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Shock Emmerdale exit as soap legend leaves just days after returning

Shock Emmerdale exit as soap legend leaves just days after returning

The Sun30-05-2025
THERE was yet another shock in Emmerdale with an exit as a soap legend left the dales again just days after making a dramatic return.
Viewers tuned into the long-running ITV soap to see Aaron Dingle (Danny Miller) tie the knot with John Sugden (Oliver Farnworth).
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Aaron's ex-husband Robert (Ryan Hawley) made a sensational Emmerdale comeback as he attempted to stop the nuptials.
He was previously seen on-screen when he was sent down for the murder of Lee, who raped his sister Victoria (Isabel Hodgins).
The character was sentenced to fourteen years without parole and he was transferred to a different prison that was far away from the village.
However, Robert was released early and he found out about Aaron's wedding on social media.
He admitted that he still loved Aaron and the pair kissed on the bridge, before he got into a fight with John.
On tonight's episode that was uploaded to ITVX, Robert will make another exit.
After Aaron chooses to go through with the wedding to John, Robert is arrested for breaking the terms of his licence.
Suspecting that John reported his half-brother to the police for missing his first probation meeting, he soon gets dragged back to prison.
He calls Victoria who is celebrating the wedding of her other brother from the Woolpack.
Although Robert reminds her that he and Aaron once took their vows in front of the village residents, she urges him to admit defeat.
Emmerdale shock return as Aaron's wedding to serial killer is gatecrashed by ex
She tells him that ultimately, Aaron chose John, but Robert was not having it, as he replied: "For now maybe."
Victoria then asks how long he will remain behind bars, to which he says: "For a while maybe.
"I guess you should use this time to put it all behind you, admit that you've lost and move on."
Robert then put the phone down and disgruntledly made his way back to his cell.
Aaron Dingle's biggest storylines
The character Aaron Dingle (formerly Livesy) made his Emmerdale debut all the way back in 2003. Current actor Danny Miller took on the role in 2008. Here are some of Aaron's biggest soap storylines over the years.
McFarlane family: After Aaron returns to the village in 2008, he is arrested by Ross Kirk (Samuel Anderson) for possession of drugs. His mother Chas ' (Lucy Pargeter) family later learn he is a drug courier for the McFarlanes.
Coming to terms with his homosexuality: Initially, Aaron questioned and struggled to come to terms with his homosexuality. He ultimately confided in friend and guardian Paddy Kirk (Dominic Brunt).
Romantic advance towards Adam Barton: At one point, Aaron begins dating Holly Barton (Sophie Powles) and befriends her brother Adam (Adam Thomas). Aaron tries to kiss Adam after they are involved in a run-off road collision. Embarrassed, he tells Adam that he misunderstood the situation. Aaron sleeps with Holly, however, Adam informs his family that he thinks Aaron is gay. Aaron denies it but Holly ends the relationship.
Child sexual abuse: In 2015, it was revealed Aaron had been sexually abused by his father Gordon (Gary Mavers) when he was from the age of 8 before Gordon kicked him out. Ultimately, Gordon was imprisoned years later - but took his own life while in prison.
Relationship with Jackson Walsh: Aaron and Jackson Walsh (Marc Silcock) started dating after a tumultuous start to knowing each other. Their story ultimately ended in heartbreak, as Jackson died by assisted suicide.
Suicide attempt: A harrowing storyline from 2010 saw a then-teenage Aaron attempt to take his own life.
Relationship with Robert Sugden: Aaron and long-standing character Robert Sugden were romantically linked following the latter's return in 2014. Nicknamed "Robron", the pair married in 2018, however, Robert exited the soap in 2019.
This is sure to be a shock to viewers as it was previously revealed that Ryan will be back permanently, although his first return was only for an initial short stint.
A source said: "It will soon become clear that Robert's freedom isn't all that it seems and he will end up back behind bars for a little while.
"His full-time return will come later in the summer and it's set to be explosive."
The actor previously broke his silence on his huge soap comeback, saying: "It sets up a fantastic few episodes to finish off the wedding week which shows how the incident of Robert turning up will resolve itself."
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Truth about JD Vance's new BFF Thomas Skinner's 'modern-day Del Boy' roots: Apprentice and Strictly star's childhood in £2.5m home and £29k-a-year school
Truth about JD Vance's new BFF Thomas Skinner's 'modern-day Del Boy' roots: Apprentice and Strictly star's childhood in £2.5m home and £29k-a-year school

