
Love Island fans slam show as ‘rigged' as Conor and Megan go missing from final dumping despite being there
no show Love Island fans slam show as 'rigged' as Conor and Megan go missing from final dumping despite being there
LOVE Island fans were left baffled this evening as Conor and Megan were missing from the final dumping.
All the former Islanders returned to the villa this evening to get rid of the least compatible couple - dumping Meg and Dejon.
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Megan and Conor didn't return to the villa in tonight's episode
Credit: Eroteme
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Megan and Conor were missing from the final dumping
Credit: Eroteme
But newly dumped Megan and Conor didn't head back into the villa - despite the fact they were right outside filming Aftersun tonight.
Discussing their absence, one person wrote: 'How come Megan and Conor aren't there?'
A second demanded: 'I want to know why Conor and Megan weren't involved in this vote.'
While a third asked: 'Why did Conor and Megan not get to vote?! Rigged.'
And someone else demanded: 'Wait guys why didn't conor and megan go in to vote?!!'
Meg and Conor were voted out of the villa last week after being voted least compatible by the public.
The Irish couple got back together after she made a shock return to the villa.
During tonight's episode, the Islanders were shocked as their former housemates returned.
They took it in turns to vote for who they wanted to go - and after much back and forth, Meg and Dejon received 10 votes, while Angel and Ty received 8 votes.
The news means Love Island's final four are - Angel and Ty, Cach and Toni, Harry and Shakira, and Jamie and Yas.
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Meg and Dejon got dumped from the villa tonight
Credit: Eroteme

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Irish Examiner
14 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
'We just got lucky': Tales from the Cork lads who ran merchandise stalls for Oasis in the 1990s
Morty McCarthy remembers the first time he met one of the Gallagher brothers. It was February 1992, and the Cork man and his band, the Sultans of Ping, were sharing a bill with fellow Leesiders the Frank and Walters at the Boardwalk venue in Manchester. A local lad by the name of Noel popped up during the soundcheck to say hello. He'd been rehearsing in one of the other rooms with an unsigned group he said were called 'Oasis', and wanted to reacquaint with the Franks, a band he'd previously worked with as a roadie. Little did anyone there know that the 'sound' 21-year-old and the four lads banging out tunes in the basement were on their way to becoming the biggest band in Britain. Or that McCarthy would have a front seat on the Oasis rollercoaster. As the Sultans' career plateaued, the Greenmount drummer ended up working with the Manchester band's merchandise material in the era when they exploded onto the scene. His switch of career to the merchandise world originated in his Sultans days when, as the non-drinker in the band, McCarthy was the designated van driver. During a period of downtime in early 1994, he heard that their merchandise company Underworld needed somebody to ferry gear to various gigs. McCarthy signed up, and drafted in his childhood pal Damien Mullally when an opening came up for somebody to look after the company's London warehouse. 'Underworld were probably the biggest merchandise outfit in the UK at the time,' recalls McCarthy. 'We just got lucky, because we all started working literally a couple of months before the whole Britpop thing broke. And Underworld not only had Oasis, they also had Pulp.' Liam and Noel Gallagher messing about at Knebworth in 1996. Mullally and McCarthy enjoyed working in the merchandise, travelling to gigs and making the most of life in London. In true Cork style, they'd even managed to secure jobs in Underworld for a few more of their mates from home. Not that it was all plain sailing. There was still an element of anti-Irish feeling in the UK in the mid-1990s – especially in the wake of the IRA bombing of the Bishopsgate financial district in 1993 – and going around in a van full of boxes meant the Cork duo were regularly stopped and questioned at police checkpoints. 'We also got a bit of it around Abbey Wood where we lived, but things were much better when we moved to Hackney, which was more multicultural,' says Mullally. Meanwhile, between April 1994 and the release of Definitely Maybe at the end of August, a real buzz was building around Oasis. The three singles Supersonic, Shakermaker, and Live Forever, had been hitting incrementally higher chart positions, and the album went straight to number one in the UK charts. The Gallagher brothers had arrived. For the Cork duo, the gigs they worked were getting ever busier, and the few dozen t-shirts and other bits they'd previously sold were now getting to hundreds and even thousands of units. Underworld realised they were going to need a bigger boat. Or at least a decent lorry. This created a bit of a conundrum as nobody in the company had the special licence required in the UK. Step forward the lad with the Irish licence which, at the time, was universal and didn't need the special HGV training. 'I'd never even sat in the truck before,' recalls McCarthy, now 55, of the day they went to hire their new vehicle from a yard near King's Cross. 