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Katherine Ryan reveals ‘oversharing' celebs on her podcast have admitted smoking crack cocaine

Katherine Ryan reveals ‘oversharing' celebs on her podcast have admitted smoking crack cocaine

The Sun2 days ago

KATHERINE Ryan has come to expect strangers to tell her their guilty secrets.
But the comic, who regularly reveals all about herself, was shocked to hear about the dark pasts of celebrity pals on her new podcast about ageing.
Katherine has so far been joined by singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor, presenter Olivia Attwood, footballer Jill Scott, and in an upcoming episode Katie Price.
At London's SXSW festival, she joked: 'I love people who overshare, it does not surprise me.
"Now people stop me on the street to tell me about their divorces.
'But I was shocked to learn we had crackheads on the podcast.
"We had so many celebs, especially famous in the Nineties, who would abuse drugs, and bounce back.'
What's My Age Again? drops every Tuesday.
KELLY ROWLAND will replace LeAnnn Rimes as a coach on The Voice UK when the ITV talent show comes back for a 14th series this summer.
The Destiny's Child singer, who was a judge on The X Factor in 2011, said: 'I am excited to join The Voice UK and I am looking forward to working with the excellent and passionate coaches the show is known for.'
Harriet's farm hand
Celebrations looked to be in store Harriet Cowan kept a firm hand on balloons for a barnyard bash in Chipping Norton last weekend.
She held on to the balloons, of farm animals and a tractor that resembled Jeremy Clarkson 's beloved Lamborghini.
3
Harriet shot to fame as the new farmhand on the fourth series of Clarkson's Farm on Prime Video last month.
With Jeremy unable to call upon Kaleb Cooper 's help, Harriet stepped in and she has put rumours of bad blood with Kaleb to bed.
She told BBC Derby: 'Kaleb's amazing. Me and him got on really well.
Shock moment Katherine Ryan jokes about Holly Willoughby's kidnap ordeal and Alison Hammond's weight live on stage
'He's another farmer to add to my phone list to ring. Everyone checks in to make sure everyone's fine.'
It feels good to the cast
They get up close and personal in the TV adaptation of Paris Lees 's memoir What It Feels Like For A Girl, but it wasn't hard for the BBC Three show's cast to get along.
Lead actor Ellis Howard has revealed he and his co-stars, including Michael Socha and Hannah Walters, hit it off from the get-go.
At the SXSW festival Ellis said: 'It started in the final round of casting.
"I walked in and [co-star] Laquarn Lewis was in an Anne Summers one-piece with his arse hanging out.
"Then Hannah Jones walked over in eight-inch heels, and I was like, 'What the f***ing hell? It's ten in the morning in Walthamstow'.
'They crashed into my life, but it felt like something was hot-wired in my brain, like I'd been searching my whole life for a connection, and I did with these two.'
Laquarn, who plays Lady Di, added: 'We support each other 24/7, though [in] the WhatsApp group, I'm on 'Do Not Disturb' at the minute!'
What It Feels Like For A Girl is on BBC iPlayer now.
Filming has started on new legal drama Pierre, starring David Harewood.
The six-part Channel 4 series will see the award-winning actor play glamorous duty solicitor Pierre.
But his character is put to the test when he investigates the suspicious death of a client and begins to uncover a chilling web of corruption.
Joining the cast are Boiling Point's Jason Flemyng, Hijack's Nikkita Chadha and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet's Christopher Fairbank.

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Highgate cemetery families confront bosses in row over new building
Highgate cemetery families confront bosses in row over new building

The Guardian

time29 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Highgate cemetery families confront bosses in row over new building

