
Nick Cannon criticized for podcast announcement
The actor and rapper, who has 12 children with six different partners, has been widely mocked on social media for launching a relationship advice show.
Promotional material for the podcast suggests Cannon's public personal life makes him uniquely qualified to discuss dating, fatherhood, and modern relationships.
Social media users have sarcastically commented that Cannon is more suited to give fertility advice than relationship advice.
Cannon has previously stated that 'God decides' when he will stop having children and has admitted his 'biggest guilt' is not spending enough time with all his offspring.
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Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Has Carrie Bickmore nabbed herself a Bachelor? Radio host is linked to Lee Elliott after his split from wife Georgia Love - following Tommy Little romance rumours
Carrie Bickmore has sparked rumours that she's romancing Lee Elliott. The radio host and the former Bachelorette star are said to be spending time together, according to a new report. The relationship is 'heating up quickly', an alleged source told Woman's Day this week. The pair, who were reportedly introduced by mutual friends, are said to have been spending time together at Carrie's home in recent weeks. 'They've been trying hard to keep things under wraps. But there's definitely something romantic going on. They're a beautiful couple!' the source claimed. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Daily Mail Australia has reached out to Carrie Bickmore and Lee Elliott for comment. Lee is newly single after splitting from his wife, Georgia Love, earlier this year. He and Georgia, who first met on the 2016 season of The Bachelorette, announced their separation with identical posts to Instagram in May. 'After nine wonderful years together, including four as husband and wife, [we] have made the incredibly difficult decision to lovingly part ways,' they wrote. 'Our relationship has been so special and we will always cherish the memories, love, and laughter we've shared. 'There is no drama, no bad blood. Just two people who have grown in different directions while still holding deep respect and care for each other. 'We remain friends and we'd really appreciate our privacy as we navigate this next stage. Thank you.' Georgia and Lee had fuelled rumours they had split for some time, after having not been seen together for four months and ditching their wedding rings. Carrie, meanwhile, has long been linked to her Carrie & Tommy radio show co-star, Tommy Little. The pair, who share undeniable chemistry on their Hit Network radio show, have been at the centre of dating rumours for years. While they have never confirmed that they are a couple, fans continue to speculate about the true nature of their relationship. Romance rumours between the pair arose after Carrie's very public split from longtime partner Chris Walker in 2023. Just two weeks ago, Carrie and Tommy took a vacation to Hayman Island together, along with a group of their colleagues. Meanwhile, Tommy recently made a relationship confession which continued to fan the flames of romance rumours. The comedian confessed to Stellar he is very keen to start a family and settle down - even if he's not entirely ready to grow up yet.


Daily Mail
7 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Shark diver busts Jaws myths and shares her top tip to avoid a similar attack
When Andriana Fragola slips into the ocean, she's not just diving into saltwater. She's entering the habitat of some of the world's most feared and misunderstood creatures - sharks. Fragola, a 31-year-old marine biologist, conservationist, and shark diver known to her online followers as Andriana Marine, has built a life around challenging the myths that have haunted our cultural consciousness since 1975 - the year Jaws hit theaters and turned the great white shark into a cinematic supervillain. Now, with Shark Week 2025 kicking off July 20 on Discovery and Max and coinciding with the 50th anniversary of Jaws, Fragola says it's more important than ever to set the record straight. 'Jaws, specifically, has done quite a lot of damage for sharks and just the image of sharks,' Fragola said. 'It's something that people are already nervous about - being in the ocean or being in that environment - and then it just amplifies it by making it this shark that's specifically hunting people. And that is not the case at all.' However, she does admit to one or two terrifying encounters, including a dive in Hawaii where she was almost savaged by a Tiger shark. Daily Mail caught up with Fragola to distinguish fact from fiction and get her top tips for avoiding a similar fate. The truth behind the terror Fragola grew up in Miami, where a childhood love of the ocean led her to snorkeling, scuba diving, and eventually a master's degree studying sharks at the University of Miami. Today, she leads shark diving tours, creates educational content for social media, and works with conservation-focused dive operators around the globe - including her latest project in the Maldives, helping design a new tiger shark free diving program. Still, she's no stranger to skepticism. 'People really don't understand that if that were the case, there would be people every single time you go to the beach - there would be someone there, you know, multiple people getting injured or attacked because they're in the water all the time,' she said. 'In reality, out of the global population, there's only about 10 human fatalities in the entire world' due to shark interactions each year. 'In comparison to how many sharks are killed by people, that's actually over 100 million sharks killed by people every single year.' 'If you compare the number between 10 and 100 million, it's pretty jarring.' Could Jaws actually happen? Not according to Fragola. 'I think it's pretty off-base with sharks,' she said. 'Sharks are attracted to splashing because when something's injured or dying at the surface, it's usually splashing or thrashing around.' But the image of a relentless man-eating predator? Pure Hollywood. 