'I just thought, how hard can it be? We got in and the first thing I did was hit a barrier. I was just thinking 'I'm not going to be able to reverse this. So whatever we do, we'll just have to drive it forward'. I suppose we had this 'It'll be grand' attitude. I wouldn't do it at this age!' Morty McCarthy on a merchandise stall back in the 1990s. Life on the road was a mixture of good fun and hard work. Depending on the tour, Mullally and McCarthy would sometimes be living on the crew's bus, or other times driving to venues themselves. Of course there were some late nights and partying along the way, but the Oasis entourage also had a serious work ethic. 'If everybody knew that did a couple of days off, then there might be a big party and a bit of a blowout. But a lot of the time, people were up early to get set up at the next venue, and working long hours through the day. You wouldn't have been able to do your job if you were partying all the time,' says Mullally, now working at the Everyman theatre in Cork. 'People got on very well on tour. You knew you just couldn't be invading people's private space or doing the langer in any way.' The band themselves travelled in a different bus, but both Mullally and McCarthy recall the Gallagher brothers as being down-to-earth lads who were always pleasant to deal with. 'I think because we were Irish, that helped too,' says Mullally. 'Yes,' agrees McCarthy. 'I even remember Noel joking with us about Taytos and Tanora!' He does recall a friendly disagreement before a gig in Bournemouth when Liam Gallagher fancied his footwear. 'We had this Dutch driver who used to come every week delivering merchandise, and he used to sell Adidas off the back of the truck. I'd bought this pair of orange Adidas. Liam collected Adidas trainers. He was like 'I'm having your trainers.' And I was going no, and he was like '100 quid!'.' While it was predominantly merchandise that kept Mullally and McCarthy involved with Oasis, they also dropped a load of equipment for the band to Rockfield Studios in 1995. Those sessions at the Welsh studio would of course spawn (What's the Story) Morning Glory?,the second album that would propel the band to stratospheric levels of popularity. On the road, part of the Cork duo's job was dealing with the increasing amount of bootleggers who were selling unofficial merchandise near the venues. 'We'd go out to chat to them, and then of course it'd turn out that a lot of them were friends of the Gallaghers from Manchester,' says Mullally. 'They were mostly nice guys so you'd just ask them to push back a bit – 'Just go down to the end of the road to sell your stuff'.' The mid-1990s was an era when everything was paid for in cash. This meant the two Cork lads would sometimes end up with tens of thousands worth of banknotes in cardboard boxes or plastic bags in the back of the truck or in a hotel after a gig. Liam and Noel Gallagher of Oasis arriving at Cork Airport in 1996. Picture: Dan Linehan An event like Knebworth in 1996 – when Oasis played to 250,000 people across two days – created even more issues. 'A few times a day we used to do a cash-run to get the money off the stall. Somebody would come along with a backpack and we'd stuff it with maybe 10 grand in notes," says Mullally. "You'd try to be as inconspicuous as you could walking through the crowd with that on your back, hoping that nobody comes at you.' Knebworth had 'proper' security vans taking the cash from the event HQ, but Mullally recalls the earlier days when himself and his co-worker would have to bank the money. 'You can imagine with all the stuff that was going on at the time, and two Irish guys coming into the bank with 20 grand in cash, sometimes even in deutsche marks if we were after a European tour. They'd be looking at you strangely, and you know that they're just about to push a button. But they might make a few phonecalls or whatever and we'd eventually get it done.' Knebworth is widely regarded as the high point for the band, but McCarthy also has particularly warm memories of the gig they played in his hometown just a few days later. 'I couldn't believe they were actually playing in Cork at that stage,' he says. He drove the truck from the UK via the Holyhead ferry, but as he arrived at Páirc Uí Chaoimh ahead of schedule, they wouldn't let him into the arena. Wary of leaving a truck full of merchandise parked around the city, McCarthy drove it to the seaside village of Crosshaven. 'When I got there I decided I'd leave it at the carpark at Graball Bay. I didn't even know if it'd fit up the hill but I just about managed it,' he recalls. When he went back later that evening to check everything was ok, there was a big crowd of children gathered around the emblazoned truck. 'There was a big mystery in Cork about where the Gallaghers were staying, and the word had gone around that this was their truck. One of the kids asked me 'Are Liam and Noel coming out to play?' I had to shoo them away.' Oasis merchandise has become an even bigger business since the 1990s. Picture: Lucy North/PA Those two Cork gigs were among the final dealings McCarthy had with Oasis. He has since moved to Sweden, where he teaches English, but regularly returns to the merchandising world for tours with various other bands. He's happy the Gallagher brothers are back together, and realises he was part of something special in the 1990s. 'It's hard to explain people the energy in the UK that the Britpop thing had. Musically, I didn't think it was the greatest, but the energy was phenomenal,' says McCarthy. ' I think at the time, the Indie scene was very middle class. But then along came Oasis. We probably didn't realise we were living in a golden era, but we had the time of our lives.'