Daily Mail​

time7 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Truth about JD Vance's new BFF Thomas Skinner's 'modern-day Del Boy' roots: Apprentice and Strictly star's childhood in £2.5m home and £29k-a-year school

Thomas Skinner has always traded on his working class roots, whether it be his love of fry-ups at his favourite café or his famous 'Bosh' catchphrase. But the Daily Mail can reveal that the ex-Apprentice star's upbringing was far from poverty-stricken as he grew up in a house worth more than £2.5million and went to an exclusive private school. Skinner, 34, who had a surprise meeting with American vice president JD Vance this week before being named as a contestant on Strictly Come Dancing, referred to his father in his autobiography as being 'a livewire and a geezer' and a 'ducker and a grafter like me'. But rather than struggling to make ends meet, his father Lee – who his son nicknames 'The Governor' – was a mega rich marketing boss and businessman who was once able to have a garage of Lamborghinis before being made bankrupt over his role in a suspected investment fraud which cost investors £3.6million. Cockney-speaking Skinner who appeared on The Apprentice in 2019 bizarrely got his invitation to enjoy 'a barbecue and beers' with Vance at his Cotswolds holiday retreat after the politician became a fan of his often motivational and feelgood posts on social media. His book called 'Graft, How to Smash Life' which was published in 2023, glossed over large parts of his childhood, describing how he and his parents initially lived in a modest terraced townhouse home in Romford, Essex. But while detailing how his mother worked hard to earn a living, the book failed to mention that he and his family lived from 2002 until 2014 in a much bigger detached house with a large driveway and leafy front garden in Gidea Park, Romford. The imposing property where Skinner grew up last sold for £2.5million in 2017 and is now used for people living in supported accommodation. Skinner's parents are thought to have split up around 2012 when his father disappeared off the electoral register records for the house which has an immaculate and spacious lawned rear garden. He later spent time living separately with his mother and father at their respective new homes while he carved out his career as a market trader, before he eventually set up a company selling mattresses and pillows. Skinner described the semi-detached home in Hornchurch, Essex, which his mother Annette moved to as being so small that he was forced to sleep on a pull out bed on her downstairs floor at a time when he 'did not have a pot to piss in financially'. He made no mention in his book about having been a pupil at Brentwood School which currently has days fees of £29,112-a-year or boarding fees of £56,358. His book described how he had been expelled from a school at the age of 14 when he was caught selling pornographic DVD films to classmates after they were supplied to him by his father to encourage him to make money for himself. While not referring to his time at prestigious Brentwood School, the book, priced at £5.99 on Amazon, made much of his love of buying and selling anything, and eating hearty breakfasts at his beloved Dino's Cafe in Spitalfields Market. Describing his mantra of self-reliance, he stated in his book how he started working on a paper round at the age of 12 before getting weekend work on Romford market and a job sweeping up in a barber's shop Referring to himself as 'a modern-day Del Boy', he wrote: 'Success, money, work, it's never come to me, it's never been handed to me. Everything I 've ever had, I've had to go out and work for and that's generally the rule in life'. Skinner who now lives in Brentwood with wife Sinéad (pictured) and their three children described in his book how his father 'worked the markets and always had a business opportunity on the go' In a reference to his love of spending money as well as well as making it, he added that he 'had been up and down so many times that I've lost count'. The book also told how his wheeler-dealing had spilled over into criminality which culminated in him being given a two year suspended prison sentence, a fine and 300 hours community service in 2012 for handling 4,992 stolen tubes of Body Shop cleansing gels worth nearly £40,000 and 2,000 Valium tablets. Skinner was only revealed to be an old boy of prestigious Brentwood School in a local Essex newspaper report in 2019 which told how he had been chosen to appear on The Apprentice. He was forced to defend his working class credentials after a commentator called him out about his time at the expensive private school in a post on X in