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Anais Gallagher flaunts her incredible figure in a skimpy bikini as she cosies up to rarely-seen boyfriend Callum Scott Howells during French getaway

Anais Gallagher flaunts her incredible figure in a skimpy bikini as she cosies up to rarely-seen boyfriend Callum Scott Howells during French getaway

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

Anais Gallagher showed off her amazing figure in a skimpy yellow bikini as she poses for a sizzling Instagram snap on Monday during a getaway in Provence, France.
The daughter of Oasis frontman Noel Gallagher, 25, looked more loved-up than ever with her rarely-seen boyfriend Callum Scott Howells during the romantic holiday.
Anais flaunted her incredible figure in the tiny patterned two-piece and wore her blonde tresses in a neat braid as she posed for a mirror selfie.
The model later slipped into a stylish pink linen minidress as she cosied up to her It's a Sin star boyfriend, 25.
In another photo, Anais gave a glimpse into the couple's dinner as they cooked chicken and salad as well as spaghetti.
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The stunner also wore an eye catching blue off the shoulder crop top in another snap, which she teamed with a chic white miniskirt.
The happy couple have reportedly been seeing each other romantically since the autumn of 2023.
Callum previously confirmed he identifies as queer, telling Pink News: 'I've always been happy to say to people. So for me, it was just part of it.
'I wouldn't like to speak for anyone else on that matter. But for me it was kind of: "It is what it is".'
Anais had been spending quality time with Callum in the wake of her reported split from her long-term boyfriend Julius Roberts.
She was in a relationship with the farmer for three years after they got together two days before Christmas in 2019.
But a source revealed they have 'ended their relationship' in late 2022 and she was moving back up to London, after splitting her time between the city and his family farm in Dorset.
It comes after Anais hit back at those branding her a nepo baby in an impassioned interview.
In another photo, Anais gave a glimpse into the couple's dinner as they cooked chicken and salad as well as spaghetti
Speaking to H! Fashion magazine, the influencer thanked her Oasis icon father Noel for the 'financial stability' he gave her early in life, but insisted she had paved out her own success.
She said: 'There are a lot more dangerous industries in which nepotism is around – look at Donald Trump 's sons.
'I would be far more concerned with people making legislation than an actor wanting to help out their daughter who wants to be an actress.
'All my privilege and, in quotation marks, "luck" has come from my financial stability – not my dad's fame.'
The model, who Noel had with his first wife Meg Mathews just a year before their divorce in 2001, suggested that children of singers were more likely to come under fire over nepotism than those with parents successful in other professions.
'I went to school with a lot of very wealthy people who probably had the exact same amount of privilege as me, but they wouldn't get called a nepo baby because their dad's a lawyer or a politician.
'My dad paid for my private education, he paid for my university degree. I was given money to live on so I didn't have to get a job when I was at university.
'If I needed a new camera, he would buy me a new camera to help with my studies – all of those things made my life so much easier than my friends who had to struggle whilst they were studying.
'But I never wanted to be a musician, so him writing Wonderwall never really helped me out. But him having money? Yes.'
Anais boasts 269,000 followers on her Instagram account but accepted that she owes at least part of her rapid rise to her rock legend father.
'You have to look at social media as fun,' she said. 'I think I'm in a really unique position in that I never decided I wanted to be an influencer.
'I posted on my Instagram as a normal teenager would, and then, because of who my dad was, initially, I got a lot of followers. I try to navigate social media exactly the same way as my friends who would have a private account of 100 people following it.
'My biggest criticism of certain influencers is that their feed feels like a magazine.'
Of her famous dad, who is getting ready to reunite with brother Liam this summer for the first time in more than 15 years, Anais said: 'With my family, what you see is what you get. They are really hard-working people.
'With my dad, I would always go to him for help or advice – it's very funny that a rock star from the 90s is like the most level-headed person I know. He's definitely the guiding force in my life.'