Dozens of grave owners confronted Highgate cemetery's bosses and their architects this week in a growing row over a maintenance and toilet block in a part of the graveyard where almost 200 people were recently buried. The cemetery called Tuesday's private meeting in an attempt to placate objectors by setting out adjustments to a new building that is part of an £18m redevelopment of the graveyard. But the meeting descended into heckles, chants, a walkout, legal threats, demands for compensation and accusations that cemetery was putting the needs of tourists above mourners. A recording of the meeting, heard by the Guardian, revealed unanimous and often furious opposition to what grave owners have called 'the bunker'. The controversial block is due to be located on the mound, an area of the cemetery of about 170 recent graves including those of the sociologist Prof Stuart Hall, the artist Gustav Metzger, and the critic Tom Lubbock. Among those objecting were the actor Bertie Carvel, whose mother, Pat, was buried on the mound in 2019. He told the meeting it was 'crazy' to locate the 'brutalist' building in part of the cemetery 'most frequented by active mourners'. Pleading with the cemetery's managers, he said: 'I'm sure it is not deliberately insensitive but given the strength of feeling please, please, please will you stop. Go away and rethink.' His fellow actor Pam Miles demanded that the cemetery pay for the cost of exhuming the remains of her actor husband, Tim Pigott-Smith, if the scheme goes ahead. 'It leaves us no option but to exhume. In the circumstances it would be fair to expect you to repay us for these expensive graves.' Staff from Hopkins Architects, who designed the scheme, were repeatedly heckled and shouted down as they argued the building could not be placed in any other part of the 14.5-hectare (36-acre) graveyard. A lawyer, who afterwards asked not to be named, said he and others were planning to sue the cemetery for breach of contract. The man, who owns a double plot where his partner his buried, told the meeting: 'What we bought was a site with open views and you are changing that. You need to think about whether there are potential legal ramifications from people like me if you carry on with this.' Separately, a letter to the cemetery's trustees signed by more than 30 grave owners, claimed the charity had breached consumer rights of those who had recently bought plots by failing to inform them of the plan to redevelop the cemetery. It also threatened to report the trust to the Charity Commission over consultation failures and reputational damage to the cemetery. And it warned they were prepared to allege mismanagement to the National Heritage Lottery Fund, at a time when the cemetery is seeking £18m of funding for the redevelopment. At the meeting architects defended the building. One denied it was brutalist, saying: 'That's just not correct. There's more poetry to it than that.' One of the objectors shouted: 'Bollocks.' Undeterred, the architects outlined proposed changes to the block including removing an accessible toilet and reducing the height and width of the building. At this point Natalie Chambers, whose parents are both buried on the mound, left the meeting in protest. As she left she said: 'I'm appalled. You don't listen to us one bit. My father was in the Warsaw ghetto. And you are so disgusting I don't even want to come to the cemetery any more.' There followed a chant from the room of: 'We don't want the building.' A screenwriter, Anna Seifert-Speck, whose husband was buried on the mound in 2019, said: 'We are asking you to reconsider bulldozing over our complaints. Lowering the thing a little bit isn't going to work, it's not want we want.' Another grave owner said: 'It's a graveyard for us. It's not a tourist site.' A barrister said the mound area was the 'worst possible' location for the building. 'There is a concentration of nothing but contemporary graves there. That's why you have so many people in this room. My young daughter lies there. 'You must see that the notion of having toilets right next to the graves of loved ones causes pain and anguish. The solution is simple: don't build on the mound.' Speaking after the meeting, Carvel said: 'Mourning in a cemetery ranks higher than visiting a place of historic interest. The force of those arguments must have rung loud to anyone with an ounce of humanity. But we are also dealing with a corporate decision-making process and I remain somewhere between anxious and cynical about the extent to which that organisation will look itself in the mirror and admit it was wrong.' The architects and trustees agreed to reflect on the feedback and report back to the grave owners in the coming weeks. Elizabeth Fuller, the chair of the Friends of Highgate Cemetery Trust, acknowledged failures in the way recent grave owners had been consulted about the plans and pledged 'better communication in the future'. At the start of the meeting she said: 'As required by the planning process, and by [the] reality [of the site], we have had to balance the benefits and harms of all constituent elements. We will commit to amending our plans wherever possible.'

Jury hears evidence of dead alleged rape victim in Lewes trial
Jury hears evidence of dead alleged rape victim in Lewes trial

BBC News

time35 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Jury hears evidence of dead alleged rape victim in Lewes trial

A 999 call from a woman who a man allegedly posing as an "unofficial Uber" driver attempted to rape has been played in Head, of Pevensey in East Sussex, is alleged to have had latex gloves, condoms, Viagra tablets and a balaclava in his silver Mercedes when he was arrested in November 68-year-old is accused of kidnapping, sexually assaulting and attempting to rape a 25-year-old woman after picking her up in Brighton city centre. The woman died in December denies the charges, stating that he offered the woman a lift home but did not touch her, jurors at Lewes Crown Court were told. 'I'm really confused' The court heard that in a 999 call made by the woman, she told the operator: "A man put me to sleep. I don't know what he did. I woke up. He had gloves on. I need some help. This man is clearly doing this to people."I'm confused, I'm really confused."He was pulling my trousers down and then I kicked him and he's driven off."He had a mask on and he had plastic gloves on his hands. He said he was an Uber, he said he was going to drive me home. I didn't order one and I was reluctant."The woman remembered part of a number plate and Mr Head was arrested minutes later after a police pursuit through Hove, the court was to the prosecution, in a police interview, the woman said Mr Head told her he was finishing his shift and would drive her home."I tried to sit in the front and he said I couldn't. I closed the window and fell asleep. I was fading in and out of consciousness and becoming aware I had been in the car for a really long time," she said."He kept stopping the car and was groping me. He got into the back and he had these rubber gloves. I was so out of it, I thought maybe this guy is going to chop me into pieces."Mr Head is also accused of assaulting 19-year-old woman he picked up near Hove Park, which he trial continues.

