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Freddy Brazier makes U-turn on rehab and insists he just needs ‘a boys' holiday'

Freddy Brazier makes U-turn on rehab and insists he just needs ‘a boys' holiday'

The Sun4 hours ago

FREDDY Brazier has made a shock U-turn on plans to enter rehab – just days after admitting he's been hooked on smoking since the age of 12.
The youngest son of TV presenter Jeff Brazier, 46, and the late Jade Goody, shared a dramatic change of heart on Instagram over the weekend.
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But posting a black and white throwback of himself as a child, Freddy wrote: 'You know what I don't need rehab! I just need a holiday with a good group of boys or a retreat.'
It comes just a week after the 20-year-old revealed he was preparing to check into a Marbella rehab facility in a bid to 'get clean', and open up a new chapter in his life.
Freddy stunned followers when he opened up about a long-standing smoking addiction and a desire to make peace with his dad after a tense family rift.
The 20-year-old, who starred with Jeff in the BBC's Celebrity Race Across The World, revealed he wanted to get help in Spain for cannabis, saying he 'wants a healthy relationship with his dad'.
In a heartfelt post, he said: 'I want to be clean so I can life happily and have healthy relationships with people and be there for all of my family rather then feeling like I'm in the middle and have to choose a side.'
Freddy also shared hopes of mending things with his famous father, saying: 'I want to play football and take up boxing. I want to be happy and be in a healthy relationship and have a healthy relationship with my Nana and my father.'
Freddy was recently spotted puffing away with his grandmother Jackiey Budden, 68, near Tower Bridge, despite Jeff's attempts to block contact over safety concerns.
Sources say Freddy moved in with Jackiey in Bermondsey for a week, in defiance of his dad's legal efforts to keep them apart.
One family pal revealed: 'Jeff was never going to keep Freddy away from his Nanny for very long — they've always had a strong bond.'
'They had a great time together, playing with her dog and catching up at her flat – where he has often stayed over the years.'
Freddy Brazier reunites with dad Jeff before heading to rehab in Spain amid concern over gran's 'harmful' influence
TV presenter Jeff, 46, has a court date in his legal fight to stop Freddy from seeing Jackiey amid concerns over his welfare.
A family friend said: ' Jeff and Freddy are in regular contact with each other - probably more than most dads and their adult children.
'They talk a lot and spend plenty of time together. Jeff just wants the best for his son and the door is always open for him.
"Jackiey's influence over Freddy is harmful to his overall wellbeing.
'It's very sad that a grandmother continues to try and lead him astray.'
The Sun approached reps for comment.
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Frederick Forsyth obituary
Frederick Forsyth obituary

The Guardian

time27 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Frederick Forsyth obituary