July last year. The post said: 'This guy went to a school that costs £23,000 a year to attend as a day student and £46,000 a year to attend as a boarder. Yet, he's got every Deano in the land eating out of his hand as some fake working-class hero. Embarrassing.' Skinner who has admitted being dyslexic replied in a lengthy post which did not name Brentwood School, but stated: 'I got a sports scholarship to a fantastic sports academy school, that I later got expelled (for selling porno DVDs my dad got from me off his mate in the pub so I could have a few more quid in my pocket) and I was an idiot when I was younger.' He added: 'I'm dyslexic and struggled with school, I was an extremely lucky child who got given the opportunity to go there, what's wrong with that? But I worked extremely hard to get myself there and I proud of that. 'I've been working on markets since the age of 12. I work every day and Employ 18 people. I have previous criminal records because I had to do things when I was younger that I'm not proud of and I was naive. Pictured: Jack Skinner and his father at 80s pop star Paul Young's wedding to wife Lorna at the Old Marylebone Town Hall Skinner's parents are thought to have split up around 2012 when his father disappeared off the electoral register records for the house (Pictured) He later spent time living separately with his mother and father at their respective home (Pictured his childhood home, which has an immaculate and spacious lawned rear garden) 'But learnt from it and made me the man I am today. I'm proud of where I've come from and what I've achieved in life. All I try to do is spread positivity and let the world know anything in life is achievable with hard work.' Skinner was ejected from The Apprentice by Lord Sugar in Week Nine of the show in 2019, and went on to capitalise on his TV work with appearance on 8 Out of Ten Cats and Celebrity Masterchef. But his social media fame only really took off in Covid when he started posting videos of himself while speaking of the joys of being British, having a happy family life and motivating fans with messages such as: 'It doesn't matter how big those steps are you're taking as long as they're in the right direction.' Many of his clips were filmed behind the wheel of his trusty Transit van while he was making deliveries across the country. Since Covid, his social media posts often show him tucking into breakfasts at Dino's. It emerged this week that he was invited to meet JD Vance at his Grade Two listed manor house holiday home in the Cotswolds, thanks to them both being mutually acquainted with Dr James Orr, associate professor of philosophy of religion at the University of Cambridge. Orr told the Telegraph this week: 'He's a very busy man. He's up at 3.30am grafting, going for those revolting breakfasts, gets in his van, drives around the South East delivering mattresses, has a cheeky pint at his local.' He said he viewed Skinner as being a patriotic, straight talking family man and effectively 'England incarnate'. Orr said: 'There's something timelessly English about him… It's the energy, the sunny optimism, the authenticity. And maybe… a glimpse into what's been lost.' Earlier this year, Orr persuaded Skinner to speak at a London conference called Now and England which he was organising for the Roger Scruton Legacy Foundation after seeing some of his videos. Referring to himself as 'a modern-day Del Boy', he wrote: 'Success, money, work, it's never come to me, it's never been handed to me. Everything I 've ever had, I've had to go out and work for and that's generally the rule in life'. He added: 'We had too many wonks, eggheads, politicians, and nobody who could speak of England… I thought, 'This guy is Romford on legs and I want him at this conference'. 'He came to the conference and gave a barnstorming speech, and what was so powerful about it was it wasn't political, wasn't point-scoring, wasn't having jabs at the Government or Opposition… He talked in a straightforward and emotionally powerful way about his love of England.' Orr suspected JD Vance would get on well with Skinner and sent his politician friend a picture of him, saying: 'We have to go for pints with this guy'. JD Vance later voiced support for Skinner on X after the former Apprentice star said he had received 'death threats' and 'vile comments about my children' following posts in which he claimed 'something's gone wrong' in the UK. In response, the Vice President posted a picture of a cartoon character and wrote: 'Hang in there, my friend. Remember that 90 percent of people attacking your family look like this.' Following their surprise meeting, Skinner posted a picture of himself on