Sunday World
an hour ago
- Sunday World
Tragic Irish fashion designer opened business in the Hamptons just weeks before death
The late Martha Nolan O'Slatarra (33) moved to the US in 2015 but had built her own fashion brand. US police are investigating the death of Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra (33) US police are investigating the death of Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra (33) The Irish woman who was found dead on a yacht in New York had reached a major milestone with her business just weeks before her tragic death. US police are investigating after Martha Nolan O'Slatarra (33) was found dead on a yacht at the Montauk Yacht Club, East Hampton. According to the New York Post, the Manhattan resident was 'well known' in the community and described as 'very friendly' and 'always smiling'. The fast-rising fashion designer had originally moved across the Atlantic in 2015 to find success stateside. Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra, who died in the Hamptons News in 90 Seconds - August 6th In 2021, she launched her resortwear line East x East. Ms Nolan O'Slatarra was a marketing consultant, entrepreneur, and founder of the fashion brand, which has nearly 58,000 followers on Instagram. East x East went on to host a brand shoot in 2023, which she described on TikTok as the 'oh so chic campaign shoot in Mallorca'. She added: 'I am still overwhelmed by the incredible outcome and amazing team! As the creative director, witnessing my visions come to life fills me with so much happiness. So proud of East x East.' At the start of July, and just weeks before her death, the brand celebrated the opening of a new pop-up shop at Gurney's Montauk Resort and Seawater Spa. The resort wear line had launched pop-ups before, having previously been seen at the Montauk Beach House luxury resort. Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra on TikTok. The latest pop-up was hailed by Ms Nolan O'Slatarra just weeks ago, posting on her TikTok that it was 'goals achieved'. Speaking in a TikTok video in February 2024, the Carlow native said East x East stands for 'New York, by the Hamptons'. She continued: 'Our tagline is built in the city, made for the sun. I absolutely adore it. "I think it resonates with so many people on so many levels because I feel at some point everyone in their lives are grinding city life, but everyone's just destined for the sun. The brand specialises in men's swimwear as well as women's bikinis, swimwear, and sunglasses before branching out in wider resort wear. Ms Nolan O'Slatarra's social media also gives a snapshot into her jet-set life in New York. The 33-year-old took a plane to Nashville for a concert in 2021. Last October, she enjoyed a helicopter trip with a male companion with the caption: 'Heli on up'. US police are investigating the death of Martha Nolan-O'Slatarra (33) The businesswoman shared a clip of herself sitting in a convertible sports car with the same man as the two drove around sunny countryside. Her body was discovered at the Montauk Yacht Club luxury resort and hotel, where rooms are available for around $1,500 in the peak summer months. A regular at the hotel told the New York Post that a tragic event like this is out of the normal for the expensive area of eastern New York. 'We come here [to Montauk] every summer and nothing like this ever happens,' the boater said. 'The police have been here all day since four in the morning.' The four-star destination offers beach-goers luxurious accommodations, including spa services, a pool, beach, harbour cruises, biking and yoga. Summer season usually sees influencers and celebrities flock to the luxury destination. Speaking to the Irish Independent last year, she revealed that she had attended the Institute of Education private secondary school in Dublin. She then went on to study commerce in UCD before earning a master's in digital marketing at Smurfit Business School. 'I always knew I wanted to be successful, that I was money driven, business driven and that fashion is a tough industry and it would be a slow road,' Ms Nolan O'Slatarra said at the time. 'I made friends in the institute and at college and a new group in New York, but I still have all my Carlow friends. They are still my crew.' After finishing up her academic studies, the new graduate was looking for a 'change' and ended up in New York after her dad bought her a one-way ticket to the US. While she initially planned to stay in the city for just nine months, she went on to land a job with fintech start-up Street Diligence. After spending two years there, the Irishwoman held a number of other roles before launching East x East in 2021 alongside her Amazon brand Duper. She also described herself as having a 'hard-work mindset' and a determination to succeed. 'Carlow is a small town, I was the small town girl who needed to get out to achieve her big dreams,' she added. 'I always knew I wanted to be successful, that I was money-driven, business-driven – and that fashion is a tough industry and it would be a slow road.' According to her LinkedIn, Ms Nolan O'Slatarra was appointed as director of operations with K4 Capital Management in 2024. East Hampton Town Police confirmed in a statement that preliminary investigation and exam of the deceased Irishwoman were inconclusive regarding the cause of her death. A post-mortem examination is set to be conducted by the Suffolk County Medical Examiner's Office.