Frederick Forsyth always claimed that when, in early 1970, as an unemployed foreign correspondent, he sat down at a portable typewriter and 'bashed out' The Day of the Jackal, he 'never had the slightest intention of becoming a novelist'. Forsyth, who has died aged 86, also became well known as a political and social commentator, often with acerbic views on the European Union, international terrorism, security matters and the status of Britain's armed forces, but it is for his thrillers that he will be best remembered. Forsyth's manuscript for The Day of the Jackal was rejected by three publishers and withdrawn from a fourth before being taken up by Hutchinson in a three-book deal in 1971. Even then there were doubts, as half the publisher's sales force were said to have expressed no confidence in a book that plotted the assassination of the French president General Charles de Gaulle – an event that everyone knew did not happen. The skill of the book was that its pace and seemingly forensic detail encouraged readers to suspend disbelief and accept that not only was the plot real, but that the Jackal – an anonymous English assassin – almost pulled it off. In fact, at certain points, the reader's sympathy lies with the Jackal rather than with his victim. It was a publishing tour de force, winning the Mystery Writers' of America Edgar award for best first novel, attracting a record paperback deal at the Frankfurt book fair and being quickly filmed by the US director Fred Zinnemann, with Edward Fox as the ruthless Jackal. Forsyth was offered a flat fee for the film rights (£20,000) or a fee plus a percentage of the profits – he took the flat fee, later admitting that he was 'pathetic at money'. The 1972 paperback edition of The Day of the Jackal was reprinted 33 times in 18 years and is still in print, but while readers were happy to be taken in by Forsyth's painstakingly researched details (about everything from faked passports to assembling a sniper's rifle), the critics and the crime-writing establishment were far from impressed. Whodunit? A Guide to Crime, Spy and Suspense Stories, published in 1982, by which time Forsyth's sales were well into the millions, declared rather loftily that 'authenticity is to Forsyth what imagination is to many other writers', and the critic Julian Symons dismissed Forsyth as having 'no pretension to anything more than journalistic expertise'. It was a formula that readers clearly approved of, with the subsequent novels in that original three-book deal, The Odessa File (1972) and The Dogs of War (1974), being both bestsellers and successful films. Novellas, collections of short stories and more novels were to follow. These included The Fourth Protocol (1984), which had a cameo role for the British spy-in-exile Kim Philby and was also successfully filmed, with a screenplay by Forsyth and starring Michael Caine and a pre-Bond Pierce Brosnan and, against type, The Phantom of Manhattan (1999), a sequel to Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera. Nothing, however, was to match the impact of The Day of the Jackal and when a Guardian journalist spotted a copy in a London flat used by the world's most wanted terrorist, Ilich Ramírez Sánchez, or 'Carlos', in 1975, the British press dubbed him Carlos the Jackal, with no need to explain the reference. Born in Ashford, Kent, Frederick was the son of Phyllis and Frederick Sr, shopkeepers at 4 North Street – his mother's dress business operated on the ground floor and his father sold furs on the first floor. He was educated at Tonbridge school, where supportive teachers and summer holidays abroad ensured that Frederick excelled at French, German and Russian. At the age of 16, he enrolled on an RAF flying scholarship course that brought him a pilot's licence by the age of 17 and eased his way into the RAF proper for his national service, where he obtained his pilot's 'wings' and flew Vampire jets as the youngest pilot in the service. However, when he failed in his ambition to be posted to a frontline squadron, he opted for a change of career and in 1958 entered journalism as a trainee with the Eastern Daily Press in their King's Lynn office. In the autumn of 1961 he set his sights on Fleet Street, and his fluency with languages (which now included Spanish) got him a job with Reuters press agency. In May 1962, he was posted to Reuters' office in Paris, where De Gaulle was the target of numerous assassination attempts by disaffected Algerians. The experience was not lost on Forsyth, but before he could put it to good use in The Day of the Jackal, there were other journalistic postings, a war to survive and a non-fiction book to write. The Reuters' office in East Berlin was a plum posting for any journalist in 1963 as the cold war turned distinctly chilly, despite the attentions of the East German security services. However, when he returned to Britain in 1965 for a job as a diplomatic correspondent with the BBC, it was Broadcasting House rather than East Berlin which he found to be 'a nest of vipers'. Forsyth's relationship with the BBC hierarchy was antagonistic from the start and deteriorated rapidly when he was sent to Nigeria in 1967 to cover the civil war then unravelling. Objecting to the unquestioning acceptance of Nigerian communiques that downplayed the situation, by both the Foreign Office and the BBC, Forsyth began to file stories putting the secessionist Biafran side of the story as well as the developing humanitarian crisis. He was recalled to London for an official BBC reprimand but returned to Nigeria as a freelance at his own expense to cover the increasingly bloody war and to write a Penguin special, The Biafra Story (1969). He returned to Britain for Christmas 1969, low on funds, his BBC career in tatters and with nowhere to live. On 2 January 1970, camped out in the flat of a friend, he began to write a novel on a battered portable typewriter. After 35 days The Day of the Jackal was finished, and fame and fortune followed. In 1973 he married Carrie (Carole) Cunningham, and they moved to Spain to avoid the rates of income tax likely to be introduced by an incoming Labour government. In 1974 they relocated to County Wicklow in Ireland, where writers and artists were treated gently when it came to tax, returning to Britain in 1980 once Margaret Thatcher was firmly established in Downing Street. By 1990, Forsyth had undergone an amicable divorce from Carrie, but a far less amicable separation from his investment broker and his life savings, and claimed to have lost more than £2m in a share fraud. To recoup his losses, Forsyth threw himself into writing fiction, producing another string of bestsellers, although none had the impact of his first three novels. He was appointed CBE in 1997 and received the Crime Writers' Association's Diamond Dagger for lifetime achievement in 2012. In 2016 he announced that he would write no more thrillers and that his memoir The Outsider (2015), which revealed that he had worked as an unpaid courier for MI6, or 'The Firm' as he called it, would be his swansong. He acquired a reputation as a rather pungent pundit, both on Radio 4 and in a column in the Daily Express, when it came to such topics as the 'offensive' European Union, the leadership of the Conservative party, the state of Britain's prisons and jihadist volunteers returning from Middle Eastern conflicts. He was an active campaigner on behalf of Sgt Alexander Blackman, 'Marine A', who was jailed for the murder of an injured Taliban fighter in Afghanistan in 2011. Forsyth maintained that Blackman had been made a scapegoat by the army from the moment of his court martial. In 2017 the conviction was overturned. Often concerned with military charities, Forsyth wrote the lyrics to Fallen Soldier, a lament for military casualties in all wars recorded and released in 2016. Forsyth was not the first foreign correspondent to take up thriller-writing. Ian Fleming had led the way in the 1950s, with Alan Williams and Derek Lambert carrying the torch into the 1960s. The spectacular success of The Day of the Jackal did however encourage a new generation, among them the ITN reporter Gerald Seymour, whose debut novel, Harry's Game, was generously reviewed by Forsyth in the Sunday Express in 1975. Years later, Seymour remembered the impact of Forsyth's debut, The Day of the Jackal: 'That really hit the news rooms. There was a feeling that it should be part of a journalist's knapsack to have a thriller.' Despite having declared Forsyth's retirement from fiction, his publisher Bantam announced the appearance of an 18th novel, The Fox, in 2018. Based on real-life cases of young British hackers, The Fox centres on an 18-year-old schoolboy with Asperger syndrome and the ability to access the computers of government security and defence systems. For Christmas 1973 Disney based the short film The Shepherd, a ghostly evocation of second world war airfields, on a 1975 short story by Forsyth. The following year The Day of the Jackal was reimagined by Ronan Bennett for a TV series with Eddie Redmayne taking the place of Fox. Later this year a sequel to The Odessa File, Revenge of Odessa, written with Tony Kent, is due to appear. Forsyth will be a subject of the BBC TV documentary series In My Own Words. In 1994 he married Sandy Molloy. She died last year. He is survived by his two sons, Stuart and Shane, from his first marriage. Frederick Forsyth, journalist and thriller writer, born 25 August 1938; died 9 June 2025