Tuesday, dressed in a smart white shirt and tie with his unlikely political friend dressed in a polo shirt 'after a few beers'. He added that it had been 'a cracking night in the beautiful English countryside with JD, his friends and family' and a 'once in a lifetime' moment, before his trademark, signing off with the word: 'Bosh'. Skinner who has a combined 1.1 million followers on Instagram and X had his profile raised still further this week when he became the tenth contestant to be announced by the BBC for this year's Strictly starting next month. He also spoke of how his life spilled into criminality after being handed a two-year suspended prison sentence for handling 4,992 stolen tubes of Body Shop cleansing gels and 2,000 Valium tablets He welcomed the news, saying: 'I'm beyond excited to be joining Strictly Come Dancing. I've tackled the boardroom and some big breakfasts in my time but stepping onto the dance floor under that glitterball is next level stuff! 'I've never danced in my life (other than at weddings) but I'm ready to graft and of course have a laugh. Bring on the sequins, sambas and most importantly, the BOSH to the ballroom!' Skinner who now lives in Brentwood with wife Sinéad and their three children described in his book how his father 'worked the markets and always had a business opportunity on the go' during his 'idyllic normal upbringing'. But the Daily Mail can reveal that his father was at the centre of a long running investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority into his attempts to revive the former Our Price records brand as an online operation selling discounted goods which led to investors losing nearly £4million. He and a business associate were found to have breached financial regulations by selling shares in their company Our Price Records Ltd to 260 investors, with amounts invested ranging from £1,200 to £252,000 Lee Skinner was said to have duped investors with bogus promotional material without telling them that at least £1.58m in commission on the share sales was being paid to third party shell companies. It was revealed in 2020 that he had been leant more than £760,000 by one of the companies which had received commission in return for him supposedly providing administrative and marketings services for Our Price Records. The High Court heard that most buyers were introduced by a company which falsely stated that Lee Skinner was 'a personal friend of Richard Branson' and that the band Madness had agreed to appear for free to promote the scheme. As a result of the case, he had a bankruptcy petition filed against him by the FCA in May 2020 and was banned from being a company director for ten years, according to financial records. wife Sinéad Meanwhile further details of Thomas Skinner's now spent conviction for handling stolen goods have now emerged. He was aged just 20 in 2012 when he was charged with a much older co-defendant Albert Jackson, then 61, Jackson from Aveley, Essex, who died in 2015 was accused of handling 9,552 tubes of the same gel to the value of £76,000 as well as 171 pairs of Sketches footwear worth £8,000. A woman who was once in a relationship with him said: 'I don't know what Albert's connection to Tom Skinner was beyond them being on the same charge in court - but I can tell you Albert was a wrong un. 'He was a proper thief, very into drugs and violent - he once attacked a fella n a pub with a crowbar. A nasty piece of work.' Skinner spoke of his brush with the law in 2019 when he told the Mail: 'Many years ago before I had my business, when I used to work on the markets, I was young and naïve and brought stock from a source that I didn't know. I wasn't aware that the stock was stolen and paid the consequences for the mistake I made.' As a result of his ordeal, he stated that he now only buys from 'trusted sources'. He added: 'That is now well in my past and I have had a string of successful companies since then… I was put in situations I didn't fully understand when I was younger but they have made me the man I am now. I am a changed man.' But Companies House records suggest that Skinner may be having business problems, or at the very least not keeping up with paperwork, due to lateness in filing returns to Companies House. His firm called The Fluffy Pillow Company which was launched in January 2019 last filed accounts for the year ending in January 2022, with accounts for the following year now being nearly 22 months overdue. Even the last set of accounts raised questions about the company as its net assets were listed as £51,301 with £50,000 falling due eventually to creditors. Unusually, the figures for the previous year were exactly the same.