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How Britain became the real Love Island
How Britain became the real Love Island

Telegraph

time32 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

How Britain became the real Love Island

Cast your mind back to June 2015, when David Cameron had just won a second term in office and Princess Charlotte had just been born. It was also the summer that 12 scantily clad 20-somethings strolled into a Mallorcan villa in the hope of finding love – and winning £50,000. All while being filmed for TV. It's been 10 years since the first series of Love Island, and while viewing figures have fallen since the programme's 2019 peak, when six million Brits tuned in, many people will still watch the 12th series when it starts on Monday. A decade of hot tub shenanigans in 'Casa Amor' has brought big changes to the way young people dress, talk, date, and behave. But the show has also reflected the shifts which wider society has undergone. 'I think Love Island is really interesting because its rise in cultural significance happened at the same time as the rise in social media,' says Chloe Combi, author of the book Generation Z: Their Voices, Their Lives. 'The show has held a mirror up to society, and tracked the rise of porn, the growth in online misogyny, how young people feel about mental health and body image.' So if you're baffled by why young women have artificially fulsome lips and eyelashes reminiscent of draught excluders, or think that someone's been robbed when they say they've been 'mugged off', you might be surprised at just how much Love Island has shaped the nation… Bodies Perhaps no other TV show encapsulates the explosion of cosmetic enhancements like Love Island, where gravity-defying boobs and suspiciously full lips are standard among the female contestants. In 2023, 7.7 million people had an aesthetic treatment in the UK – that's 11 per cent of the population. 'Young people will talk about their desire to get a ' Love Island makeover' or a ' Love Island face',' says Combi. 'And although there has been a backlash against skinniness being the ideal over the last decade, and a glimmer of body positivity, I think ultimately the ideal body shape has simply been replaced with equally unobtainable body types.' The wrinkle-free skin, perfect, white teeth, sculpted cheekbones and honed, deeply tanned limbs tend to be the result of many hours in the gym, dentist and aesthetics clinic. 'I think what has definitely changed over the last decade is that people are more open about talking about the work they've had done,' says Jo Hemmings, a behavioural psychologist who works behind the scenes on reality TV shows. 'Going under the knife or the needle used to be a taboo subject, but the stigma has been completely removed. It will be interesting to see, with the rise of weight-loss injections such as Ozempic, if this year's contestants will be even thinner.' Over the past decade, it's no longer just women who feel under pressure to have the perfect body. Although the Islanders are randomly tested for all drugs, including steroids, an extremely beefed-up physique became standard for male contestants. 'Young men now face unrealistic body standards too and are bombarded on social media we first time ever their intake is 50/50 young men and women.' Behaviour From the outset of Love Island, contestants clearly had an eye on not just the cash prize (or even finding love), but on the lucrative brand deals and huge social media followings that could come from being on the show, and the savviest Islanders ensured they behaved in a way that wouldn't compromise that potential. Interestingly, the richest Love Island contestant ever is boxer Tommy Fury, 26, who has an estimated worth of £10 million thanks to his high-profile boxing matches and brand deals with the likes of Marks & Spencer. He teamed up with Molly-Mae Hague from day five. They stuck together as a couple until the end of the series, and then remained a pair once out of the villa. 'I think the audience accepts that what they're seeing on the show is a performance, and this definitely reflects life on social media for all of us,' says Hemmings. 'The boundaries between what is private and what is performative have completely blurred. There's a transactional element to relationships that I think young people experience, too. They wonder: 'How will this look to other people?' and 'How will this affect my social capital?'' This transactional, pragmatic approach to love that's seen on Love Island extends to Gen Z as a whole. 'I think both Gen Z and millennials are quite disenchanted by relationships,' says Combi. Although we may read statistics about the rise in polyamorous relationships and more fluid attitudes to sexuality, it seems we all still want the 'Happily Ever After'. According to a recent survey, 75 per cent of Gen Z want to get married, and 69 per cent want to start a family. 'Look at the popularity of Molly-Mae and Tommy,' says Hemmings. 'A lot of people bought into their traditional milestones of buying the big house, having a baby, getting engaged.' Lingo 'I think the language used on the show is arguably where it's had the most impact on society,' says Combi. 