
Glasgow roads will be closed for 'exclusive event'
Run by GroceryAid, the event is an 'exclusive music event' where independent retailing businesses, wholesalers, national supports, and home-grown brands meet up to celebrate the work of Scotland's grocery and convenience industry.
READ MORE: Busy road near Glasgow's Silverburn to be closed for big event
READ MORE: 'Avoid area' warning as busy Glasgow road to be closed from today
We previously reported how Callum Beattie and Peter Andre will perform at the trade-only festival this year.
However, ahead of the event, Glasgow City Council has warned drivers that two roads in the city's East End will be shut during it.
From 3pm on August 27 until 12pm on August 29, drivers won't be able to stop, load, or unload their vehicles on Moncur Street between Bain Street and Kent Street, and Gibson Street between Moncur Street and Gallowgate.
Meanwhile, from 8am on August 28 until 12pm on August 29, road users will be banned from driving on Moncur Street between Bain Street and Kent Street, and Gibson Street between Moncur Street and Gallowgate.
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Jaw-dropping moment TOPLESS Katie Price derails Princess Andre's reality show - as teen screams 'no mum I'm filming!' and admits 'she's so unpredictable and doesn't care'
This is the shocking moment a topless Katie Price video calls her daughter Princess during the teen's new reality TV show, as the embarrassed youngster shouts: 'Mum, I'm filming!' The Princess Diaries first aired on Sunday, and the fly-on-the-wall ITV programme offers a glimpse into the life of Peter Andre and Katie Price's youngest daughter. Princess, 18, appears confident and level-headed despite her chaotic upbringing in the public eye. But viewers are immediately brought into her fraught personal life, and her relationship with her mother - former glamour model and media persona Katie Price. In a candid clip, watchers see Princess after a shower, with her hair drying in a towel. She opts to ring her mother, saying: 'She's currently on holiday in Dubai. I'm just going to give her a quick call.' But as soon as Katie picks up and switches to video call, a mortified Princess squeals: 'No, no, no, oh my god. This is why - mum I'm filming!' Keen to end the call, the teenager says: 'Okay love you, bye,' before telling the camera: 'She had her boobs out.' Princess admitted her mother is 'so unpredictable,' and revealed she has to immediately tell her when she's with people for fear of being embarrassed over the phone. She continued: 'She's there, just casually out the shower, just topless, you know, she just doesn't care. I was like "Oh my god." 'I can never, ever answer the phone. My mum will call me and say "You're with people aren't you?" and I'll say "Yep". 'Because when she answers the phone, she's so unpredictable.' But an admiring Princess nonetheless told watchers how she aspires to emulate her mother's fearless attitude. 'She just lives life, she just actually doesn't care,' she said. 'And I actually really, really look up to that, I would love to have that mindset of "I don't care". 'Because, deep down, I do care. You'll speak to me I'll be like "yep" - I won't show any emotion, then I'll get to my bed and I'll cry and cry.' Princess's new show has seen her speak candidly about growing up in the spotlight, and the gruelling impact of her parents' divorce. She revealed she 'saw things kids shouldn't' during her childhood, and she is still recovering from her mother's 'dark times'. Speaking during an episode, Princess said: 'I had so much on my plate at such a young age.' Princess also described the impact her mother's subsequent chaotic romances and lifestyle had on her growing up. She told how Katie fell into a 'dark' place following her 2018 split from third husband Kieran Hayler - with whom she shares Bunny, 10, and Jett, 11 - after she discovered he had been unfaithful throughout their marriage. Katie herself has previously admitted to attempting suicide and relying on drugs and alcohol as a coping mechanism at the time, and now Princess has told how it affected her. Princess revealed on the show how she has a counsellor and previously 'couldn't just go to my dad' due to her parents, who split in 2009, 'not liking each other'. 'I do have a counsellor who I see now and then and I write everything down in my notes. I wish I could have had a happier childhood, I had so much on my plate at such a young age and had things at the back of my mind. 'My mum and Kieran split up when I was ten years old, we were close to him. He was in our lives for five years. 'He did a lot of stuff and when they split everything went downhill.' Laying bare Katie's 'problems', Princess said she hasn't 'fully recovered' from her mum's breakdown but revealed she did apologise and they now 'talk a lot'. She continued: 'Mum was heartbroken and she went through a dark time and it was things kids shouldn't see and when we needed our mum there, she wasn't there because she had her own problems. 'Kids in school would ask me about it and I was like 11 and I would just cry about it in bed. I couldn't just go to my dad about it because I grew up with them not liking each other. 'I'm not healed or fully recovered from it but mum has fixed herself compared to how she was back then. 'She spoke to me about it and she apologised and I never wanted an apology but it was a lot that she acknowledged it and she realised she needed to prioritise us, we now talk a lot and she is now my best friend.'