Extra.ie
2 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Inside Pauline McLynn's career as Fr Ted star joins Corrie
Father Ted star Pauline McLynn is back on our TV screens with the Sligo woman joining the cast of British soap, Coronation Street. Pauline plays the role of Maggie, who is the interfering mother of fellow newcomer Ben Driscoll. The pair will make their debut to the Cobbles, alongside Eva Price (played by Catherine Tydesley), who returns to the street after seven years. Ben's two sons and Eva's daughter, Suzie, will also be joining the cast, with Ben and Eva set to become the landlords of the pub, The Rovers Return, in October. With an acting portfolio boasting 40 years, Pauline has been involved some of the best of Irish and British TV. take a look at some of her biggest roles…. Despite it being one of her earliest TV appearances, Pauline will always be synonymous as the iconic, tea-pushing housekeeper in Fr Ted, Mrs Doyle. The now-63-year-old was only in her early thirties when she played the role of Mrs Doyle, with make-up and costume making her look far older than her actual age. Pauline starred alongside the late Dermot Morgan and Jack Kelly as well as Ardal O'Hanlon. The show ran from 1995 to 1998 with Pauline winning Top TV Comedy Actress in 1996 at the British Comedy Award. Despite it being one of her earliest TV appearances, Pauline will always be synonymous as the iconic, tea-pushing housekeeper in Fr Ted, Mrs Doyle. Pic: Channel 4 Pauline went on to become Tip Haddem in Jennifer Saunders' Jam & Jerusalem, which also starred Joanna Lumley and Dawn French. The show ran for three seasons from 2006 to 2009 and centred around a Women's Guild, which Tip worked as the receptionist at. Tip The Irish woman is married to farmer Colin, but the second season sees their relationship going through a rocky patch. Pic: G. McDonnell / **IRISH RIGHTS ONLY** *** Local Caption *** Pauline McLynn Another beloved show Pauline appeared in is the British version of Shameless, where she took on the role of Libby Croker. Pauline appeared on the show in the seventh and eight series and is the third major love interest to head of the family, Frank Gallagher. The relationship is quite serious with the pair even moving in together for a time — that is after Libby has been released from prison after she was jailed for inciting a riot. Speaking about the role in 2010, Pauline admitted it was a different role for her, as she revealed to the Irish Independent that she bared all for the show. Another beloved show Pauline appeared in is the British version of Shameless, where she took on the role of Libby Croker. Pic: Channel 4 Pauline joined the cast of EastEnders in 2014, and played the role of Yvonne Cotton who was the mother of Charlie Cotton (played by Declan Bennett) and the former daughter-in-law of Dot Branning (June Brown). Speaking at the time, Pauline branded EastEnders her 'favourite soap' and branded co-star June a 'legend' who she was 'privileged' to act alongside. Yvonne initially arrived to Walford to speak to Dot about her missing grandson and was originally a recurring character though after storylines escalated, she became a permanent character. Pauline called time on her role in January 2015; however, did come back for one show in May of the same year when she gave evidence against Dot during the murder trial of Nick Cotton. Pic: BBC In 2022, Pauline was reunited on the screen with her Father Ted co-star Ardal O'Hanlon as the pair both appeared on Sky original series, Rosie Molloy Gives Up Everything. Ardal O'Hanlon and Pauline McLynn star alongside Sheridan Smith in the hilarious comedy that follows the titular character of Rosie Molloy as she attempts to give up all that is deemed to be bad for her – smoking, alcohol, Terry's Chocolate Orange, Xanax, Adderall, caffeine and more. Previously speaking to Pauline admitted she had no idea her former colleague had auditioned for the show and was 'shocked' it had finally happened all those years later. Rosie Molloy Gives up Everything. Pic: © Hartswood Films ©Sky UK Limited © Tom Jackson Other iconic shows Pauline has appeared on include Colin Farrell-starring Ballykissangel as well as Cork comedy The Young Offenders. In 2022, she appeared as Eileen O'Driscoll in the four-episode series of Holding, which was a TV adaptation of Graham Norton's book of the same name. She has also had a role in Doctor Who, not to forget the realm of movie credits she has to her name, such as Johnny English Strikes Again, Deadly Cuts and Gypo — the later which earned her an award at the 2006 Torino International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival in the Special Mention: Best Video category.