'Phrases such as 'he's giving me the ick' [when you're instantly repelled by someone] or 'she's mugging me off' [to treat someone badly] have become common parlance for whole generations of people because of Love Island. The way we talk is a huge reflection of our belief systems and the way we see the world.' 'Even quite complex psychological terms such as 'gaslighting' [psychological manipulation] have been made mainstream thanks to contestants describing 'toxic behaviour' on Love Island,' says Hemmings. 'I think the feelings and behaviour that are being described have always existed but now young people have a language to name them. I think the show has helped people – especially young men - find a way to talk about their feelings more.' Other terms popularised by the show include 'pied' [to be dumped] and 'melt' [liking someone so much that you don't mind embarrassing yourself to prove it]. In 2024, 'the ick' was added to the Cambridge Dictionary. Mental health Over the past 10 years, Love Island has periodically been held up as an example of the damaging effects of reality TV on mental health, after the suicides of two former contestants Sophie Gradon and Mike ­Thalassitis, as well as its presenter, Caroline Flack. 'I think what happened with Love Island has changed the way TV shows like this are made, with duty-of-care protocols including pre-show psychological assessments, and proper training for contestants on the impacts of being on the show and what can happen afterwards,' says Hemmings. 'We've seen this change in society too, with mental health being much more talked about now and strategies in place in most workplaces for helping people.' The prevalence of mental health issues on the show reflects the high rates of depression and anxiety among Gen Z as a whole. One in three 18-to-24-year-olds now report they have experienced a common mental health problem, such as depression or anxiety disorder, compared with one in four in 2000. 'Young people are highly aware of mental health issues and have the language to talk about them, but perhaps not the coping skills to deal with them,' says Combi. 'Greater awareness of mental health doesn't always lead to better outcomes.' Boozing 'In the early days of the show, producers often relied on that old reality TV staple when things get boring – wheeling out the drinks trolley,' says Hemmings. 'But that doesn't happen any more, there's much more awareness of duty of care. Producers on Love Island set limits of two drinks per night, and most contestants don't drink alcohol at all, as young people are drinking less.' The decline in the Islanders getting tipsy on the show mirrors the changing attitude to booze among Gen Z in particular, and Brits more generally. A recent survey found that nearly half of young people and one in every three middle-aged Britons no longer drink alcohol, with health concerns being the number one reason why. 'For younger generations, getting drunk has completely lost its cool, outlaw image,' says Combi. 'They prefer to stay home and socialise rather than go out clubbing.' The figures bear it out. According to the BBC, in the last five years, around 400 clubs have closed in Britain – and that's more than a third of the total number. Furthermore, the British Beer and Pub Association says that 300 pubs in England and Wales closed last year alone – that's six a week. Sex In its early days, Love Island contestants were at it like rabbits, often in front of other contestants. Ofcom received complaints about the amount of sex shown on screen, and former Miss Great Britain, Zara Holland, was stripped of her pageant title after having sex with Alex Bowen on camera. But by 2018, producers stopped showing anything too graphic and merely suggested what was going on with feet under the sheets or a moving headboard. And in more recent years, there's been nothing to show at all. Couples have tended to wait until they've left the villa to consummate their relationship, and that reflects a growing abstinence among Gen Z, too. In fact, one in four Gen Z adults say they 'never have sex'. 'I think there's a knowingness to Love Island contestants and to young people generally,' says Combi. 'They want fame and money first, and love and sex are side effects.' Diversity The UK has become more racially diverse in the past 10 years, and Love Island has too. Although in its earlier series it was accused of tokenism, last year Mimii Ngulube and Josh Oyinsan became the first black couple to be crowned winners. 'I think the show has found it very hard to truly embrace diversity,' says Hemmings. 'They have had black contestants, but not many other races, and there have been contestants with disabilities, but they've been minor, almost invisible ones, such as Hugo [Hammond] who had a clubfoot. And we've never seen a truly plus-size person on the show.' Chloe Combi says that when the show has tried to chase younger audiences by being more diverse, it hasn't always felt authentic. 'It's interesting that as Love Island has thrown in more different bodies and ethnicities and LGBTQ contestants, its popularity has declined,' she says. 'I think young people can tell that this is a show with sex and consumerism at its root, and the villa is not an inclusive place, so when it tries to be 'woke' it doesn't really work.'