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Adidas designer is accused of 'culturally appropriating' traditional sandals from Mexico as country's president calls for 'compensation'
An Adidas designer has apologised for 'appropriating' a traditional slip-on shoe style from the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. US fashion mogul Willy Chavarria, 58, who previously served as the Senior Vice President of Design at Calvin Klein, revealed he regrets that the sandals he created together with the brand were not 'developed in a meaningful partnership' with the community. The 'Oaxaca Slip-On' was inspired by traditional leather sandals known as huaraches made by indigenous artisans in the Latin American nation. Chavarria, who is himself of Mexican heritage, acknowledged that the sandals 'did not live up to the respect and collaborative approach' deserved by the community of Villa Hidalgo Yalalag, from where the original design is said to have come. The shoes feature thin leather straps braided in a style that is unmistakably similar to the traditional Hispanic artistry. However instead of flat soles, the Adidas offering tout a more chunky, sports platform. According to Mexican authorities, Adidas' design contains elements that are part of the cultural heritage of the Zapotec Indigenous communities in Oaxaca - and the country's government said it would be seeking compensation from the company. 'I deeply regret that this design has appropriated the name and was not developed in direct and meaningful partnership with the Oaxacan community,' Chavarria said in a statement sent to AFP. On Friday, the Mexican government revealed that Adidas had agreed to meet with Oaxaca authorities. 'It's collective intellectual property. There must be compensation. The heritage law must be complied with,' President Claudia Sheinbaum said during a press conference. Handicrafts are a crucial economic lifeline in Mexico, providing jobs for around half a million people across the country. The industry accounts for around 10 percent of the gross domestic product of states like Oaxaca, Jalisco, Michoacán and Guerrero. For Viridiana Jarquín García, a huaraches creator and vendor in Oaxaca's capital, the Adidas shoes were a 'cheap copy' of the kind of work that Mexican artists take time and care to craft. 'The artistry is being lost. We're losing our tradition,' she told the Associated Press, in front of her small booth of leather shoes. Authorities in Oaxaca have further called for the 'Oaxaca Slip-On' to be withdrawn and demanded a public apology from Adidas, with officials describing the design as 'cultural appropriation' that may violate Mexican law. In a public letter to Adidas leadership, Oaxaca state Gov. Salomón Jara Cruz criticised the company's design, saying that 'creative inspiration' is not a valid justification for using cultural expressions that 'provide identity to communities.' US fashion designer Willy Chavarria, who previously served as the Senior Vice President of Design at Calvin Klein, revealed he regrets that the sandals he created together with Adidas 'appropriated' a traditional design 'Culture isn't sold, it's respected,' he added. Adidas responded in a letter saying that the company 'deeply values the cultural wealth of Mexico's Indigenous people and recognises the relevance' of the criticisms. It requested to sit down with local officials and to discuss how it can 'repair the damage' to Indigenous populations. Mexican authorities have since said they're trying to work out stricter regulations in an effort to protect artists. But Marina Núñez, Mexico's undersecretary of cultural development, noted that they also want to establish guidelines to not deprive artists of 'the opportunity to trade or collaborate with several of these companies that have very broad commercial reach.' In 2022, Ralph Lauren apologised after the wife of Mexico's president accused the luxury US clothes brand of plagiarising indigenous designs, which she described as an appropriation of the work of the country's pre-Hispanic cultures. Beatriz Gutierrez posted a photo of a $360 (£267) Ralph Lauren cardigan with colorful indigenous motifs, which she said appropriated the designs of the Conta and Saltillio peoples in Mexico. 'Hey Ralph (Lauren): we already realised that you really like Mexican designs,' she said in an Instagram post. 'Hey Ralph (Lauren): we already realized that you really like Mexican designs,' Gutierrez, a writer and researcher, said in an Instagram post. 