Simon Cowell returns to Britain’s Got Talent on Saturday 21 February alongside Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and newcomer KSI, as well as hosts Ant McPartlin and Dec Donnelly
As the brain behind Britain’s Got Talent, Simon Cowell knows how to spot the gifted amongst us – but who does he think is the least talented celebrity he’s met? Himself!
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At a launch event for the 19th series of Britain’s Got Talent, Simon was asked what he’d pull out of the bag if he had to audition for the show. In response, he said: “Actually, being the most talentless person in the world.
His fellow judges, Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and KSI protested that he did have a talent, and mentioned that Simon can do an impression of David Attenborough and cats, but he insisted that he did not have a talent. He simply said: “No, I don’t. I just don’t.”
“You’re an amazing person,” Amanda pushed. “You’re an amazing bike rider.” Simon joked that he would do that on a live show, along with his impressions, but then seriously added that the one talent he did have was spotting it in others.
“That’s the only thing I can do, actually,” he said. “I was lucky, actually. Very early on, I realised, honestly, I had no talent whatsoever in terms of [what happens on Britain’s Got Talent]. You know, when I see this stuff, I’m like, ‘Well, I couldn’t do that.’
Returning to the initial question about what talent he’d bring to the auditions if he had to perform, he reiterated: “So the answer is nothing.”
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Simon has been a judge on Britain’s Got Talent since it first began in 2007, as has Amanda Holden. He is also behind the former ITV singing talent show, The X Factor.
The X Factor, which ran from 2004 to 2018, churned out many beloved acts of the UK music industry, including One Direction, Little Mix and JLS.
Sky has recently confirmed a documentary about the series with exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and interviews, including with Simon. Fans of The X Factor have already begun voicing their mixed opinions on whether a revival of the singing competition would be welcome.
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One fan expressed: “They need to bring this back, but the original concept. No live audience, just the judges. Plus the bad singers as well as the good. Honestly, Saturday night TV is missing this show so much.”
However, another viewer chimed in: “The show was fun […] but the last few seasons were rough. I think singing shows are very much a product of the 2000s and started losing influence in the late 2010s.”
Some of the contestants have been featured in documentaries before – Perrie Edwards was in Girlbands Forever, which looked at the darker side of being in a girl band, while her former bandmate, Jesy Nelson, has her own documentary, Life After Little Mix, coming to screens shortly.
Emergency services were called to Aldam Street just after 4.45pm today (Thursday, April 2).
Air ambulance, police and ambulance attended the scene and one patient was taken to James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough by road.
Air tracking data shows that the Great North Air Ambulance also made its way to the same hospital.
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A spokesperson for North East Ambulance Service said: “We were called to a road traffic incident on Aldam Street, Darlington, at 4.47pm on 2 April.
“We dispatched two double crewed ambulances, a clinical team leader and were supported by Great North Air Ambulance Service.
“One patient was taken to James Cook Hospital by road with a doctor on board.”
A spokesperson for the Great North Air Ambulance Service said: “We were activated at 16:50 on Thursday, April 2nd, to reports of a road traffic collision in Darlington.
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“We had a doctor and three paramedics on board our aircraft, who, when they arrived on scene, assessed and treated the patient before the patient was transported to hospital by road.”
The Bentley was parked outside of the David Lloyd centre on Castles Farm Road in Gosforth, Newcastle when it was reportedly set alight around 8.30am on Tuesday, March 31.
Northumbria Police believe the fire was started intentionally by masked individuals.
A force spokesperson said: “It was reported that unknown masked suspects have poured accelerant on a vehicle which was parked in the car park – then set it alight.
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“Emergency services attended the scene, and the fire was extinguished.
“Thankfully, nobody was injured.
“Enquiries are ongoing however the fire is being treated as suspected arson.”
A spokesperson for David Lloyd Clubs said: “We’re aware of the incident that occurred at our Newcastle club.
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“We are assisting police with their investigations and are unable to comment further.”
Tyne and Wear Fire and Rescue Service confirmed that two fire engines were sent to the scene.
A fire service spokesperson said: “Crews used breathing apparatus and hose reels to extinguish the blaze before leaving the scene shortly after 9am.”
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Police have appealed for information and urged the public to get in touch if they saw anything suspicious.
The spokesperson added: “Anyone with information should send us a DM on social media or use the live chat or report forms on our Force website.
“For those unable to contact us through the above ways, call 101.”