JK Rowling savages Sturgeon's book for ‘shameless denial of reality'
JK Rowling savages Sturgeon's book for ‘shameless denial of reality'

Telegraph

time7 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

JK Rowling savages Sturgeon's book for ‘shameless denial of reality'

JK Rowling has reviewed Nicola Sturgeon 's memoir, Frankly, and said it 'reads like a PR statement that's been through sixteen drafts.' The Harry Potter author said the former first minister remained 'stubbornly wedded' to the idea that transgender women should be allowed into women-only spaces. Rowling said Sturgeon looked 'like a complete f***wit' when she was asked whether transgender rapist Isla Bryson was a man or a woman during a television interview. The author was a staunch critic of SNP plans, which were later ditched, to make it easier for transgender women to change their legal gender. Earlier this week the author mocked Sturgeon for using the memoir to warn about making public spaces safer for women. She tweeted a picture of the relevant pages of the newly-released book, across which she had scrawled in capital letters: 'Are you f-----g kidding me?' Rowling said she used to feel some 'non-partisan admiration' for Ms Sturgeon and empathised with her descriptions of being subjected to sexism. But in the review, she says Sturgeon 'denies there are any risks to a policy of gender self-identification.' Rowling added: 'She can't imagine any male predator capitalising on such policies, in spite of the fact that it has, demonstrably, happened many times. She is flat out Trumpian in her shameless denial of reality and hard facts.' Rowling began the review by comparing Ms Sturgeon to Bella Swan, the heroine of the teen fantasy Twilight novels, saying they both start out as 'a shy, awkward, bookish girl' and end up as a 'monomaniac'. She wrote: 'Both are consumed by a single, overriding ambition. In Nicola's case, it's independence for Scotland. 'In Bella's, it's having loads of hot sex with Edward Cullen without getting accidentally killed. Spoiler alert: only one of these ambitions is realised,' Rowling wrote. The Harry Potter author also mocked Ms Sturgeon's claim the 2014 independence referendum was not 'unpleasant and divisive', saying: 'No s***, Nicola. 'You, surrounded only by adoring nationalists, flying between public meetings in a helicopter bearing a large image of your own face, enjoying police protection and all the excitement of potentially bringing about your life's ambition, enjoyed the referendum? I'm amazed.' She added: 'Oddly, this message didn't resonate too well with No voters who were being threatened with violence, told to f*** off out of Scotland, quizzed on the amount of Scottish blood that ran in their veins, accused of treachery and treason and informed that they were on the wrong side of, as one 'cybernat' memorably put it, 'a straightforward battle between good and evil.'

ROBERT HARDMAN: On VJ Day how can we claim 'we will remember them' when the remains of UK war heroes are still in plastic boxes in Malaysia?
ROBERT HARDMAN: On VJ Day how can we claim 'we will remember them' when the remains of UK war heroes are still in plastic boxes in Malaysia?

Daily Mail​

time35 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

ROBERT HARDMAN: On VJ Day how can we claim 'we will remember them' when the remains of UK war heroes are still in plastic boxes in Malaysia?

