
Jake Paul left ‘crying' as brother Logan marries Nina Agdal in stunning ceremony before boxer smashes up wedding cake
YouTuber-turned- WWE superstar Logan tied the knot with long-time girlfriend and mother of his daughter, Esme, at a plush Italian wedding on Friday.
4
4
The pair tied the knot in Lake Como, where they got engaged just over a year ago.
Neither Logan nor Nina have shared snaps of their big day online.
But Logan's little brother Jake gave a glimpse at the swanky shindig via his Instagram.
'The Problem Child' shared a small clip of a glowing Agdal saying her vows to Logan on his story.
And he admitted that the emotion of the day had gotten to him, writing across the video: "I've seriously been crying."
Jake then shared a video of himself and fiancée Jutta Leerdam posing for snaps with the happy couple.
The Paul brothers and the rest of the guests partied long into the Italian night.
And Jake, bizarrely, ended up putting a beating on the extremely expensive-looking cake.
4
The 28-year-old took chunks out of the three-layered dessert with a variety of punches.
And he did so while Sister Sledge's 'We are Family' blared out in the background.
YouTube star Logan Paul marries girlfriend Nina Agdal in lavish Italian wedding
His accompanying caption for the clip read: "Jake or cake?"
Unlike a lot of his opponents, Jake was unable to put the cake down for the count.
But he saw the funny side by having a warm embrace with Logan.
Paul hasn't set foot inside the ring since his laboured points victory over former middleweight champion Julio Cesar Chavez Jr in June.
The former Disney actor's representatives recently held talks over a shock showdown with two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua.
Paul and his team are hopeful the mammoth crossover clash will come to fruition and are confident of pulling off an incredible upset against AJ.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Fans are all saying the same thing after Sky Sports' US-style half-time interview with Martin Odegaard during Arsenal's showdown with Man United
Sky Sports viewers have had their say on Martin Odegaard 's half-time interview during Arsenal 's showdown at Manchester United - but not many were impressed. Odegaard was put on the spot during the interval at Old Trafford after the Premier League were granted greater behind-the-scenes access, including player interviews during live coverage and cameras filming inside dressing rooms, this season. A new four-deal domestic TV deal worth £6.7billion came into effect this month and both Sky Sports and TNT Sports are believed to have wanted more for their money. Despite the traditional 'Big Six' reportedly pushing back against the sweeping US-style changes, Odegaard found himself in front of the microphone with his side leading 1-0 after Riccardo Calafiori capitalised on Altay Bayindir's gaffe. Arsenal's captain shared his thoughts on the first 45 minutes of the game, but viewers were almost unanimous in their belief that the segment was a step too far. Posting on X, one user said: 'Don't like this American-style half-time interview thing at all. Just let the players be @premierleague.' "It's been a bit too hectic... we need more control!" Martin Odegaard shares his thoughts at half-time at Old Trafford with Arsenal leading... 🗣️ — Sky Sports Premier League (@SkySportsPL) August 17, 2025 Another wrote: 'Ridiculous. Players shouldn't have to do an interview at half-time when they need full focus on the game.' A third added: 'Interview at half-time? We never asked for this.' A fourth posted: 'This rubbish half-time interview is just codswallop. Shouldn't they be recuperating and taking instructions? 'They are trying hard to ruin football by introducing all this nonsense.' A fifth said: 'Odegaard giving a half-time interview ffs. Nobody needs this. 'The team however do need their captain in the changing room as we need to figure out how to improve 2nd half.' During the interview, which lasted around a minute, Odegaard had told Sky Sports: 'They have quality and really good players up front. I think we let them play through us too easily at times, but also we had a lot of space up front. 'When we regained the ball and we got to run and counter. We just need to be a bit more clinical in those moments and we will have chance to score more. 'It has been a bit too hectic at times. So much space. It's too open. 'We need to control it a bit better and be more compact without the ball. When we get the ball we need to pick the right moments and be more accurate when we counter.' As part of the enhanced broadcasting package, touchline interviews with substituted players are also set to be introduced during coverage this season. Furthermore, camera operators will be allowed to briefly enter the field of play to film close-up celebrations after goals during live matches. Similar elements are a regular feature of sport in the United States, but they have rarely been seen during events in the UK.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Perrie Edwards' secret anxiety disorder that stopped the Little Mix star leaving the house
PERRIE Edwards has shared the secret anxiety disorder that stopped her from leaving the house. The singer, 32, rose to fame in girl band Little Mix from 2011 until 2022. 4 4 They initially formed on The X Factor before achieving worldwide success. Perrie discussed her experience with agoraphobia in a recent interview. The star, who also shares a three-year-old son with ex-England footballer Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, said she feels "fully in her element" while performing on stage. She added to The Telegraph: "But as soon as I'm back home behind closed doors, that's when the anxiety kicks in and I'm just me again." Perrie clarified she has "quite a thick skin" with online comments about her appearance or clothes. She continued: "[I can't help] but catastrophise about the everyday things that should be easy, like getting into my car and driving to London. "At the end of last year, my agoraphobia got so bad I could barely leave the house." The star also revealed having been "painfully shy" before her time on The X Factor. It comes as Perrie's bandmate Jade Thirlwall addressed being diagnosed with disordered eating at the height of Little Mix's fame. Since leaving Little Mix, Jade has admitted to putting on weight after the pressures put on her to be "stick-thin" while in the pop group. Perrie Edwards says she still cries over