The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) will face disciplinary proceedings over accusations of sexual misconduct, it has been reported.
Karim Khan KC, who investigates war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, has taken a leave of absence pending an inquiry into the allegations.
Mr Khan, accused of a non-consensual sexual interaction with a lawyer in his office, has denied any wrongdoing.
In a vote on Wednesday by a core group of member states, 15 voted in favour, two abstained and four voted against moving forward with the disciplinary process, two sources told Reuters.
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Image: The International Criminal Court in The Hague. Pic: Reuters
The ICC, the world’s criminal court of last resort, has been rocked by the investigation into Mr Khan, its most prominent official, as well as US sanctions over the arrest warrants issued for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, the former defence minister, over alleged war crimes.
A report by United Nations (UN) investigators found a “factual basis” for the allegations of sexual misconduct, and that witness accounts “lend support to her claims”, the sources said.
However, a second report by three judges who analysed the UN report found the evidence insufficient to establish the truth of the allegations “beyond a reasonable doubt”, they said.
Lawyers for Mr Khan claimed in late March that the judges unanimously concluded that the “factual findings do not establish misconduct or breach of duty”.
It’s one of the clearest things about me. I’m black and white … I think I cried for a month when we lost the FA Cup Final in 1974. I was only ten and it was near my birthday as well. I was absolutely gutted. [Jo, Newcastle fan since the 1970s]
Sexism in football, according to a recent BBC report is “a problem that isn’t going away”. When working on my book The Feminization of Sports Fandom, I discovered that the increasing opportunities for women to become football fans over the last three decades has not automatically led to equality.
Now a University of Durham exhibition based on my work will play a role in challenging negative attitudes and help reimagine a more positive future for women football fans.
My research draws on more than 200 interviews with women sports fans in the UK. These accounts demonstrate that sexism and misogyny have been, and continue to be, rife in football. This work has contributed to several UK parliament select committees, with findings providing evidence for the urgent need for safer, more welcoming and inclusive environments for women fans.
It shows how various strategies are used by men to undermine the status of women as “real” or “authentic” fans, and that women are routinely required to “prove” themselves as such. This is supported by statistics from football’s anti-discrimination organisation Kick It Out, which received reports of more than double the number of sexist incidents at football matches this season (2025/26) compared with the same point last season.
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Colleagues and I also undertook the first research on UK male football fans’ attitudes towards women, surveying 1,950 men. It revealed that openly misogynistic attitudes still dominate football fandom in the UK. Three-quarters of men held either overt or covert misogynistic attitudes towards women in football.
To address this, we wanted to stage an exhibition that would call out common misperceptions of female fans. Away From Home: The Untold Stories of Women Football Fans is in equal measure about celebration and challenges. Co-designed with David Wright from Durham University’s Museum’s Galleries and Exhibitions Team, it recognises women’s memories and experiences as football fans – past and present – preserving these stories for the future.
Each fan featured is represented by a homemade football scarf, produced by supporters. Durham University
Raising the profile of female fans
The lack of visibility of female football fans in popular and academic accounts, combined with assumptions that women did not attend football matches in the past, has contributed to the widely held views that women fans are less “authentic”. Or they are perceived as newcomers to football with less knowledge and thus treated with less respect.
Our exhibition, currently on show at the Beacon of Light in Sunderland, shares personal accounts of women fans of Newcastle United and Sunderland AFC from the 1950s to the present day, and reveals such assumptions and prejudices to be completely false.
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This pop-up show is also about opening up challenging conversations regarding the work that is still needed to create safer spaces for all girls and women. Giving a platform to the experiences of female fans – both positive and negative – can help lead to changes in attitudes and a new appreciation for these women.
Despite football playing such an important part of culture, exhibitions on football are rare. Exhibitions with a fan focus even more so, and those focusing on female fans almost non-existent until now. Designed in the style of matchday stalls, the exhibition is popping up at sports centres and supporter fanzones such as Sunderland’s Beacon of Light.
Each fan featured is represented by a homemade football scarf, produced by supporters in a reference to an age before mass-produced official merchandise. Visitors can wear these scarves as they browse the stories, creating connection and emphasising the universal elements of football fan experiences. This familiar space and accessibility is critical if we are to unlock some of the challenging issues of sexism and misogyny that lie at the heart of this research.
