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Kelly Osbourne shares heartbreaking video sat in arms of dad Ozzy

Kelly Osbourne shares heartbreaking video sat in arms of dad Ozzy

Daily Mirror2 days ago
In the sweet clip shared by Kelly Osbourne, dad Ozzy pulls her into line over her bad language before brilliantly telling his daughter that she 'learned from the best'
Mourning Kelly Osbourne has shared another sweet memory of dad Ozzy after uploading a fun video of herself sitting with her arms draped around him.

The pair cuddle on a sofa as they speak on camera, with Kelly keen to mind her language. Uploading the cute clip to Instagram, the pink-haired daughter of the Prince of Darkness is quick to remind him where she picked up her ability to turn the air blue.

"I can't say f***, I have to behave myself," she said, sitting on her famously foul-mouthed dad's lap. He responds: "You can't say what?" Not reacting, Kelly strokes him gently on the face. Blunt Ozzy then tells his daughter: "Terrible isn't it, the way children speak these days?"

Kelly bites, and then tells him: "But I learned from you, dad." Smiling, he responds: "You learned from the best, baby." The 40-year-old returned to social media on Friday, three days after the death of the Black Sabbath legend, whose passing was announced on Tuesday.

Kelly shared lyrics to her Instagram Stories from the Black Sabbath song Changes, in an emotional tribute that calls back to a special father-daughter moment. Changes, which Ozzy co-wrote with his bandmates, was first released by Black Sabbath in 1972. In 2003, he and Kelly recorded a version as a duet with revised lyrics that reflected on their bond.
The song was a No. 1 hit in the U.K., and they became just the second father-daughter pair to top the charts, after Frank and Nancy Sinatra in 1967. Kelly has now taken to Instagram to share a heartbreaking update, writing: "I feel unhappy I am so sad," Kelly wrote: "I lost the best friend I ever had."

Heartbroken fans have since been leaving tributes outside his Buckinghamshire home, with flowers and loving message laid outside the gates. Half-drunk pints and bottles of beer have also been left alongside candles as mourners toast the rock icon on Birmingham's Black Sabbath bridge.
A source shared with People about Ozzy's last moments, saying, "Ozzy's final days were spent in England, surrounded by family, music and in the place he called home. He was in peace." Ozzy announced that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2020 and said that his daughter Kelly Osbourne had helped amid the diagnosis and other health issues.
Following the news of his diagnosis, Kelly said: "We just kept going everyday and the magic that happens, I think, when you're in pain ..." Ozzy, pointing at his youngest daughter, interrupted her to say: "She's the one! If it wasn't for her I'd be still lying up on the couch."
Kelly said: "The only thing I know when it comes to my dad is what can I do to make him smile and I know that going to the studio makes him happy. So I got him up and got him to the studio, and that's all I did. Everything else was him."
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When I was young, we were told to avoid walking too close to strange cars, cross the road to avoid a man in the dark. But how to have the conversation with newly turned eighteen year olds about sleeping with a person who will monetise off taking their virginities? This is not a parenting issue, it is a societal safeguarding one. ‌ Is it all a gimmick? Beyond the porn-shoots and online promo for her extreme sex events, she told me her last dating experience turned out to be with somebody who queued for one of her events. 'When I am ready to date, how am I going to date?' she asked. 'Because if I was to go on Tinder or Hinge, they're going to think they know me already. They're going to instantly think they know me without actually knowing me.' I think about how this woman navigates her relationships, when people may come to interactions with her with a preconceived notion of who she is. Specifically, I wondered how Tia can find love, when her persona as Bonnie Blue is so recognisable. She said: "They're going to have probably seen podcasts, interviews. They've read a lot about me. So, they're not just going to see a girl that they think, 'that person's attractive.' They're going to see Bonnie Blue." ‌ She told me that in the future she would like to advocate for sex workers' rights, specifically through 'speaking more about sex and trying to keep people safe or doing more to lower the price of STD tests and the more educational side of porn.' Having watched The Bonnie Blue Story, I wonder if the education side is a reference to "barely legals" content. Let's hope that she makes good on her will to lower the price of STD tests too, so as that can be a standard for all stepping on set. The woman I met in June is not the Bonnie presented on screen. I don't think I'll ever know which is the real her. Let's be real, as porn is not, the "barely legals" and "class-rooms" and "feminist" debates, it's all part of the same nightmarish marketing gimmick. It's adding fuel to the rage-bait machine and we're all falling for it. Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We'd love to hear from you!

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