The secrets to looking as good as Liz Hurley at 60
The secrets to looking as good as Liz Hurley at 60

Telegraph

time32 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The secrets to looking as good as Liz Hurley at 60

'Mummy, actress, model, farmer, bikini designer': that's how Elizabeth Hurley describes herself on her Instagram bio, and who are we to contradict? Though if we may, we'd also like to add 'national institution who has been enlivening the news cycle since 1994, when she stole every front page in That black safety-pin Versace dress'. 'National institution' is not, one fears, a phrase that would find favour with the perennially youthful and ebullient Liz. It makes her sound venerable, yes, but also rather staid, something that Hurley is decidedly not. Everyone celebrates their 60th birthday in different ways, and Hurley seems to have chosen to mark hers by ageing backwards, though not in a Kris Jenner way. Yes, she's genetically blessed to be a quintessential English rose, but more compelling than her looks is her lust for life, and her enthusiasm for living it fully. Whether she's sauntering along a tropical beach in her self-designed bikini, fronting a new reality TV show (Channel 4's The Deceased), larking around with her lookalike son, Damian, or hard launching her new relationship with Billy Ray Cyrus, Hurley's joie de vivre is infectious. Here's how to be more Liz, whatever your age or relationship status. Don't be afraid of bold style choices If anyone subscribes to the notion that you can wear anything at 60, it's Hurley, whose glamorous, high-octane style has only amplified with age. If it's figure-hugging, bright and shows off her famous décolletage, she's on board. Her go-to designers are Versace, Valentino and Tom Ford-era Gucci, but when it comes to swimwear, she always wears Elizabeth Hurley Beach, the swimwear brand she launched in 2005. 'Elizabeth has a perfect eye for fashion,' says Mike Adler, who's been her stylist for red carpet events, tours and special projects since 2018. 'Her signature style always remains glamorous with ultra clean lines. A formal look centres around a brilliant cut, a bold, bright colour and a favourable neckline or deep plunge. She's always incredibly supportive of designers and their craft, and appreciative of being able to present with total confidence in the public eye. 'She's also sustainably aware, re-wearing iconic pieces from her own wardrobe. During our recent Oscars fitting, Elizabeth pulled out an incredible archive Versace gown, as appealing today as when she first wore it. Not only did the dress still fit like a glove – but in comparing the red carpet photo from 30 years ago, she looked even better now.' Avoid a high-UPF diet In January 2024, she detailed in an Instagram post how she avoids junk food, which she defined as 'anything that contains any ingredient that I don't have in my own kitchen'. Adding: 'My tastes are pretty simple – I don't drink weird green juices or anything like that. My mantra is: don't eat too much, too fast, too often or too late. Or, put another way, eat smaller meals, chew properly, ban snacking, and eat dinner earlier. This works for me.' She also ensures that fruit and vegetables take up half her plate with every meal. Crucially, she isn't abstemious, making a loaf of bread every day, and cakes on weekends. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Elizabeth Hurley (@elizabethhurley1) Get into the garden Ever the pragmatist, Hurley prefers walking in nature to sweating it out in a spin class. 'I don't go to the gym, but I do a lot of gardening...' she told The Telegraph last year. 'I don't really sit still very much.' Perhaps this is where we're going wrong. Forget cutting out carbs after 7pm: we simply need to rake more leaves and weed more. A fan of 'found fitness', she likes to incorporate exercise into her everyday routine, doing squats while she brushes her teeth to tone her legs, then walking her dogs for 20 minutes to get her blood pumping. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Elizabeth Hurley (@elizabethhurley1) Tweak the shade of your hair Like many women approaching 60 (or even 40), Hurley has lightened the dark brown tresses of her youth into a rich caramel bronde whose shade has largely remained consistent for decades. Warm, flattering and sun-kissed, it's coloured using a 'ring lighting' technique that frames the face with highlights, acting like a low-maintenance soft filter. How to get the look? 'Keeping those greys away can be a real chore, but adding a few very fine micro lights near the root and broader beach lights near the face, plus choosing a base colour that is natural and a shade or two lighter than one's own original colour is key to a flattering effect,' says the celebrity colourist Josh Wood. 'Adding gloss and shine is also important, as the texture of grey can be very wiry, so keeping the hair looking hydrated is paramount.' For those not in possession of Hurley's thick hair, help is but a hair extension away. Hadley Yates salon in London specialises in a full yet natural look. 'For a DIY solution I'd recommend the Curated Hair Extensions full-head clip-in, which come in 16in and 20in lengths and add instant volume,' Yates suggests. 'For maximum shine, Redken's Acidic Colour Gloss, £33, is an at-home treatment which locks in glass-like shine by sealing your cuticles and restoring the hair back to its healthiest PH.' Moisturiser, moisturiser, moisturiser 'The one thing I swear by is moisturiser – and lots of it,' she told Woman & Home magazine. 'I'll moisturise my face about six times a day and my neck about 10 times a day.' Her favourites include La Mer, £135, and Estée Lauder's Advance Night Repair serum, £55, which she's been using religiously ever since becoming an Estée Lauder spokesperson in the mid-Nineties. For her body, she favours Clinique's Deep Comfort moisturiser (£39). While she's open about her skincare routine, she's not on the record as having had any extra help. 'Facially, Liz appears refreshed and natural,' notes Dr Manav Bawa, a cosmetic doctor and medical director at Time Clinic on behalf of Allergan Aesthetics. 'Subtle signs might suggest she's had light Botox treatments, dermal fillers like Juvederm to restore facial volume, and possibly skin boosters or injectable hydrators to hydrate and tighten the skin.' He suggests that those looking to replicate Hurley's glow at home should focus on products featuring vitamin C and retinol. Treatment-wise, they could also try biostimulation and regenerative treatments such as HarmonyCa to enhance the skin's own healing and renewal processes. 'These approaches can help maintain a rejuvenated, naturally fresh appearance without the risk of looking 'done'.' Body-wise, Hurley's even-toned skin could be achieved with the help of medical-grade microneedling with radiofrequency or laser skin tightening, which can stimulate collagen production and improve elasticity. 'Regular exfoliation and the use of active body skincare, such as glycolic acid lotions, also help maintain a youthful, luminous skin tone at home, although the most powerful product in Liz's skincare arsenal is likely a high-quality broad-spectrum SPF,' says Bawa. Make the effort with your make-up 'Actors and models must spend the equivalent of years in the make-up chair,' Hurley posted on Instagram. Unlike many women in the public eye, she's honest about the time it takes to reach Peak Liz, acknowledging that there's no quick fix. 'I work for a cosmetic company, I work for fashion companies, I have my own fashion company, I'm in high definition on massive cinema screens,' she once said. 'So it's my business to make more effort ... of course I do, it's my bread and butter.' Hurley's not averse to wearing a full face of make-up, and really carries it off. Her trademark look – a smoky eye composed of black kohl liner, shimmering grey eyeshadow, soft pink blush and shiny pale pink lip gloss – is part Hollywood siren, part Brit on a big night out. A close friend of Trinny Woodall for over 30 years (she calls her 'Trinster'), it's likely she uses Trinny London's Eye2Eye cream-based colour in Chalice (£20), and her Line2Define smudge-proof eyeliner in Shahrose (£24). Hurley also has the distinction of having a lipstick named after her and formulated in her honour: Estée Lauder's Elizabeth Hurley Pink 391 Rouge Cristal. It's sadly discontinued, though if you have $98 (£72) to spare, there's one currently for sale on eBay. Liz Hurley's 10 most memorable style moments By Jessica Burrell