'In an extremely small chance that could happen, but it's so, so unlikely and so uncommon that a shark would continue to try to attack a person. So I would say it's pretty off-base.' Even Shark Week, she says, sometimes gets it wrong. 'I think the current image of sharks in pop culture and media and movies still has that really negative image,' she said. 'Unfortunately, a lot of times movies are still bringing up the drama... Even a series like Shark Week, they do often still dramatize the most crazy thing with sharks or the most intense moment of their behavior.' 'That's maybe like five percent of what they do in a day. It's really, really different from what's actually happening and the way that sharks are actually behaving every single day.' Beauty and power, side by side Despite spending thousands of hours in the water with sharks, Fragola says she's never been bitten. That doesn't mean every dive is peaceful. 'I have definitely had encounters where the sharks have been either really competitive - whether that's because there's baitball and they're feeding, or a situation where they're just being competitive with each other,' she said. 'Sometimes that can get really heated and escalated.' But those moments are the exception, not the rule - and they're part of what makes sharks so remarkable. 'Specifically with the tigers that I work with in Hawaii, there'll be moments where the same shark is extremely intense - and she's tried to bite me before,' Fragola said. 'But it's really displaced aggression when it comes to the other sharks in the area, and she's just frustrated.' 'An hour later, it's just completely beautiful - super soft-touching, when I have to push her away - very curious. Seeing the same power in the one shark, where it's super incredibly peaceful, and then completely strength in the other side of it - I think is really beautiful.' What to do if you see a shark It's the summer beachgoer's worst-case scenario: spotting a fin near the shore. But Fragola says the solution is simpler - and calmer - than most would expect. 'The best thing to do is just to remain calm,' she said. 'If you do want to get out of the water, just slowly kind of back out of it - that way you can keep an eye on the shark while getting out.' 'Any type of screaming and splashing, they can feel the vibrations of all of that, and it's definitely going to make them more interested in pursuing you or just checking you out.' 'Honestly, standing still is probably the best thing.' If you're in the water and a shark is curious, eye contact is key. 'You want to look like a predator,' she said. 'You're going to stand your ground and show the animal that you see it - show the shark that you see it - by making eye contact and continuing to look around, just in case there's any other sharks in the area.' 'And then if the shark ever continued to approach you... you could push down on the top of the head and push it away from you. That's like last-case scenario.' Changing minds and facing critics Through her videos, Fragola documents not just the beauty of sharks, but the transformational experience of diving with them - especially for first-timers. 'I've been able to have people in the water and see sharks, and see the reaction they have when they're getting on the boat and they're terrified and nervous,' she said. 'And then the reaction afterwards, when they have a little bit more understanding of the behavior and how different it is from the perception that they had.' Still, not everyone is supportive. Some critics accuse her of interfering with nature - especially when she redirects a shark with her hand. 'It's when people say not to touch them, and it's like - the shark is approaching and I have to redirect in the sense for safety. I can't just let the shark run into my chest,' she said. 'If I didn't touch the shark to move it away from me, there's a potential it could bump into me or even bite me - and then that is going to create a whole negative slew of videos and things that people would share about someone getting hit by a shark. And that's the opposite of what I would ever want to happen.' Fragola also believes gender plays a role in the backlash. 'I get more negative comments because of being a woman,' she said. 'I'll see a post that's really similar that a man posts, and then a post I post... they could be very similar in content, and then the comments and reaction are completely different.' The real threat While fear of sharks still dominates headlines, Fragola says the real threat is going largely unnoticed - and it's on our plates. 'A lot of sharks are caught as bycatch from fisheries, and unfortunately they don't - a lot of times they don't even use the sharks,' she explained. 'They're just thrown back in the ocean.' 'And most of the time, because there's so much gear to bring in, the sharks that were caught usually are dead.' Her advice? 'Probably the number one way you can help sharks is honestly not eating seafood at all,' Fragola said. 'But if you're going to eat seafood, just really minimize it, or try to get it from a fisherman that's local and you have a more direct source. If you don't know where it's coming from, it's better not to eat it.' 'Even though it's not a shark fishery, when they're setting out big long-line fishery or gill net fishery, they're setting out all of this gear... and unfortunately, it's so much gear that it catches a lot - dolphins and turtles and other sea birds, sea lions, things like that.' 'So if you want to help the ocean in general - that's my number one thing.'


The Independent
36 minutes ago
- The Independent
Katy Perry nearly falls as prop malfunctions mid-air over crowd
Showing now | Culture 00:54 Holly Patrick Katy Perry almost fell from a butterfly prop after it malfunctioned while she was flying over the crowd singing "Roar" during her concert in San Francisco on Friday (18 July). The pop star was sitting on top of the machine when it dropped mid-performance, clinging onto it. Perry, who was rigged to the prop, appeared startled but continued with her set at the Chase Center arena. It comes after a flying car prop at Beyoncé's Cowboy Carter tour tilted midair during her Houston concert.