our Retro newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, 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... They are the adverts and jingles that you just couldn't get out of your head They helped to sell us everything from butter and sweets to toys Is your favourite ad from the 80s featured in our rundown of the best of the decade? These are some of the most memorable adverts of the 1980s | Various Forget the actual programmes, the adverts are sometimes the best things on TV. That was especially true during the 1980s, which were a golden age for advertising, long before streaming became a thing. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Below are some of the greatest ads of the 80s, which used a combination of classic British humour, catchy jingles and some animated wizardry to persuade us to part with our hard-earned cash. Apologies in advance if you'd only just managed to get these ear-worms out of your head after all these years, as they'll probably be wriggling around there for a little longer now. Shake n' Vac Housework has never looked as fun as the actor Jenny Logan made it appear in the classic ads for the carpet freshener Shake n' Vac. She is seen twirling round her living room as she vacuums in her high heels while singing the unforgettable lyrics 'do the Shake n' Vac and put the freshness back'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad How long Shake n' Vac kept your carpet fresh for is unclear, but once that jingle made it into your head it was there for good. Milk Tray The popular Milk Tray ads of the 80s made chocolate sexy, featuring adrenaline-filled action sequences which mirrored the thrill of a James Bond movie. Gary Myers was the original Milk Tray Man, who went to extraordinary lengths to deliver the said chocs to the object of his affections, 'all because the lady loves Milk Tray'. That included diving into shark infested waters, invading a heavily-guarded castle and displaying some daring skiing skills to escape an avalanche. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Cornetto What's not to love about gliding down the canals of Venice, licking an ice cream and being serenaded by a bouffant-haired Italian stud with an implausibly wide-collared shirt? This was the stuff of dreams portrayed in the famous Cornetto ads of the early 80s, in which the classic line 'just one Cornetto, give it to me' is belted out opera-style. Things sadly turn sour when the deep-voiced dreamboat plucks the ice cream from the woman's hands as their gondolas pass. She can't say she hadn't been warned! Lurpak Long before Aardman Animations became synonymous with the claymation adventures of Wallace and Gromit, it produced this classic ad for Lurpak butter. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad A snorkel-wearing Douglas the Butterman is seen emerging from a buttered crumpet before advising us to 'spread a little creaminess the Lurpak way', to the strains of a gentle melody. He then grabs a couple of butter knives and rows across the table in this clever advert, which showcases the skills of the team who were also behind the award-winning music video for Peter Gabriel's song Sledgehammer. National Dairy Council This is the ad which spawned a generation of milk lovers, especially in the red half of Merseyside. Produced at the height of Ian Rush's goal-scoring prowess for Liverpool, a young boy is seen guzzling milk straight from the bottle. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad When his friend expresses his disgust, he replies 'It's what Ian Rush drinks', before adding 'he said if I didn't drink lots of milk, when I grow up I'll only be good enough to play for Accrington Stanley'. His friend then delivers the classic line: 'Accrington Stanley, who are they?' The ad was replayed many times in January 2025 when Liverpool were drawn to play Accrington Stanley in the FA Cup. The Premier League giants had clearly been drinking enough milk as they secured a comfortable 4-0 victory over their League Two opponents. Trebor Softmints Another animated triumph is this stylish advert for Trebor Softmints, featuring a rewritten version of the hit song Mr Soft by Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The Mr Soft character, looking a little like an underinflated Michelin Man, is seen strolling jauntily down a street in which everything is white, padded and bouncing merrily along to the catchy tune. He casually flicks a mint into the mouth of a swaying postbox, which chomps away eagerly, before walking into a lamppost and collapsing to the ground. The ad features the catchline: 'Bite through the shell of a Trebor Spearmint Softmint and everything turns chewy and soft.' Many people described this as their favourite advert growing up, but a few said it gave them nightmares when they were young. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Toys 'R' Us This is surely one of the most memorable advertising jingles for any child growing up during the late 80s or early 90s, most of whom will be able to recite the lyrics - at least in part. The animated ad shows a cartoon giraffe called Geoffrey and his team of young assistants stacking the shelves of the famous toy store overnight, ready for opening. The jingle, sung in hushed tones, opens with the lyrics: 'It's a magical world, we're on our way there, with toys in their millions all under one roof. It's called Toys 'R' Us.' Bird's Eye Potato Waffles These tea time staples gave us one of the catchiest jingles of the 80s, reminding us how they're 'waffly versatile'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It rattles through a host of serving suggestions, including beans, bangers, bacon, burgers and fish fingers, before instructing us to 'grill 'em, bake 'em, fry 'em, eat 'em'. The jingle was so catchy it was revived many years later in a sing-along karaoke style version, with the words appearing at the bottom of the screen and a waffle bouncing along above them to the tune. Kwik Fit This classic 80s ad features not just a memorable jingle but some great dance moves to accompany it from the team of merry mechanics. When a beleaguered motorist pulls into a Kwik Fit garage, she's so impressed by the speedy service she asks 'how do you do it?'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Cue the mechanics bursting into song and dance as they belt out the lyrics: 'You can't get better than a Kwik Fit fitter. We're the boys to trust.' She doesn't seem bothered that they don't actually answer her question. The tune feels like it could be a collaboration between Chas & Dave and Madness, with a Cockney-style knees-up of a dance to match. Vitalite The dairy-free spread Vitalite gave Lurpak's Douglas the Butterman a run for his money with this simple cartoon ad, set to the infectious tune of Israelites by Desmond Dekker & the Aces. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad A sunglasses-wearing animated sun can be seen spreading Vitalite on a piece of toast as he sings along accompanied by a chorus of crooning sunflowers 'Made with pure sunflower oil, and with a taste that'll make you shine, ooooooh, ooooooh, Vitalite,' they sing. Club biscuits This jingle might just be the catchiest of the lot, thanks to its simplicity. The ad features just one line: 'If you like a lot of chocolate on your biscuit, join our club.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It's repeated ad nauseum by various groups of people enjoying the park - the message being 'who doesn't like a lot of chocolate on their biscuit?'. One fan said: 'My favourite advert of all time. So catchy, it's a permanent earworm.' Have we missed out your favourite ad from the 1980s? We'd love to know which other memorable adverts you think should have made the list. Do you have retro pictures or nostalgic memories to share with us? Send them online via YourWorld at It's free to use and, once checked, your story or picture will appear on our website and, space allowing, in our newspapers.

