logo
Dejon's embarrassed mum tells him off about threesome confession as Love Islanders Meet The Parents

Dejon's embarrassed mum tells him off about threesome confession as Love Islanders Meet The Parents

The Sun28-07-2025
DEJON'S embarrassed mum told him off about his threesome confession in the latest twist.
On Love Island, viewers will see the loved ones of the contestants enter the villa as the infamous 'Meet The Parents' segment returns.
5
5
Dejon Noel-Williams will be left most shocked of all as both his mum Demelza and sister Gene show up in Majorca.
This is alongside Meg Moore's mum Nathalie and her sister Paige who arrive on the ITV2 set together.
In unison, Meg's family excitedly yell out on the sprawling summer set: 'Where's 'our Meg'?'
However, when the trio sit down, Meg's sister demanded answers as she told her sibling: "You let him get away with a lot though."
Simultaneously, Dejon's family also sit with him for their own dressing down after his actions on the show.
His mother Demelza exclaimed: "In the beginning it was like you had verbal diarrhoea.
"No mother needs to hear about your threesomes and how much you looooooove sex."
She continued: "I just wanted to go, 'Shut up!'," which left him practically speechless.
Demelza added: "You're a big flirt, didn't know that."
Dejon didn't seem to warm up to his family's remarks as he gave a stiff reply to their prodding.
Love Island lad slammed for being a 'red flag' after 'worrying' intro video
He sarcastically joked: "You lot just come in to cook me or what?"
But his own sibling insisted that he 'needed' to hear their viewpoint, and their words came from a place of affection.
Gene explained: "We've been watching you for the last how many weeks - you need this feedback!'
Meg then puts a serious question to her own family as she pondered: "Does everyone like D or just wary of him?"
Love Island 2025 full lineup
Harry Cooksley: A 30-year-old footballer with charm to spare.
Shakira Khan: A 22-year-old Manchester-based model, ready to turn heads.
Megan Moore: A payroll specialist from Southampton, looking for someone tall and stylish.
Alima Gagigo: International business graduate with brains and ambition.
Tommy Bradley: A gym enthusiast with a big heart.
Helena Ford: A Londoner with celebrity connections, aiming to find someone funny or Northern.
Ben Holbrough: A model ready to make waves.
Dejon Noel-Williams: A personal trainer and semi-pro footballer, following in his footballer father's footsteps.
Aaron Buckett: A towering 6'5' personal trainer.
Conor Phillips: A 25-year-old Irish rugby pro.
Antonia Laites: Love Island's first bombshell revealed as sexy Las Vegas pool party waitress.
Yasmin Pettet: The 24-year-old bombshell hails from London and works as a commercial banking executive.
Emily Moran: Bombshell Welsh brunette from the same town as Love Island 2024 alumni Nicole Samuel.
Harrison Solomon: Pro footballer and model entering Love Island 2025 as a bombshell.
Giorgio Russo: The 30-year-old will be spending his summer in the sun, potentially his sister Alessia's successful tournament at the Euros in Switzerland.
Yaz Broom: Professional DJ from Manchester who appeared on X Factor 2016 in girl group Four of Diamonds.
Andrada Pop: Miss Bikini Ireland 2019 winner who hails from Dublin and works as a nail technician and personal trainer.
Emma Munro: Harry Cooksley's ex who entered as a bombshell and works as a hydrogeologist.
Departures:
Kyle Ashman: Axed after an arrest over a machete attack emerged. He was released with no further action taken and denies any wrongdoing.
Sophie Lee: A model and motivational speaker who has overcome adversity after suffering life-changing burns in an accident.
Blu Chegini: A boxer with striking model looks, seeking love in the villa.
Malisha Jordan: A teaching assistant from Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, who entered Love Island 2025 as a bombshell.
Shea Mannings: Works as a scaffolder day-to-day and plays semi-pro football on the side.
Caprice Alexandra: The 26-year-old bombshell owns a nursery in Romford.
Poppy Harrison: The bombshell broke up with her boyfriend after finding out she would be in the villa
Will Means: The fourth fittest farmer in the UK according to Farmers' Weekly in 2023 entered the villa as a bombshell
Megan Clarke: An Irish actress part of the OG line-up.
Remell Mullins: Boasts over 18million likes and 500k followers on TikTok thanks to his sizzling body transformation videos.
Alima Gagigo: 23-year-old personal banker from Glasgow who fancies herself as a 'good flirt'.
Ryan Bannister: 27-year-old gym hunk who entered the show as a bombshell.
But will she get the answers that she's looking for?
When Yasmin Pettet first entered the villa as a bombshell, she threw her hat in the ring for Dejon with a shocking sexual trio offer.
She asked him: 'Would you ever have a threesome with me and Toni?'
Toni Laites was completely shocked Dejon was so surprised by the remarks at the time that he nearly spat out his drink.
5
5
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rees-Mogg clashes with Price Andrew biographer over ‘salacious gossip' behind new book
Rees-Mogg clashes with Price Andrew biographer over ‘salacious gossip' behind new book

