
Pregnant mum-of-four shamed & labelled ‘vile' and ‘filthy' as she shares reality of cooking in her air fryer
Nicole Austin is no stranger to incurring the wrath of online trolls with regular videos documenting her life as a pregnant mum living in a council house.
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But she found herself accused of deliberately rage-baiting people online with her most recent video, in which she showed just what it looks like inside her fryer.
"When I opened my air fryer to cook my children's dinner today, I simply couldn't believe my eyes," Nicole said in her TikTok video.
"There was absolutely no way I could cook their dinner in this air fryer... I can't even tell you the last time it's been cleaned."
She added that with her air fryer and microwave, it's a case of "out of sight, out of mind", and when they're not used often, they get "neglected".
"I use my oven a lot more than I use my air fryer, so I really didn't notice it get in this mess," she sighed.
"Look at all that fat, grease, grime, and chips... ew!"
She then turned her "cook my kids dinner" video into a "clean my air fryer" video instead, as she said: "This was a biohazard.
"I dread to think the deadly diseases my kids would have got if they ate from this air fryer."
Nicole then showed herself cleaning the fryer, and even used a hoover to suck up all the food remnants.
"I'm getting really good at keeping on top of visible mess, but things that aren't visible right in front of me, they get forgotten," she added.
Mrs Hinch shares epic air fryer nacho recipe that takes only 10 minutes to make & loaded with hidden veggies for the kids
"And unfortunately, that's what happened to this little old air fryer."
"Anyone else struggle with cleaning things they don't frequently use?" she added in the video caption.
But people in the comments section were less than impressed with Nicole's video, with one writing: "You are vile, there are no excuses for not being clean especially when you have children.
"You should be ashamed of yourself. This nothing other than laziness.
"Vulgar."
"This is such a fire hazard and just plain disgusting," another shouted.
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"This should be wiped and cleaned after every use," a third insisted.
"Why would you continue to use it and get to the state it's in?
"I'm a mum to 4 and never ever would imagine doing this to my kids!!! No excuses!"
"That's just filth. Those poor kids," someone else sighed.
"I actually feel sick," another admitted.
"This isn't struggling this it's absolutely disgusting," someone else agreed.
"All that stuff that was in there can be very dangerous, and that could've set on fire.
"As it probably instructs, please clean regularly."
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an hour ago
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Now, you can't even chase until 20 weeks have passed, and when you do, there is never anybody on the other side of the line to help – all they seem able to do is repeat, 'Computer says no.'' Culver believes that this mess is a result of an 'update' to the system that was completed in March this year. 'Covid, when everyone was working from home, created huge backlogs, but it was the new system that changed everything. They claimed they were streamlining it, but in the process they closed lots of probate registries, which has made everything much less efficient.' All the while, relatives are being forced to go into battle at a time when they are often at their most vulnerable. 'It can be very difficult,' says Sarah Coles, the head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown. 'Emotionally it's hard on recently bereaved people to not be able to put things to rest because there is no closure in sight on any of the admin. And in many cases you have to maintain a property you don't live in, all because of these unnecessary delays.' Cook echoes this sentiment. 'I think it has made the past few months harder,' she says. 'It was an added stress we didn't need. You have to arrange the funeral, you have to notify everyone and then decide on a date for a memorial service, and so much more – not to mention getting to grips with your own grief. Dealing with what I could only visualise as an empty office that was holding our mother's will captive wasn't helpful.' Cook adds that even if the delay was inevitable, a bit of sympathy from the few people she managed to get hold of would have gone a long way. 'A nice email or a few understanding words would have made a huge difference, but nobody was helpful and nobody showed any kindness.' And still, she was arguably one of the lucky ones. Cook's mother had moved into a care home a few years before her death, and her property was sold during that time, while Cook and her brothers were also able to pay the inheritance tax they owed out of their own pockets. But for many people, delays like these can cost huge sums of money, as houses need to be sold quickly before late fines for inheritance tax start accruing at six months. 'When people go into the process, they assume it will be quick, so they put properties on the market, but then delays mean sales fall through – and then if the house or flat has been around [for sale] for a while, it becomes less likely to sell well,' says Coles. 'It can cause serious long-term financial problems for anyone whose inheritance is tied up in property. At least you can sell a share portfolio the day that probate comes through, whereas a property can take six months or more.' Similarly, anyone with a relative whose will has been held hostage by HMCTS will be liable for inheritance tax after six months – even if they didn't officially know that an estate had been left to them. 'Interest starts to run on IHT after six months, regardless of the circumstances,' says Wallhead. 'HMRC is totally separate from HMCTS.' Cook, realising there was no other avenue to pursue, eventually decided to use her journalistic credentials and phoned the department's press office to tell them she was planning on writing an article about the delay in the national press. The two events may well not be connected, but soon after that, the will plopped through her letterbox. According to posts online, other people in similar situations have resorted to calling their MPs. 'Human error' After being contacted by The Telegraph, HMCTS looked into Cook's case and found that it had received the request for withdrawal on May 5 and that it was ordered from storage the following week. On July 1, a Crown Court usher called the storage team to chase up the withdrawal and was told it had been dispatched on May 27. A search was carried out by the same team, who then realised that the will had been mistakenly filed away rather than posted to Cook. This means, in total, the will retrieval took 11 weeks rather than the four stated online. A spokesman for HMCTS says: 'The delay was a result of a human error and we apologise for the distress and frustration this has caused. Most requests for withdrawals of wills are processed within four weeks and we have taken action to ensure this does not happen again.' In response, Cook says: 'It's not only the mistakes, which, in a way, we could accept. It is more that they didn't respond to about eight emails and never gave us an explanation or apology.' Mostly, she is relieved to have the will in her possession – but that doesn't stop her from being daunted by the prospect of probate. 'Guess who deals with that? HMCTS,' she says. 'Grief, I have realised, is made infinitely worse when you feel powerless; when a system that's supposed to serve the public won't even respond to you. I'm not asking for a shortcut or special treatment; I'm asking for straightforward honesty, transparency and human decency. But I haven't seen a shred of it yet.'