Farewell tour? As Bruce Springsteen says, he 'ain't going anywhere'
Farewell tour? As Bruce Springsteen says, he 'ain't going anywhere'

The Herald Scotland

time4 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Farewell tour? As Bruce Springsteen says, he 'ain't going anywhere'

An insight into the discipline it takes to deliver a high-quality show was provided by Springsteen himself, in his autobiography Born to Run. After his long-term saxophone player, Clarence ('The Big Man') Clemons, died in 2011, Springsteen eventually got around to auditioning Clemons's nephew, Jake, for the role. Jake, however, arrived an hour late, having got lost en route, and then said he 'sort of' knew the handful of songs Springsteen had sent him. "Lesson number one", The Boss, evidently unimpressed, records in the book: in the E Street Band they don't 'sort of' do anything. "James Brown was my father, god and hero as bandleader. Sam Moore was also a great inspiration. At their best, these were men whose lives forbade them to f--- around with the thing that was lifting them up. On the bandstand, with their bands, they gave NO QUARTER!" And then Springsteen wrote this: "People always asked me how the band played like it did night after night, almost murderously consistent, never stagnant and always full balls to the wall. "There are two answers. One is they loved and respected their jobs, one another, their leader and the audience. The other is ...because I MADE them! Do not underestimate the second answer. I need Jake to understand them both". Bruce SpringsteenNow, in 2025, he and the E Streeters – with Jake on sax – are on the road again, playing a string of 16 European dates. The shows are as high-energy and as life-affirming as they ever were. The set-lists range far and wide over Springsteen's peerless collection of great songs. The most recent, from Lille, includes No Surrender, Promised Land, The River, House of a Thousand Guitars, Letter to You, The Rising, Thunder Road, with the encores ranging from Born in the USA to Born to Run and Dancing in the Dark. Two years ago, when the band was touring the US and Europe, there were whispers to the effect that it wouldn't be a surprise if Springsteen, then 73, were to quit life on the road. One respected critic was bowled over by the relentless energy on display at a gig in Barcelona. Yet for how much longer, he wondered, could Springsteen and his crew pull off this trick? As uplifting as the show was, there had been an underlying poignancy to proceedings, "a sense that this is reluctantly, defiantly, yet inevitably coming to an end. If you haven't had the pleasure of seeing the greatest rock star of our time with the greatest rock and roll band in the world, I would urge you to catch this tour when it arrives on our shores. Right now, Springsteen is undeniably still the Boss. But I have a sneaking suspicion that this tour might be him handing in his notice". Springsteen gave such notions short shrift, telling a Philadelphia audience in August 2024: 'We've been around 50 f***ing years and we ain't quitting!' he said. 'We ain't doing no farewell tour bulls***! Jesus Christ! No farewell tour for the E Street Band! Hell no. Farewell to what? Thousands of people screaming your name? Yeah, I wanna quit that. That's it. That's all it takes. I ain't goin' anywhere.' The current leg of the Land of Hope and Dreams tour, which kicked off with three dates at Manchester's Co-Op arena in mid-May, will cap a tour that began in February 2023. The current run of 130 dates has sold in excess of four million tickets. At the opening date in Manchester Springsteen made headlines with an impassioned verbal assault on the Trump White House. 'In my home', he declared, 'the America I love, the America I've written about, that has been a beacon of hope and liberty for 250 years, is currently in the hands of a corrupt, incompetent and treasonous administration. Tonight, we ask all who believe in democracy and the best of our American experience, to rise with us, raise your voices against authoritarianism and let freedom ring'. US authorities under Trump, he added, were 'persecuting people for using their right to free speech and voicing their dissent'. In America, the richest men 'are taking satisfaction in abandoning the world's poorest children to sickness and death ... In my country, they're taking sadistic pleasure in the pain that they inflict on loyal American workers'. Historic civil-rights legislation was being rolled back, he continued. Great allies were being abandoned, and leading universities were being defunded. Springsteen quickly issued a six-track digital EP containing those words, and four songs – Land of Hope and Dreams, Long Walk Home, My City of Ruins and Bob Dylan's Chimes of Freedom – from the concert. Read more Trump responded in characteristically thin-skinned fashion, saying: "This dried out 'prune' of a rocker (his skin is all atrophied!) ought to KEEP HIS MOUTH SHUT until he gets back into the Country". He later demanded a 'major investigation' into Springsteen, Beyoncé, Oprah Winfrey and Bono, alleging that Kamala Harris, his beaten opponent last year, had broken campaign-finance law by paying the first three for their endorsements. Springsteen, for his part, has been supported by such musicians as Neil Young, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, and Tom Morello. Bono, asked by US TV host Jimmy Kimmel for his take on the spat between Springsteen and Trump, said: 'I think there's only one 'Boss' in America'. In a guest essay in the New York Times, Eric Alterman, author of a book about Springsteen, noted Trump's 'petty rage' at the musician for his Manchester remarks, adding: "Perhaps Mr. Trump worried that a simple, uncompromised patriotic message on offer from a man who is arguably the nation's most beloved male rock star would break through to his fans". In Springsteen's native New Jersey, a tribute band that plays his songs had to find a new venue for a gig after the owner of the original venue cancelled, saying he was worried about Springsteen's remarks about Trump. The European gigs by the E Street Band have been rapturously received, with Uncut magazine's reviewer, Dave Simpson, observing that Springsteen delivered "what must surely be the most politically-charged show of his career. As he stands just feet from the front rows, video screens show the singer's face furrow with concentration as he delivers every line with passion, precision and often venom. "Springsteen is 75 years old now. His hair is greyer and wirier. He no longer plays guitar on his back or does knee slides across the stage like he did in his youth, but he's still more than capable of helming a powerhouse two and a half hour show which never once loses fire, brimstone or focus. The main members of the E Street Band are now in their 70s too, but with saxophonist Jake Clemons replacing his late, legendary uncle Clarence, they roar away as inimitably as ever". In the meantime, a huge, nine-LP/seven-CD box set, Tracks II: The Lost Albums, covering Springsteen's career between 1983 and 2018, will be released on June 27. The never-before-released albums contain no fewer than 83 songs. A companion offering – Lost And Found: Selections from The Lost Albums — will feature 20 songs from across the collection, and will also go on sale on June 27. * Springsteen and the E Street Band play Liverpool's Anfield stadium on June 4 and 7.

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