Tom Daley was bullied so horrifically he received threats of broken legs and was given classroom key to escape
Tom Daley was bullied so horrifically he received threats of broken legs and was given classroom key to escape

The Sun

time35 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Tom Daley was bullied so horrifically he received threats of broken legs and was given classroom key to escape

TOM DALEY once ruled the world of diving after becoming an Olympic champion. But in a candid interview and documentary, Daley has opened up on his personal struggles to get to that point, including bullying, eating disorders and the loss of his father. 4 4 4 The now-retired Daley, 31, won five medals for Team GB across five Olympic Games, including gold for the 10-metre synchro in 2021. His long list of accolades also included being named world champion twice, but perhaps his greatest prize now is his loving family with husband, Dustin Lance Black, and two boys, Robbie and Phoenix. In the new documentary, " 1.6 seconds", Daley has opened up the career struggles that have shaped him into the person he is today. And also speaking to People, the Brit has reflected on both the good and bad parts of his life. Speaking in the documentary, Daley says: "My whole life has been about diving. My whole life has been about perfecting those 1.6 seconds. "I spend four years training for something that goes by in less than 10 seconds in total. And I wouldn't change a thing. It's been the best 23 years that I can imagine." At the age of just 14, Daley became the second-youngest British male Olympian when he made his debut at the Beijing Olympics, but had started diving aged seven. And despite having the support of a whole nation, back at school, Daley had begun to feel unsafe due to bullying. The horrific bullying saw Daley called names and even saw kids threaten to break his legs, with the situation getting so bad that he and his friends were given a key to allow them to lock themselves in a classroom to escape other students at lunchtime. In the documentary, he recalls: "I don't think people realise how much it impacted me because I didn't really talk about it. Tom Daley breaks down in tears as he retires live on BBC after returning home from Paris 2024 Olympics "I was almost embarrassed about the fact that people were mean to me at school. I feel so sorry for that kid that had to explain what was going on." Daley publicly spoke about his bullying at the age of 13, but now believes he should have been "more conservative" with what he shared due to it making the situation even more overwhelming and painful. In 2011, Daley had to fight his way through an eating disorder after being told to lose weight by the performance director at British Diving, which was all he could think about going into London 2012. Daley said: "It was the first time where I felt that I was being looked at and judged not for how I did in the diving pool but for how I looked. "I took some quite drastic measures to make sure that the food did not stay in my stomach... "Every time I made a decision about what I was going to eat, if I was going to eat it and then get myself so hungry that I would end up eating so much and binging to the point where I was then so guilty — that I then had to do something about that." Daley admits his struggles were not helped by his internal beliefs about masculinity where guys, "didn't have eating disorders, didn't have any problems with their mental health," and "were meant to be these macho things that get on with anything and you just keep going". As a result, Daley felt isolated, a problem which was only deepened with the tragic loss of his father, Robert, from brain cancer just days after he turned 17. On his grief, Daley says: "I think there was something about when he was gone that I think in turn, probably did have something to do with all that I've faced. "The feeling like I had to face it alone because I didn't want to upset anyone else or bother anyone else because they were already going through enough." His father had kept the seriousness of his illness hidden from his children for as long as he could, as he was determined not to let it overshadow his son's growing success. In the documentary, Daley reflects: "He didn't care how well I did. He didn't care if I came last. He didn't care if I bombed out. Like there was no concern about the outcome. "He just wanted to be there.… He just loved seeing me dive. He was the one person that I could go to to speak about anything and everything and feel like I had someone on my side. "I didn't just lose my dad, because he was much more than that. 'He was my biggest cheerleader, my best friend, mentor. I mean, our whole life came to a standstill." However, Daley says he understands his father's decision to keep it close to heart, saying to People: "Now that I think about it as a parent, it would be like trying to explain that to my oldest son. "And, you know, if one of the kids knew, then they were all going to know. As a parent, you want to protect your kids from anything that's going into that." He added: "So I just think… that's part of the reason for the documentary and like how grateful I am to have all of that archival footage. "All of those moments… forever immortalised by being able to actually have copies of that digitised." Daley's world of isolation came crashing down when he met his husband and eventually started a family. In 1.6 seconds, he explains: "I finally found perspective, and I didn't put all of my self-worth and self-esteem based on how well I did in diving. "I started to realise that I was more than just a diver. [I am] a husband, a father, a friend, a son." Despite the struggles he has been through, the Olympic legend, father and husband says: "You know, there's much of my life formed and shaped because of the experiences I went through — the good and the bad. "Those things formed me and created the person I am today."

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