logo
Rochelle Humes looks radiant as she shares a loved-up album of family snaps with husband Marvin and their children

Rochelle Humes looks radiant as she shares a loved-up album of family snaps with husband Marvin and their children

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Rochelle Humes looked radiant as she shared a series of sweet family snaps on Instagram on Tuesday.
The former Saturdays singer, 36, shares three children - Alaia Mai, Valentina and Blake - with JLS star Marvin, 40.
And showing that she is ever the family woman, Rochelle gave a glimpse into her summer with her adorable family.
In on snap, the singer and Marvin looked happier than ever as they posed for a loved-up snap together at the KissStory festival.
Rochelle cut a stylish figure in a cropped Miu Miu navy jacket and jorts, while Marvin donned an all black ensemble.
Another shot showed the beauty in a photo booth with her children as they posed for fun-filled snaps during a day out at a Jellycat pop up in London.
This was followed by a sweet photo of her daughter and Marvin at the diner table as she captured a candid moment.
Rochelle also included snaps of her sister Sophie along with some head turning fashion snaps.
Alongside the photo dump, the star penned: 'Some summer stuff that's made me a happy girl.'
It comes after Rochelle admitted she would be 'lost' if she didn't have 'help' at home, despite previously having a 'bad experience' using a childminder.
During a Q&A session with her Instagram followers in April, the star was asked if she has help at home to support her and Marvin when they are busy with work.
Rochelle opened up on having two people help her with the kids and her house - her mother Roz Wiseman and a lady called Dita, who she said is also like family.
She explained: 'I do have help, I'm going to be honest, I'm not sure I'd be able to spin as many plates if I didn't.
'Obviously the children are in school 5 days a week (Blake in preschool), Marvin hosts radio 11-1 so his hours slot perfectly around the school run. We have an incredible lady (called Dita) who helps with the house.
There were also some head turning fashion snaps
'She's like family and has worked with us for years and then my mum helps us SO much, we would be lost without her. I feel so lucky that our nanny is their actual Nan.
'We always try and make sure we are pulling opposite work shifts so one of us is always there! The only time that's not possible is when we record our TV show [The Hit List] and then the children stay with my mum.
'I squeeze as much into school hours as humanly possible and take it week by week.'
Rochelle previously shared that she would never use a nanny again after experiencing trust issues in the past.
The This Morning host said she relies on her mum Roz to help out with family life, after having 'a bad experience' using a childminder.
She told Zoe Hardman and Georgia Dayton on Made By Mammas: The Podcast that it was 'really awkward' to be off work as the nanny would still be around the home.
She added: 'I had a bit of a bad experience with like, trust issues and stuff in a previous nanny role before. So, it just didn't work with me.'
The presenter previously said planning ahead and taking time out for self care has helped her be a better parent.
She told Mother & Baby: 'I just think when things get overwhelming, you just have to try and find time to take care of yourself in all of that.
'I do as much as I can the night before.
'That's just little things just to make me feel like I'm halfway there.
'So whether that's laying out the kids uniforms, or filling up their water bottles because that's one thing down for the morning or even laying out my own outfit.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cat Deeley just wore the same hoop earrings loved by Kate Middleton - and they're only £25
Cat Deeley just wore the same hoop earrings loved by Kate Middleton - and they're only £25

Daily Mail​

time27 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cat Deeley just wore the same hoop earrings loved by Kate Middleton - and they're only £25