'However, by copying these designs you are committing plagiarism, which is illegal and immoral.' 'However, by copying these designs you are committing plagiarism, which is illegal and immoral.' 'Hopefully you repair the damage to the original communities that do this work with love and not for profit,' Gutierrez added, attributing the designs to the indigenous communities of Contla and Saltillo. Ralph Lauren told Reuters it was 'surprised' to learn the product was still being sold, after issuing a directive to remove it from its channels after discovering it some months previously. 'We are deeply sorry this happened and, as always, we are open to dialogue about how we can do better,' it said in a statement. The U.S. fashion retailer has pledged that all new products using indigenous designs following its summer 2023 season will be created under a model of 'credit and collaboration'. also found that the Ralph Lauren cardigan was being sold on Zalando's UK online site for £349.99 ($389.75). President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador launched an intense campaign to reclaim relics of Mexico's pre-Columbian heritage since taking office in 2018, including lodging complaints against auction houses in the United States and Europe, and recovering dozens of Mexican antiques.


The Sun
3 hours ago
- The Sun
Watch moment horrified Peter Andre is left stunned as Princess says she ‘feels like mum Katie Price' in risque shoot
HORRIFIED Peter Andre was stunned into silence when he saw daughter Princess posing up a storm during a risque photoshoot. Princess, 18, is starring in her very own reality show - The Princess Diaries - which follows her journey into adulthood as she steps out of her famous parents' shadows. 3 Mum Katie Price has since insisted those in charge banned her from appearing in the ITV2 series, which marks huge moments for Princess including walking in her first catwalk show and her milestone birthday celebrations. The teen is also seen working the camera for her first-ever solo cover shoot - and it's instantly apparent she's the daughter of one the country's most successful models. For one set of snaps, Princess stunned in a sheer pink dressing gown trimmed with fluffy faux fur. With her smokey eye make-up and perfect pout, the influencer was a double of her mum in her early modelling career. In a moment of bad timing, Pete, 52, appeared on FaceTime and even Princess picked up on how 'uncomfortable' her dad was. Speaking in her confessional, Princess said: 'I'm channelling my mum's confidence in photoshoots. This look is… something I've not actually done before. It's a little bit more grown up.' When Pete was shown his daughter's new look, clearly struggling with his words, he said: 'Right… yeah… ok.' Off camera, Princess said: 'I think it was such a big mistake to FaceTime dad. This is definitely not a dad-friendly look.' Pete is seen still adjusting to what he's seeing, and he added: 'Not my kind of thing… but you look… you look…' After the shoot wrapped, Princess reflected on the day and said: 'I did feel a bit like I was in my zone. I felt like my mum. 'When I see pictures of her when she was younger, it reminded me of that. But obviously she did topless and I will not do topless.' Princess Andre reveals what mum Katie Price thinks of her TV career after star vowed NOT to watch new show Katie, 47, made her name in the 90s as a lads' mag pin-up, posing under the pseudonym Jordan. Such was Katie's success as Jordan that she was already a multi-millionaire when she entered the I'm a Celebrity jungle in 2004 and met future husband Pete, who was then known for his 1995 hit Mysterious Girl. Meanwhile, Katie has claimed she was 'banned' from seeing her daughter when she was filming scenes for The Princess Diaries in Ibiza. Mum-of-five Katie was coincidentally on the White Island and attempted to meet up with Princess in a bar. But Katie told how she broke down in tears when producers blocked it from happening. Speaking on the latest edition of The Katie Price Show podcast, she revealed: "When I was in Ibiza, Princess was there in Ibiza, and I wasn't allowed to meet up with her. "But funny enough, I walked into a bar, and there was a group of people and it was the producer of her show, and they came up to me and said, we're producing the show. I burst out crying and this producer would know it, and said, 'I'm so upset'.