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Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split
Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

Scottish Sun

time28-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BIG Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival. Telly stars Rosie Williams and Nathan King admitted they were "devastated" by their break-up, when it was announced in February. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 5 A Big Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival 5 Nathan filmed Rosie at a festival over the weekend 5 The Big Brother couple announced their split in February this year Rosie, 29, told fans she had hoped her "luck had changed" but confirmed she and Nathan, 24, are now just "friends". But fans have speculated that the pair are back on, after they went to a festival over the weekend. Nathan shared videos of the event on his social media, including a clip of Rosie. Online, one person wrote: 'Nathan shared a video of him at a (festival?) of Rosie dancing. Are they back together?' Replying to the comment, another Big Brother fan recalled how Nathan had left a kissing emoji beneath one of Rosie's TikToks 'a couple of weeks ago.' Someone else wrote: 'They must be back on.' Announcing their split earlier this year, Rosie had shared a message alongside a picture of Glen and Jill from the cult BBC comedy Nighty Night. She wrote: "Lots of you asking about Nathan and I. It is true, we're no longer in a relationship but we are still friends. "So yeah, unfortunately, I'm very aware that my earlier posts aged like milk. Big Brother's Nathan and Rosie 'break up live on air', claim fans as he makes brutal comment about their relationship "It's not how I wanted things to go in the slightest and I'm devastated that it didn't work out as I genuinely thought my luck had changed, but here we are. "Believe it or not, it was the realest thing I've ever experienced and I have nothing but love and gratitude for everyone who has been supportive. "Thank you so much my dear friends xx." Nathan went on to repost her heartfelt statement about their split to his own Instagram account. Rosie, a dental assistant, and former Royal butler Nathan met during last year's series of Big Brother. Despite their five-year age difference, the pair formed a close bond which then progressed into a romantic relationship. 5 Another fan has noticed that Nathan commented a kissing emoji beneath Rosie's TikTok

Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split
Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

The Irish Sun

time28-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

A BIG Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival. Telly stars Rosie Williams and Nathan King admitted they were "devastated" by their break-up, Advertisement 5 A Big Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival 5 Nathan filmed Rosie at a festival over the weekend 5 The Big Brother couple announced their split in February this year Rosie, 29, told fans she had hoped her "luck had changed" but confirmed she and Nathan, 24, are now just "friends". But fans have speculated that the pair are back on, after they went to a festival over the weekend. Nathan shared videos of the event on his social media, including a clip of Rosie. Online, one person wrote: 'Nathan shared a video of him at a (festival?) of Rosie dancing. Are they back together?' Advertisement Read More on Big Brother Replying to the comment, another Big Brother fan recalled how Nathan had left a kissing emoji beneath one of Rosie's TikToks 'a couple of weeks ago.' Someone else wrote: 'They must be back on.' Announcing their split earlier this year, Rosie had shared a message alongside a picture of Glen and Jill from the cult BBC comedy Nighty Night. She wrote: "Lots of you asking about Nathan and I. It is true, we're no longer in a relationship but we are still friends. Advertisement Most read in News TV "So yeah, unfortunately, I'm very aware that my earlier posts aged like milk. Big Brother's Nathan and Rosie 'break up live on air', claim fans as he makes brutal comment about their relationship "It's not how I wanted things to go in the slightest and I'm devastated that it didn't work out as I genuinely thought my luck had changed, but here we are. "Believe it or not, it was the realest thing I've ever experienced and I have nothing but love and gratitude for everyone who has been supportive. "Thank you so much my dear friends xx." Advertisement Nathan went on to repost her heartfelt statement about their split to his own Instagram account. Rosie, a dental assistant, and former Royal butler Nathan met during last year's series of Big Brother. Despite their five-year age difference, the pair formed a close bond which then progressed into a romantic relationship. 5 Another fan has noticed that Nathan commented a kissing emoji beneath Rosie's TikTok Advertisement 5 Nathan went on to repost Rosie's heartfelt statement about their split

Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split
Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

The Sun

time28-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Sun

Big Brother couple ‘back together' as eagle-eyed fans spot they're at same festival – months after shock split

A BIG Brother couple are 'back together' say eagle-eyed fans, as they're spotted at the same festival. Telly stars Rosie Williams and Nathan King admitted they were "devastated" by their break-up, when it was announced in February. 5 5 5 Rosie, 29, told fans she had hoped her "luck had changed" but confirmed she and Nathan, 24, are now just "friends". But fans have speculated that the pair are back on, after they went to a festival over the weekend. Nathan shared videos of the event on his social media, including a clip of Rosie. Online, one person wrote: 'Nathan shared a video of him at a (festival?) of Rosie dancing. Are they back together?' Replying to the comment, another Big Brother fan recalled how Nathan had left a kissing emoji beneath one of Rosie's TikToks 'a couple of weeks ago.' Someone else wrote: 'They must be back on.' Announcing their split earlier this year, Rosie had shared a message alongside a picture of Glen and Jill from the cult BBC comedy Nighty Night. She wrote: "Lots of you asking about Nathan and I. It is true, we're no longer in a relationship but we are still friends. "So yeah, unfortunately, I'm very aware that my earlier posts aged like milk. Big Brother's Nathan and Rosie 'break up live on air', claim fans as he makes brutal comment about their relationship "It's not how I wanted things to go in the slightest and I'm devastated that it didn't work out as I genuinely thought my luck had changed, but here we are. "Believe it or not, it was the realest thing I've ever experienced and I have nothing but love and gratitude for everyone who has been supportive. "Thank you so much my dear friends xx." Nathan went on to repost her heartfelt statement about their split to his own Instagram account. Rosie, a dental assistant, and former Royal butler Nathan met during last year's series of Big Brother. Despite their five-year age difference, the pair formed a close bond which then progressed into a romantic relationship. 5 5

Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy
Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy

Yahoo

time09-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy

I don't know if you've ever ever seen five MPs fighting in a phone box, but it's not a pleasant sight. As I write, Nigel Farage is throttling Rupert Lowe with the receiver, while Rupert tries to jab a 10 pence piece in his eye. The civil war in the tiny party of Reform is both funny and tragic: consequential, because it was leading the polls before Rupert questioned Nigel's leadership and Nigel, it seems, responded with tact and humility by calling the police (truly the Right has gone woke). Whether the claims against Lowe, of bullying and threats of violence, turn out to be accurate or not is almost unimportant; it's telling that they emerged shortly after he criticised Farage in public. I'm afraid Farage has form as a dictator. The studios of GB News are littered with people he fell out with then exiled, the Hamiltons having erected a Red Cross tent in the green room. To paraphrase the sitcom Nighty Night, 'I am not a malicious man, and I will strike down the first person who says that I am.' To be fair to Nigel, if you're loyal to him, he's loyal to you. When Reform's fifth Beatle, James McMurdock, was revealed to have a police record for an assault in 2006 , he rushed admirably to his defence. But insiders are worried that the leader's refusal to share one tiny shard of the limelight holds his party back from becoming truly parliamentary, with costed policies and a proper front-bench. On the other hand, none of that stuff matters to the average punter. Opposition politics is a crude battle for attention: Farage is a rare star. If I were Rupert Lowe, I'd think: 'I only got elected last June by accident, thanks to Nigel, and now we have a once-in-a-generation chance to overtake the Tories. So I'm going to shut up and do whatever the boss says – walk his dog, wash his car – because any hint of disunity could sink the whole project.' Be a team player. Be nice, like Richard Tice. Ah, but there's the problem: the kind of citizen who wants to run for parliament, let alone for a long-shot party like Reform, isn't into team sports. He is likely an egotist, probably a crank. Rupert Lowe is certainly enjoying being an MP, tabling hundreds of questions to ministers that civil servants grumble are a waste of money, and becoming Twitter famous – to the point that Elon Musk suggested he might be a better leader than Farage. Why was never entirely clear; perhaps because Lowe is perceived as more sympathetic to rabble rouser Tommy Robinson, at a time when the online Right is becoming more critical of Islam, more militant on immigration. It's interesting to note that the Reform blow-out coincides with the first recorded spat between Musk and the Trump administration he helped to put in office (at the cost of around a quarter of a billion pounds in donations). Cabinet members are resisting Musk's plan to sack vast numbers of federal workers, including from air traffic control (necessary to land planes) and veterans affairs (vital to winning elections). Here's the danger of letting bright amateurs into politics. We live in an era when very clever people – mostly men, and men who've played Civilisation II a lot – think they can answer every problem with a wordy substack. But while creative destruction might be useful in business, it cannot be applied to a state, upon which millions depend for safety and security. To win elections, you must both excite and reassure people, as Nigel is trying to do. Lowe, by contrast, has a Musky whiff of the radical about him. He has called for a million migrants to be deported. His hero is Oliver Cromwell. Reform will survive precisely because Farage has such tight control over the party machinery, plus he still benefits from popular hatred of Tories and Labour. But the reason I'm not just amused but quietly angry about the Lowe controversy is because it suggests Reform is like all the other parties in Westminster, more interested in itself than the public, or that it lacks the discipline to translate goodwill into electoral wins. Chaps, don't do this. Pull yourselves together and stop giving journalists things to write about. Another day, another argument about the nature of Englishness. Anyone who says 'English isn't an ethnicity' hasn't seen me in shorts, and with the weather so balmy, I'm tempted to tear off my top and parade about the high street with a can of Stella Artois. 'Oh England, my lionheart.' Instead I drove up the M25 last week to take part in a Moral Maze roadshow – I am ageing gracefully into Alan Partridge – and on route I passed something enticing called the Magna Carta Tea Room, at Runnymede. 'I must visit it on the way back,' I said to 999's Michael Buerk, who replied with his usual dry wit, 'Yes, you can probably squeeze a column out of that.' The tearoom had run out of cheese pasties, on a Friday in Lent, but the chef said he could offer me a 'vegan sausage roll that tastes just like a sausage roll' (I think it was a sausage roll). There I relaxed, beneath a cloudless sky, and watched dogs playing in the field where Magna Carta was signed, heralding the beginnings of democracy. Or, as I like to call it, 'the place where things started to go wrong'. As you can tell, I really don't like Oliver Cromwell. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy
Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy

Telegraph

time09-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

Reform's shenanigans are an inevitable tragedy

I don't know if you've ever ever seen five MPs fighting in a phone box, but it's not a pleasant sight. As I write, Nigel Farage is throttling Rupert Lowe with the receiver, while Rupert tries to jab a 10 pence piece in his eye. The civil war in the tiny party of Reform is both funny and tragic: consequential, because it was leading the polls before Rupert questioned Nigel's leadership and Nigel, it seems, responded with tact and humility by calling the police (truly the Right has gone woke). Whether the claims against Lowe, of bullying and threats of violence, turn out to be accurate or not is almost unimportant; it's telling that they emerged shortly after he criticised Farage in public. I'm afraid Farage has form as a dictator. The studios of GB News are littered with people he fell out with then exiled, the Hamiltons having erected a Red Cross tent in the green room. To paraphrase the sitcom Nighty Night, 'I am not a malicious man, and I will strike down the first person who says that I am.' To be fair to Nigel, if you're loyal to him, he's loyal to you. When Reform's fifth Beatle, James McMurdock, was revealed to have a police record for an assault in 2006 , he rushed admirably to his defence. But insiders are worried that the leader's refusal to share one tiny shard of the limelight holds his party back from becoming truly parliamentary, with costed policies and a proper front-bench. On the other hand, none of that stuff matters to the average punter. Opposition politics is a crude battle for attention: Farage is a rare star. If I were Rupert Lowe, I'd think: 'I only got elected last June by accident, thanks to Nigel, and now we have a once-in-a-generation chance to overtake the Tories. So I'm going to shut up and do whatever the boss says – walk his dog, wash his car – because any hint of disunity could sink the whole project.' Be a team player. Be nice, like Richard Tice. Ah, but there's the problem: the kind of citizen who wants to run for parliament, let alone for a long-shot party like Reform, isn't into team sports. He is likely an egotist, probably a crank. Rupert Lowe is certainly enjoying being an MP, tabling hundreds of questions to ministers that civil servants grumble are a waste of money, and becoming Twitter famous – to the point that Elon Musk suggested he might be a better leader than Farage. Why was never entirely clear; perhaps because Lowe is perceived as more sympathetic to rabble rouser Tommy Robinson, at a time when the online Right is becoming more critical of Islam, more militant on immigration. It's interesting to note that the Reform blow-out coincides with the first recorded spat between Musk and the Trump administration he helped to put in office (at the cost of around a quarter of a billion pounds in donations). Cabinet members are resisting Musk's plan to sack vast numbers of federal workers, including from air traffic control (necessary to land planes) and veterans affairs (vital to winning elections). Here's the danger of letting bright amateurs into politics. We live in an era when very clever people – mostly men, and men who've played Civilisation II a lot – think they can answer every problem with a wordy substack. But while creative destruction might be useful in business, it cannot be applied to a state, upon which millions depend for safety and security. To win elections, you must both excite and reassure people, as Nigel is trying to do. Lowe, by contrast, has a Musky whiff of the radical about him. He has called for a million migrants to be deported. His hero is Oliver Cromwell. Reform will survive precisely because Farage has such tight control over the party machinery, plus he still benefits from popular hatred of Tories and Labour. But the reason I'm not just amused but quietly angry about the Lowe controversy is because it suggests Reform is like all the other parties in Westminster, more interested in itself than the public, or that it lacks the discipline to translate goodwill into electoral wins. Chaps, don't do this. Pull yourselves together and stop giving journalists things to write about. Taking tea at Runnymede Another day, another argument about the nature of Englishness. Anyone who says 'English isn't an ethnicity' hasn't seen me in shorts, and with the weather so balmy, I'm tempted to tear off my top and parade about the high street with a can of Stella Artois. 'Oh England, my lionheart.' Instead I drove up the M25 last week to take part in a Moral Maze roadshow – I am ageing gracefully into Alan Partridge – and on route I passed something enticing called the Magna Carta Tea Room, at Runnymede. 'I must visit it on the way back,' I said to 999 's Michael Buerk, who replied with his usual dry wit, 'Yes, you can probably squeeze a column out of that.' The tearoom had run out of cheese pasties, on a Friday in Lent, but the chef said he could offer me a 'vegan sausage roll that tastes just like a sausage roll' (I think it was a sausage roll). There I relaxed, beneath a cloudless sky, and watched dogs playing in the field where Magna Carta was signed, heralding the beginnings of democracy. Or, as I like to call it, 'the place where things started to go wrong'. As you can tell, I really don't like Oliver Cromwell.

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