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Rees-Mogg clashes with Price Andrew biographer over ‘salacious gossip' behind new book

The author of a new biography about the Duke and Duchess of York has clashed with Jacob Rees-Mogg over the book, which the GB News host branded as 'salacious gossip'. The book, called Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, written by Andrew Lownie, has made claims about the disgraced duke's life. It includes accusations of affairs, fights with Prince Harry and of being ' unbelievably cruel ' to royal staff. But the author was confronted by Mr Rees-Mogg over the sources he used in the joint biography, which has been serialised in the Daily Mail. When asked at the beginning of the interview why he had written the book, Mr Lownie said: "There was a strong story there, especially with Andrew being in the news over [Jeffrey] Epstein — but what really interested me was how they leveraged their royal status for private gain, and the damage that did to the monarchy." But the author was then questioned on the reliability of his sources, with Mr Rees-Mogg accusing him of predominantly using newspaper reports. During the interview, Mr Rees-Mogg asked Mr Lownie about a claim made in his book regarding the duke allegedly hiring an escort. He asked the author if his source, quoted as 'the comedian Katy Brand has a story from a friend', was sound. "Sometimes, that is all we have," Lownie said, to which Mr Rees-Mogg replied: That's my point. You've got salacious gossip, starting with an unfounded allegation against Prince Philip. Would you have written it while he was alive and could have sued you for libel? You're making sleazy claims without solid evidence." The author defended his sources, highlighting that he had interviewed 300 people, including on-the-record diplomats, naval personnel, and special royal representatives. At the end of the heated exchange, Mr Rees-Mogg thanked the author for his 'hatchet job'. Extracts of the book have grabbed headlines in recent days, with a series of claims made about the duke and duchess and their relationships to the royal family. The book has claimed Prince Andrew called a staff member in the Royal Household a 'f***ing imbecile' for not referring to the Queen Mother by her full title in 2005. According to the book, Prince Andrew's catchphrase when dealing with royal staff was 'I want this done and I want this done now. Do it!' Mr Lownie also claims in his book that the relationship between the Duke of York and his younger nephews, William and Harry, was 'problematic'. The Duke of York is alleged to have accused Prince Harry of going 'bonkers' for marrying Megan Markle. However, a spokesperson for the Duke of Sussex told The Daily Telegraph that Prince Andrew did not 'ever make the comments he is alleged to have made about the Duchess of Sussex to Prince Harry'. The spokesperson also denied the book's claim that the pair had ever gotten into a physical fight.

The Guardian view on the sensuous splendour of art nouveau: ripe for revival in the age of AI
The Guardian view on the sensuous splendour of art nouveau: ripe for revival in the age of AI

The Guardian

time19 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

The Guardian view on the sensuous splendour of art nouveau: ripe for revival in the age of AI

Walter Benjamin, the great German theorist of early 20th-century modernity, was famously unimpressed by art nouveau. Dismissive of the style's dreamy aesthetic and flowery taste for designs inspired by the natural world, he described it as 'the last sortie of an art besieged in its tower by technology'. An artistic movement embodying a reaction against the mass production of the industrial age deserved a more sympathetic reception. Nevertheless, the 20th century appeared to agree with Benjamin's analysis. By the end of the first world war, art nouveau's decorative curlicues and flowing forms had fallen out of fashion as a more machine-inspired modernist aesthetic came into vogue. But that was then. More than a century on, as artificial intelligence offers a fresh tech challenge to humanity, a timely spot of revisionism appears to be taking place. Last month, in Paris, it emerged that a museum is finally to be dedicated to one of art nouveau's most deserving and neglected exponents. During the early 1900s, the architect Hector Guimard designed 167 entrances to the city's new Métro, one of which was later to be donated to the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The stylised lettering and sinuous green ironwork, resembling insects' wings or orchid stalks, quickly became synonymous both with art nouveau and with Paris itself. But despite their much-loved and emblematic status, almost half were bulldozed in an ill-advised wave of modernisation. Much of the rest of Guimard's work in the city has been treated with equal disdain. With good reason, the art enthusiasts who have lobbied for the new museum for years see it as the historic 'righting of a wrong'. Meanwhile, 200 miles away in the birthplace of art nouveau, more rehabilitation work has been taking place. As part of a spectacular new exhibition, Brussels' Art and History Museum this summer unveiled a restored version of Victor Horta's famous Winter Garden, an immersive stained-glass marvel that helped make the artist's name when it was designed in 1900. This too became a victim of postwar architectural aesthetics, unceremoniously dismantled as part of a wider urban development programme. A six-year process of reconstruction has salvaged much of the original and replicated the rest. And completing what might be viewed as an upliftingly revivalist year, the work of Alphonse Mucha – best known for his poster portraits of the Parisian actor Sarah Bernhardt – is now being showcased at a new Mucha museum in Prague. In the US, a recent exhibition has also highlighted his influence on the psychedelic art of the 1960s counterculture. Benjamin might have raised a sceptical eyebrow. But art nouveau's emphasis on the importance of craftsmanship, and the conviction that artistic originality can introduce beauty as well as utility into the objects of daily life, are principles with a strong echo of William Morris's work. They are energising doctrines to recall in a new age of existential anxiety. Year by year, concerns grow over the extent to which artificial intelligence will colonise creative processes that once defined the meaning of being human. Guimard's stunningly innovative Métro entrances remain a tourist attraction in their own right, and a tribute to the power of the free imagination. The Guimard and Mucha museums, and Horta's rebuilt Winter Garden, can serve as reminders of what must be protected, as we enter our own equivalent of a new industrial age.