Daily Mail journalists select and curate the products that feature on our site. If you make a purchase via links on this page we will earn commission - learn more While the Princess of Wales is known for her impeccable fashion sense, it's often the finer details that really stand out. Kate boasts an enviable jewellery collection, ranging from budget-friendly buys to priceless heirlooms. One pair of high street earrings has proven particularly popular - not just with Kate, but with TV presenter Cat Deeley too, who was recently spotted wearing the exact same set. The earrings in question? Orelia's Chain Huggie Hoops, an 18-carat gold-plated design featuring a chain-textured finish and convenient click clasp. Kate is clearly a fan, having worn them to more than 10 royal engagements, including a visit to Maidenhead Rugby Club in 2021. The dainty hoops are as versatile as they are stylish, effortlessly elevating both casual and formal looks. While Kate has paired these earrings with blazers and dresses, Cat gave them a relaxed twist, wearing hers with a cosy sweatshirt on the beach. At just £25, they're an affordable addition to any jewellery collection. It's no surprise these earrings have earned over 40 glowing reviews, with shoppers praising their style, comfort and everyday wearability. One happy customer called them 'the perfect everyday earrings'. Another added: 'I love these earrings, they're perfect for every day wear or occasions! They are lovely quality and I always get compliments on them!' A third reviewer raved: 'Superb earrings, very nice, even more beautiful then in pictures.' Another pointed out their ideal balance of fashion and function, writing: 'Comfortable and a great statement piece.' One first-time buyer shared: 'First purchase from Orelia and I wasn't disappointed. Perfect size and style, buy them, you won't regret it!' Several customers even admitted they were inspired to buy the earrings after spotting them on the Princess of Wales - some going so far as to say they're 'obsessed' with their new go-to accessory. If the gold finish isn't to your liking, you'll be glad to know the earrings also come in sleek sterling silver. Equally versatile and elegant, the silver version offers a more understated take on the design - ideal for those who prefer cooler-toned accessories or want a modern twist on a classic hoop. Whether you're dressing up for a summer event or adding polish to everyday outfits, the sterling silver option brings the same comfort, quality and royal-approved style at the same affordable price. With both finishes available online, it's a no-brainer to pick the one that best suits your wardrobe - or get both to cover all bases.

Six-time Grammy Award-winning singer Flaco Jimenez dies aged 86 after ‘facing a medical hurdle' as family pays tribute
Six-time Grammy Award-winning singer Flaco Jimenez dies aged 86 after ‘facing a medical hurdle' as family pays tribute

The Sun

time28 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Six-time Grammy Award-winning singer Flaco Jimenez dies aged 86 after ‘facing a medical hurdle' as family pays tribute

GRAMMY Award winner Flaco Jimenez has died at the age of 86. The music star died surrounded by his family on July 31. Jimenez, who hailed from San Antonio, was known for his Tex Mex and Tejano music. His death comes just months after being hospitalized over a "medical hurdle." "'It is with great sadness that we share tonight the loss of our father," his family said. They said he will be "missed immensely." During his career, he picked up six Grammy Awards. In 2015, he won the Grammy Lifetime Achievement award. .

Born in the USA: Is American Eagle really using whiteness to sell jeans?
Born in the USA: Is American Eagle really using whiteness to sell jeans?

The Guardian

time28 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Born in the USA: Is American Eagle really using whiteness to sell jeans?