I'm married but fell pregnant with my handsome ex's baby after passionate nights of sex
I'm married but fell pregnant with my handsome ex's baby after passionate nights of sex

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

I'm married but fell pregnant with my handsome ex's baby after passionate nights of sex

DEAR DEIDRE: MY gorgeous ex has wormed his way back into my life and now I'm expecting his baby. I've blown up my world for a few hours of passion while my husband was away. After five years of marriage I thought I was happy. We have a daughter of four and my husband recently got a promotion which meant he had to retrain and was out of the country for two whole months. He's not as handsome as my ex but he's a lovely guy. I split up with my ex after he cheated on me with my friend. I was 19 at the time. I'm now 28 and my husband is 32. My ex, who's 30, contacted me through social media saying he had something to tell me. I stupidly thought there would be no harm seeing him so arranged a babysitter and met him in a pub. I recognised him immediately. His dazzling smile and his trendy hair-cut — he was still on-point. He bought me a drink, saying he was sorry for hurting me all those years ago. He asked about my job and what I'd been doing. I didn't tell him I was married. I fancied him all over again. He invited me back to his new apartment overlooking the river and he told me he'd never stopped thinking about me. I've never felt as desirable as when he kissed me passionately that night. We had sex and it was like old times. We met a few times after that and always ended the evening with sex at his place. We used protection so I was horrified last week to discover that I'm pregnant. I don't know how it happened but the condom must have failed. It's definitely his. I'm in a mess. DEIDRE SAYS: This guy was history but your husband and daughter are the family that you love. You're on the edge of jeopardising life as you know it. If you go through with the pregnancy, your ex will be responsible for looking after this child financially and preferably emotionally too. How do you think he'd react to the news? You could choose to forget the dates and try to pass this off as your husband's baby but secrets have a habit of getting out. If the dates are way out, people are going to ask questions. My support pack called Unplanned Pregnancy will show you where to find support in deciding your next steps. I DREAM OF WORLD'S END WHILE I SHUT MYSELF AWAY DEAR DEIDRE: I SEEM to have cut myself off from my family and friends by withdrawing socially. It is not because they have done anything wrong, but more because I don't feel the need for interaction. Given a choice, I'll plump to read or watch TV alone. I am a 42-year-old single woman and I live by myself. Recently, I've had a lack of interest in anything and anyone, and don't want to engage in activities that usually interest me. I've even started fantasising that there will be another world war as I am fed up paying bills and dealing with people. Debts and working are also contributing to my mood. Even if the world ended today, I would be happy and excited. I hate it as it is now, and I am bored. I also keep cleaning my flat in the hope that it will help me focus and be happier, but it never does. Do other people feel the same or is there something wrong with me? DEIDRE SAYS: It can be upsetting to feel apathetic and unmotivated, and it could be a sign of depression, anxiety or being overwhelmed. It is important that you talk to your doctor about how this lack of interest is affecting you. Feeling bored with life at times is normal, especially if faced with monotonous routines or a sense of emptiness. My support pack, Defeat Depression, explains more. FLOP IN BED DUE TO WORK STRESS DEAR DEIDRE: GOING on holiday improves my physical health and then my erections return. As soon as I'm home, they disappear. My job as a police sergeant is stressful. I'm married and I'm 47. We've had some issues with sex in the past couple of years but we've always managed to do things that appeal to both my wife and I. We went to Norfolk earlier in the year and had great sex. Recently we went to Dubai and I had no problems in the bedroom while we were there. But this week, I'm back at work and I don't wake up with that 'morning glory' like I used to. DEIDRE SAYS: When we take a break from our normal day-to-day concerns, holidays do exactly what they are supposed to do – they recharge the batteries as we enjoy a change of scene. If you're waking up when you're away with morning erections, then you know that everything is working as it should be. A lack of erection once or twice can quickly become a self-fulfilling prophecy; you worry once and it happens again and again. My support pack on Solving Erection Problems will help but in the short-term, do read my pack called Sex Play Therapy, which has exercises recommended by sex therapists. There is no pressure to have full sex for a few weeks but it will help those feelings of arousal to return naturally. SHE MONITORS MY EVERY MOVE DEAR DEIDRE: TECHNICALLY, I cheated on my girlfriend when we first met and now she watches me like a hawk. We weren't official though and my other relationship was petering out. I hardly saw my previous girlfriend and it was only a matter of time before I plucked up the courage to tell her we were over. What I hadn't told her was that I'd found a new love interest at work. My colleague was 24 when she joined our tech desk. My computer was constantly on the blink and she always seemed to be there when I needed help. I'm 29 and I really fancied this girl so I invited her out. We must have had half a dozen dates – and sex – before I asked her to make it official. We've been getting along great and I think she could be the one but one Saturday morning in bed, she was asking about my exes and I got confused with the dates and let it slip that I was seeing her and my ex at the same time. Now she wants to check my phone, she's got me on Find My Friends and won't let me go anywhere without her. It's getting too much. DEIDRE SAYS: Many people still assume you're a free agent if you're dating them or having sex with them, so it's always best to spell it out that you're looking for something casual. Technical details aside, in her eyes you've broken her trust and you're going to have to come clean and ask for forgiveness. Explain that you regret you weren't more open but that you want to fully commit now. Understand that she's feeling insecure and allow her time to realise you're not an unfaithful type. Read through my support pack, How To Look After Your Relationship, to get the best out of what you have together. Things may look different in a few months.

Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch pack on the PDA as she strips to a TINY white string bikini while relaxing on a yacht on child-free luxury Ibiza holiday
Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch pack on the PDA as she strips to a TINY white string bikini while relaxing on a yacht on child-free luxury Ibiza holiday

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch pack on the PDA as she strips to a TINY white string bikini while relaxing on a yacht on child-free luxury Ibiza holiday

Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch packed on the PDA as they shared an insight into their Ibiza getaway with fans on Monday. The English model, 39, showed off her incredible figure as she partied on a luxury yacht at the holiday hotspot. Former footballer Peter, 44, could be seen embracing Abbey as the sun set behind the loved-up couple. In one picture, Abbey wowed in a tiny white bikini as she prepared to take a dip in the sea to cool down. The pair appeared to leave their children at home as they enjoyed an adults-only getaway with their pals. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch packed on the PDA as they shared an insight into their Ibiza getaway with fans on Monday The couple made the most of the warm weather as they relaxed with their friends and enjoyed a cold drink on board the yacht, surrounded by the blue ocean water. Peter showed off his ripped physique as he went shirtless on the boat while basking in the sunshine. The mother-of-four captioned her post on Instagram: 'Ibiza we love you.' Fans flooded the pair with compliments, with one gushing: 'It's so nice to see a couple still in love.' A second said: 'Love you two.' Abbey and Peter tied the knot in 2011 and will celebrate their 14th wedding anniversary this year. They share four children - Sophia, Liberty, Johnny, and Jack. Meanwhile, Abbey recently opened up on the way she's kept her marriage to Peter thriving over the years. She admitted the key was 'growing together' throughout time with Peter and always staying 'in sync' with him. 'When we look back at our wedding day, some of the choices we've made, some things we've done in the past, we're like ''Bloody hell, who were we then?'',' the TV star told The Mirror. 'But today? We're still in sync, we've got the same interests and the same things that make us laugh. It's really a happy time for us at the moment. 'We honestly do everything together, except work - actually even work, because we have our podcast.'

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