As the very last of the 'Forgotten Army' gather today, it will be with the same bitter-sweet emotions which come flooding back every August 15. Now, as then, the veterans of the Far East can't help the feeling that they are something of an afterthought. They had felt it all through the war, and especially through the summer of 1945 – as they fought on for three more hellish months long after Victory in Europe and those wild VE Day parties back home. And can we really blame them? Today's commemoration of Victory in Japan – VJ Day – at the National Memorial Arboretum, attended by the King and the Prime Minister, will be a poignant occasion, of course. Yet, at the going down of the sun and in the morning, can we truly say that 'we will remember them' when it transpires that the mortal remains of several British heroes continue to languish in a plastic box in Malaysia – while the British authorities twiddle their thumbs? For proof that the war in the Far East still sits in the dimmer recesses of our collective national memory, look no further than the tragic tale of two mighty Royal Navy warships, the battle cruiser, HMS Repulse, and the battleship, HMS Prince of Wales. On December 10, 1941, less than three days after its attack on the US fleet in Pearl Harbour, Japan came after the pride of the Royal Navy's Eastern Pacific fleet off the coast of what was then Malaya. Both ships were hit by bombs and torpedoes and went down within hours of each other, taking 842 men with them. 'In all the war, I never received a more direct shock,' Winston Churchill said later. 'As I turned over and twisted in bed the full horror of the news sank in upon me... Across this vast expanse of waters, Japan was supreme.' Even for those who survived, salvation was short-lived. Most were taken ashore to the naval base in Singapore. Within weeks, the colony had fallen to Japan in one of the greatest humiliations of the war. Thousands of servicemen, along with the civilian population, were marched to a brutal captivity from which many would not emerge. After the war, passing British ships would conduct memorial services over the wrecks and, for a while, send divers down to ensure that the White Ensign of the Royal Navy was still attached to the hulls. In due course, they were designated as war graves while the bell of the Prince of Wales was recovered in 2002 and returned to Britain. However, over the years came grim reports of looting by salvage operators plundering the wreck for scrap metal. When the subject surfaced periodically in Parliament, ministers would pledge to keep an eye on things. It was only thanks to the British charity, the Maritime Archaeology Sea Trust (MAST), that the true extent of this desecration has since come to light. In 2022, it discovered that a Chinese salvage barge had spent 92 days ransacking the sites – which lie in international waters. Then, in 2023, it tracked the loot to a Malaysian breakers' yard. Police duly seized a huge quantity of stolen property, including the giant anchors of HMS Prince of Wales, and arrests were made. Veterans and the next of kin were dismayed, even more so when it emerged that the British High Commission in Kuala Lumpur had told the Malaysians they could keep the stuff. No one in the Foreign Office or the Ministry of Defence, it seems, had seen it fit to consult the families. Further bad news was to follow, however. Last year, the Malaysian authorities confirmed to the team from MAST their worst suspicions: the loot not only included sailors' possessions but human remains. These were being carefully preserved by the Malaysians yet the British authorities had made no effort to reclaim them. It was now beyond doubt that the final resting places of hundreds of British war heroes have been plundered by Chinese grave-robbers and the bodies of the dead have not just been disturbed but dumped ashore while British diplomats failed to act. 'I find it utterly extraordinary. I just don't know how we can simply stand by while this goes on,' says the former First Sea Lord, Admiral Lord West. Two months ago, in the House of Lords, he asked the Government 'what steps they are taking to ensure that human remains found among the scrap of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse are given a fitting burial by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission'. The defence minister, Lord Coaker, said the Government 'is unable to provide a response regarding the presence of human remains' until 'investigations have concluded'. The MoD will only say: 'We strongly condemn any desecration of any maritime military grave. We will take appropriate action, including working with regional governments and partners to prevent inappropriate activity.' At least MAST, led by marine and military luminaries, including former Desert Rats commander Major General Patrick Cordingley, are on the case. 'It's only thanks to them we have had any idea of what's going on. We've heard nothing from the Government,' says Hannah Rickard, chair of the HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse Survivors Association. This week, MAST's chief operating officer has reported back from Malaysia where he has been shown human bones included in the official catalogue of material seized from the scrapyard. These, he says, are being treated 'with professionalism and respect' and the Malaysians are more than ready to assist the British in identifying them through DNA tests. Once that has happened, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission is ready to give these brave men a proper burial. This cannot come soon enough for the last survivor of the sinkings. This week, former Royal Marine Jim Wren, 105, received a royal visit when the Duchess of Edinburgh came to his Salisbury care home as part of the VJ Day commemorations. He still recalls the moment a bomb landed behind his mess in HMS Repulse and exploded several decks below. He rushed to man an anti-aircraft gun until the ship keeled on her side, whereupon 'it was every man for himself' and he was hauled out of the sea two hours later, vomiting oil. Returned to Singapore, he fought the Japanese on land before being taken prisoner. For the next three years, his family and his sweetheart, Margaret, thought he was dead until word came through that an emaciated Jim was on his way home in October 1945. Now the oldest Royal Marine alive, Mr Wren has had his portrait painted at the behest of the King and also featured on this week's BBC film, VJ Day: We Were There. 'I can't forget the men in that ship,' he said this week. 'Let them rest in peace.' He wants all the looted remains buried properly. For good measure, he would love to see the main anchor of the Prince of Wales returned to Britain and installed at the National Memorial Arboretum as a monument to all 842. It is, surely, not much to ask – unless the heroes of VJ Day really are the 'forgotten' ones?

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