American Eagle is a US-founded fashion brand that sells jeans, shrunken 'baby' T-shirts and cropped sweatshirts to predominantly tween and teenage girls. On TikTok, users gush about their clothes in outfit-of-the-day posts or shopping hauls. This week, however, the brand found itself facing backlash over its new campaign, starring the 27-year-old White Lotus and Euphoria actor Sydney Sweeney, in which critics are alleging American Eagle uses the language of eugenics to try to sell denim. The campaign depicts Sweeney in a denim shirt and baggy jeans provocatively posing as a male voice says: 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' In one now-viral clip, Sweeney is filmed pasting a campaign poster on to a billboard. The poster's text reads 'Sydney Sweeney has great genes jeans'. In another video that has since been removed from American Eagle's social media channels, Sweeney, who has blond hair and blue eyes, says: 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality, and even eye colour. My jeans are blue.' Critics were quick to point out the implications of the advert's wordplay. In one video that has had more than 3m views, a TikTok user compared it to 'fascist propaganda,' adding: 'a blonde haired, blue-eyed white woman is talking about her good genes, like, that is Nazi propaganda'. On the brand's own channels, users are battling it out in the comments section. 'It's giving 'Subtle 1930's Germany',' reads one. Another person posted: 'The woke crowd needs to leave the room.' Even the US senator Ted Cruz has weighed in. Reposting a news story on X, he commented: 'Wow. Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women. I'm sure that will poll well ...' According to Sophie Gilbert, a staff writer at the Atlantic and author of the book Girl on Girl which explores how pop culture is shaped by misogyny: 'The slogan 'Sydney Sweeney has good jeans' obviously winks at the obsession with eugenics that's so prevalent among the modern right.' Dr Sarah Cefai, a senior lecturer in gender and cultural studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, agrees. 'Honestly, what were they thinking, that a white supremacist fantasy has permission to be aired so conspicuously?' Aria Halliday, an associate professor in gender and women's studies, African American and Africana studies and author of Buy Black: How Black Women Transformed US Pop Culture, isn't surprised by the ad. In recent years, she says, 'we have seen an influx of media reasserting the beauty of thin, white, blond, and blue-eyed people,' with many brands 'invested in re-presenting the wholesomeness and sanctity of conservative white values.' Critics have also zeroed in on the campaign's focus on Sweeney's body. In one clip the camera zooms in on the actor's breasts – lingering in a way that Gilbert sees as 'leering and unapologetic' – as Sweeney says: 'My body's composition is determined by my jeans.' The camera then cuts back to Sweeney's face as she shouts: 'Hey, eyes up here!' For Cefai, 'its sexualisation of the viewer via its voyeurism exposes western sexism as a racialised fantasy of whiteness'. American Eagle were approached for comment by the Guardian but did not respond. Fashion campaigns are notorious for purposefully sparking controversy, but the denim genre is a particularly seedy seam. In a 1980s Calvin Klein campaign, a 15-year-old Brooke Shields mused: 'You know what gets between me and my Calvin's? Nothing.' In 1995, another Calvin Klein ad featured models including Kate Moss being filmed in a basement as they undid the top button of their jeans and were asked: 'Are you nervous?' It was criticised for alluding to child exploitation. The American Eagle campaign comes at a time when the US is witnessing a cultural shift centering whiteness as well as more conservative gender roles, while the Maga movement has been linked with promoting a 'soft eugenics' way of thinking. In 2025, there are new factors reinforcing old stereotypes. For Halliday, the rise of GLP-1 medications for weight loss and the record high unemployment of Black women in the US all feed into a wider cultural shift that is 'about recentering whiteness as what America is and who Americans look like.' Some fashion imagery is reflecting this wider regression. The blacklisted photographer Terry Richardson is shooting for magazines and brands again, while Dov Charney, whose role as CEO of American Apparel was terminated after allegations of sexual misconduct, is now making content for his new brand that resembles the heavily sexualised noughties style of his former brand's advertising. For American Eagle, a brand whose biggest demographic is 15- to 25-year-old females, to tailor their campaign to the male gaze seems retrograde, if not downright creepy. However, Jane Cunningham, co-author of Brandsplaining: Why Marketing is (Still) Sexist and How to Fix It, says many gen Z-ers who are fed a 'hypersexualised visual diet' on social media may buy into the strategy. 'Their attitude may be that they are 'owning' their sexuality by being overtly sexual in the way they present,' she says, pointing to the pop star Sabrina Carpenter as another example of someone who has also been accused of catering to the heterosexual male gaze. Sign up to Fashion Statement Style, with substance: what's really trending this week, a roundup of the best fashion journalism and your wardrobe dilemmas solved after newsletter promotion Halliday says that while 'Black girls are rarely the target audience for ads,' some may still be curious to try the jeans: 'the desire to be perceived as beautiful is hard to ignore,' she says. Many gen Z-ers may not have experienced this genre of advertising, or 'intentional provocation as branding strategy', before, says Gilbert, for whom the campaign also reminds her of 90s Wonderbra ads with their 'Hello Boys' slogan. But maybe they will come to see through it. They are 'extremely savvy as consumers', she points out. 'They have the kind of language and expertise in terms of deconstructing media that I couldn't have dreamed of utilising as a teen during the 1990s. And they know when someone is trying to play them, which seems to be happening here. She adds: 'It all feels like it was cooked up in a conference room to provoke maximum controversy and maximum outrage, and to get maximum attention.' And it seems – in the business sense at least – to be working. Since the campaign launched, American Eagle's stock has shot up almost 18%. To read the complete version of this newsletter – complete with this week's trending topics in The Measure – subscribe to receive Fashion Statement in your inbox every Thursday.

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