Rupert Murdoch's 'wild child' granddaughter Charlotte Freud hits back at critic who labelled her new tattoo disgusting
Rupert Murdoch's 'wild child' granddaughter Charlotte Freud hits back at critic who labelled her new tattoo disgusting

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Rupert Murdoch's 'wild child' granddaughter Charlotte Freud hits back at critic who labelled her new tattoo disgusting

Rupert Murdoch 's 'wild child' granddaughter has slammed a troll who criticised her recent tattoo. Charlotte Freud, 25, shared a screenshot of an Instagram conversation to her story on Sunday, which showed one of her fans calling her new tattoo 'disgusting' after making a disturbing sexual comment. The day before, the daughter of PR guru Matthew Freud and Elisabeth Murdoch took to the social media platform to show off her new ink on her torso: a lyric from Noah Kahan's song Orange Juice. 'But it made you a stranger. And filled you with anger. Now I'm third in the lineup. To your Lord and your Savior,' the tattoo reads. One of Charlotte's followers weighed in on her new tattoo, writing: 'Why do this? Yuck.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Freud shared a screenshot of an Instagram conversation to her story on Sunday, which showed one of her fans calling her new tattoo 'disgusting' after making a disturbing sexual comment earlier on 'Coz im hot and cool,' she responded to the troll. 'Sorry but the beauty of a womans skin is wasted with ink imo (in my opinion). I hope this fad wanes,' they wrote back. Charlotte decided to post the exchange to her Instagram story, hitting back at the critic over their comments. 'From the man who's last message was getting horny over a picture of an 8 year old's hands,' she wrote across the post. The caption alluded to a prior message where the troll responded to her picture of a manicure, saying: 'Suddenly itchy'. Charlotte recently took to Instagram to confess that she is on the airport watch list after committing an illegal act while in the air. She posted to the social media platform in May to reveal that she was put on watch for five years after she was caught vaping on a Virgin Atlantic plane. The relative of media mogul Murdoch, who is from the UK but lives in Los Angeles, shared a picture of her holding a peace sign as she filled fans in on the plane mishap. 'After a perfect month of travel, she finds out she's on some kind of terrorist watch list for vaping on a Virgin flight two years ago and will be stopped at every check point to be scolded for that for all Virgin flights for the next five years,' she wrote. Charlotte went on to say that she was 'boycotting' the airline before admitting that she's 'done a lot worse' on flights. 'Obviously we are boycotting Virgin for the next three years, but in the grand scheme of things young char char has done a lot worse on flights so we'll be grateful they're just Juul shaming me' she added. Juul is a popular brand of nicotine vape in the USA. She then shared a picture of her vape with the song Never Tear Us Apart by INXS playing in the Instagram story.

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