Jesy Nelson leaving Little Mix five years on - but insists 'we did everything we could' But the scrutiny on her changing body has not eased and Jade admitted feeling the temptation to go on weight-loss injections such as Mounjaro, or Ozempic as is the brand name in the US. "Little Mix fans were all about empowerment and celebrating your body however you look," Jade said in an interview with The Guardian. "Now I'm in my 30s and the healthiest I've ever been, but every time I post a picture, there are comments saying, 'She must be pregnant'... people are used to seeing me in a group environment five or 10 years ago when I was stick-thin because I was in my early 20s with an eating disorder.' Jade added that she did not realise in the moment that she had a disordered eating issue. "But when I look back at photos of periods when I was quite unhappy, I think, 'wow, girlie, you were very, very thin'," she explained. Help for mental health If you, or anyone you know, needs help dealing with mental health problems, the following organisations provide support. The following are free to contact and confidential: Samaritans, 116 123 CALM (the leading movement against suicide in men) 0800 585 858 Papyrus (prevention of young suicide) 0800 068 41 41 Shout (for support of all mental health) text 85258 to start a conversation Mind, provide information about types of mental health problems and where to get help for them. Call the infoline on 0300 123 3393 (UK landline calls are charged at local rates, and charges from mobile phones will vary). YoungMinds run a free, confidential parents helpline on 0808 802 5544 for parents or carers worried about how a child or young person is feeling or behaving. The website has a chat option too. Rethink Mental Illness, gives advice and information service offers practical advice on a wide range of topics such as The Mental Health Act, social care, welfare benefits, and carers rights. Use its website or call 0300 5000 927 (calls are charged at your local rate). Heads Together, is the a mental health initiative spearheaded by The Royal Foundation of The Prince and Princess of Wales. "The pattern was there. Historically, if I've ever felt that something is out of my control, then restricting food has been a means of controlling my life in a very toxic way.' The Angel Of My Dreams singer got so bad around 2017 that her mum and a friends of hers drove down from her hometown of South Shields, near Newcastle. They made sure Jade was eating and getting her to gigs, but taking a break from Little Mix never crossed her mind. 'If you stop working in this business, then everybody wants to know why, and I couldn't be arsed for everything that came with that. So I kept it moving,' Jade said. 4


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Terence Stamp: the mesmerisingly seductive dark prince of British cinema
'A stranger arrives, makes love to everyone and then leaves,' said Pier Paolo Pasolini to Terence Stamp, outlining the plot of his 1968 classic Theorem. 'That's your part.' Stamp exclaimed. 'I can play that.' It was the role that the man was born to play and would play, with subtle variations, throughout his career. From his first appearance as the eerily beautiful sailor in 1962's Billy Budd through to his last manifestation as 'the silver-haired gentleman' in Edgar Wright's Last Night in Soho, Stamp remained a brilliantly, mesmerisingly unknowable presence. He was the seductive dark prince of British cinema, an actor who carried an air of elegant mystery. 'As a boy I always believed I could make myself invisible,' he once said. He showed up and made magic, but he never stuck around for as long as we wanted. Sign up to Film Weekly Take a front seat at the cinema with our weekly email filled with all the latest news and all the movie action that matters after newsletter promotion Stamp's talent was timeless but he was a creature of the 60s, forged in the crucible of postwar social mobility and as much a poster boy for the era as his one-time flatmate Michael Caine. 'Terry meets Julie, Waterloo station, every Friday night,' Ray Davies sang on the Kinks's Waterloo Sunset and while he wasn't necessarily singing about Stamp and Julie Christie – at least not consciously – the actors and the song have now become intertwined, part of a collective cultural fabric, to the point where that mental image of the two of them by the Thames is almost as much a part of Stamp's showreel as his actual 60s pictures. He was born in London's East End, the son of a tugboat coalman who regarded acting with horror, and his rough-hewn swagger lent a crucial grit and danger to his refined matinee idol aesthetic. He gave a superb performance – full of seething chippy rage – in 1965's The Collector, a role that won him the best actor prize at Cannes, made an excellent dastardly lover in Far from the Madding Crowd and whipped up a storm in Federico Fellini's uproarious Toby Dammit. But he was always a more febrile movie actor than his compatriots – Caine, Sean Connery, Richard Harris, Peter O'Toole – and so his career proved more fragile and never truly bedded down. 'When the 60s ended, I almost did too,' he once said, ruefully acknowledging a decade-long slump that only came to an end when he was cast as General Zod in 1978's Superman. In the subsequent years he played too many off-the-peg Brits – thuggish gangsters, evil businessmen – in subpar productions, although this only made his occasional great role feel all the more precious. Stamp was at his full-blooded best in Stephen Frears's 80s crime drama The Hit, sparked briefly as the devil in The Company of Wolves and was fabulous as Bernadette in 1994's Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. But his great later role – and arguably the ultimate Stamp performance – was in The Limey, Steven Soderbergh's 1999 revenge tale. Soderbergh casts him as Wilson, an ageing career criminal who haunts LA like a ghost. It's a film that is implicitly about Stamp's youth and age, beautifully folding the present-day drama in with scenes in Ken Loach's Poor Cow to show what happened to the golden generation of swinging 60s London – and by implication, what happens to all of us. Somewhere along the way, wending his way up the coast to Big Sur, Stamp's knackered criminal stops being a ghost and becomes a kind of living sculpture, a priceless piece of cinema history, returned for one last gig to seduce the world and set it spinning before heading off towards the sunset.