Win a copy of Our Last Resort by Clémence Michallon in this week's Fabulous book competition terms and conditions
Win a copy of Our Last Resort by Clémence Michallon in this week's Fabulous book competition terms and conditions

The Sun

time19 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Win a copy of Our Last Resort by Clémence Michallon in this week's Fabulous book competition terms and conditions

T&CS Open to United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland residents aged 18 or over only, except employees of the Promoter, News Corp UK & Ireland Limited, and their associated, affiliated or subsidiary companies, their families, agents or any other person(s) connected with the competition, including third party promotional partners. Competition closes at 11.59pm on August 30, 2025. Entries received after the Closing Date will not be counted. One entry per person. Bulk, automatically generated or third party entries are void. To enter you must click the 'click to enter' link on Our Last Resort page before the Closing Date. There will be 10 winners. The winners will be selected at random from all valid entries for this competition received before the Closing Date. Winners will be notified by email or phone or using the other contact details provided by the winner within fourteen days after the Closing Date. All reasonable endeavours will be made to contact the winner during the specified time. If a winner cannot be contacted or is not available, the Promoter reserves the right to re-draw another winner from the valid/correct entries that were received before the Closing Date. The prize is a copy of Our Last Resort by Clémence Michallon in hardcover, paperback or e-book format, at the discretion of the Promoter. The prize is non-transferable and there are no cash alternatives to the prize in whole or in part. The promoter of this competition is News Group Newspapers Ltd (publishers of The Sun) (the 'Promoter'). General terms and conditions for competitions apply*. *GENERAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COMPETITIONS These terms and conditions apply to all competitions (unless and to the extent that) the competition states otherwise. The winner is responsible for ensuring they are able to accept the prize as set out and in accordance with these terms and conditions, in the event they are unable to do so then the Promoter reserves the right to redraw the prize. Entry is free but entrants should be aware that they may be subject to data charges depending on their own individual arrangements for Internet access if entry is online or by email. An eligible entrant must be an individual, must enter on their own behalf, and must submit an entry in the form requested by the Promoter under this promotion including their name, address and e-mail address. By entering, all eligible entrants agree to abide by each and all these terms and conditions. Misrepresentative or fraudulent entries will invalidate an entry. Where a competition involves a voting process: offering or receiving any incentive for voting is not permitted and will invalidate the vote, and may disqualify the recipient of the vote. The Promoter reserves the right, with or without cause, to exclude entrants and withhold prizes for violating any of these terms and conditions. The Promoter reserves the right to amend these terms and conditions. Any amendments will be published on the Promoter's website (the 'Website'). The Promoter reserves the right to publish entries (including parts of entries) other than the winning entry and publication does not necessarily mean the entrant has won a prize. Entrants will retain copyright in their submitted entries, however, by entering, all entrants licence the Promoter a worldwide royalty-free perpetual licence to edit, publish and use each entry in any and all media (including print and online) for publicity and news purposes. The Promoter reserves the right to publish entries (including parts of entries) although publication does not necessarily mean the entrant has won a prize. There is no cash or other alternative to the prize stated and the prize is not transferable and no part or parts of the prize may be substituted for other benefits, items or additions. Winners may be required to submit valid identification before receiving their prize. The Promoter's decision is final and binding on the entrants. No correspondence will be entered into. The Promoter will not be liable for technical, hardware, or software failures of any kind or lost or unavailable network connections that may limit or prohibit an eligible entrant's ability to participate in the competition. Other than death or personal injury arising from the acts or omissions of the Promoter or its employees, the Promoter will not be liable for any loss or damage arising out of the winner's (or their guest's) enjoyment of the prize. By entering, any subsequent prize winners agree to allow the free use of their names, photographs and general locations for publicity and news purposes during this and future promotions by the Promoter or any associated or subsidiary company of News Corp UK & Ireland Limited. Uses of personal data received by the Promoter in the course of the promotion are subject to the privacy policy found on the Website. Winners' names may be published on the Website. Completion and submission of a registration slip or e-mail will be deemed acceptance of these terms and conditions. The Promoter reserves the right at any time to cancel, modify or supersede the competition (including altering prizes) if, in our sole discretion, a competition is not capable of being conducted as specified. The Promoter reserves the right to substitute a prize of equal value in the event that circumstances beyond their control make this unavoidable. For a list of winners please send a stamped envelope to News UK, Competitions Department, 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF stating for which competition you would like winners' details. Competition rules published in publications of the Promoter (including social media if applicable) or on the Website form part of these rules.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store