Many of the stories emphasise the lifelong connections between fans and clubs that will be relatable to all fans, irrespective of club or gender. Margaret, a regular at Sunderland since the 1950s, sums this up:
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Your football team gets into your heart and that’s where it stays. You cannot change that. My heart is with Sunderland Football Club, has been since my dad took me, and that’s the only place I would ever go.
Many featured fans describe gender inequalities in their experiences. This includes the expectation of giving up attending matches after marriage or starting a family, despite male partners continuing to attend.
There are also examples of sexism and extreme hostility towards women’s presence in the football stadium across all generations – as Beryl, a fan since the 1950s, describes: “The men just assume that you’re an idiot. Because they’re a man and football’s their game.” Lynsey, a fan since the 1990s, agrees: “We hear comments like: ‘What would you know about football? You’re a woman.’”
Creating better spaces for women
Highlighting these experiences can help us to reconsider negative attitudes to women fans today and imagine what the future could look like for them.
For a long time, women fans have felt they needed to accept what Newcastle fan Tracey describes as “football’s terrible sexist culture”, but there is a sense that this is changing.
As the exhibition tours, our work in collaboration with police and other major groups and organisations is developing solutions based on evidence that will help create safer, more welcoming and inclusive spaces for women fans. This includes improvements in national mechanisms for reporting and responding to violence and abuse.
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Football can be an important force for positive social change. This exhibition and the research that underpins it forms part of these wider collective efforts to increase public awareness and understanding of the challenges women fans face. But crucially, it also celebrates these women’s lifelong memories, and the powerful sense of identity being a football fan can provide.
The circumstances surrounding the death of a man at a home in Co Antrim are being investigated.
Officers were in attendance at a residential property in the Ballymena area in the early hours of Thursday, April 2. In a statement to Belfast Live, a police spokesperson said a woman, aged in her 20s, was arrested at the property on a suspicion of drug-related offences.
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The statement read: “Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding the sudden death of a man at a residential property in Ballymena in the early hours of this morning, Thursday, 2nd April.
“A post-mortem will take place in due course, however the death is not being treated as suspicious at this time.
“A woman, aged in her 20s, was arrested at the property on suspicion of a number of drug-related offences and remains in custody.”
Bush, 48, has pleaded guilty to 67 offences spanning 12 years at his firm, Legacy Independent Funeral Directors.
Hull Crown Court heard that about 240 victim impact statements from affected people will be submitted before he is sentenced in July.
Funeral director Robert Bush leaves Hull Crown Court on Thursday (April 2) (Image: Scott Heppell/PA Wire)
Robert Bush (Image: Humberside Police)
These include families of the 31 bodies that were kept at his site for months after they should have been cremated, ashes found there that could not be identified, and about 150 people who were sold fraudulent funeral plans.
Speaking outside court after Bush pleaded guilty to all charges, campaigner Karen Dry, whose parents were both cremated at Legacy Independent Funeral Directors, said: “There is an enduring sense of deep betrayal, emotional stress, and damage caused by this individual, to many families right across this city.
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“From the torment of not knowing whether we have the ashes of our loved ones, to families having the trauma of DNA profiling to establish the identity of their deceased loved ones and having the distress of a second funeral, not to mention the anguish and hardship caused by fraudulent, and now worthless, funeral plans.”
Senior investigating officer Detective Superintendent Alan Curtis, of Humberside Police, said: “The utter devastation and emotional harm Robert Bush has caused to hundreds of victims and families cannot be underestimated.
“Thirty-one families believed that their loved one had been cremated, when in fact they remained on site within the Legacy premises on Hessle Road. Most had been given ashes and had been advised that their loved ones’ cremation had taken place.
“Other families, who had chosen cremations through Legacy, were left waiting for ashes that have never been provided, or were deceived by Bush and given ashes that we now know were not their loved ones.
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“The distress and devastation that this has caused for those families is simply unimaginable.
“People paid Bush for funeral plans, so in the future their families didn’t have to worry about costs and arrangements for their own funerals.
“He betrayed this trust, leaving some victims with the uncertainty around their own funeral arrangements and without the means to pay for them.
“The damage he has caused to families across our communities is quite possibly irreparable, with so many victims who have suffered and continue to do so.”
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Victims of Robert Bush
Thirty people whose bodies were found at the funeral home:
Norman Bridger
Jonathan Butler
Muriel Winning
Raymond Dagnall
Colin Wainman
Maureen Graham
Susan Gorbutt
Shirley Wright
Mark Hotham
John Carlill
Joyce Moulton
Terence Buck
David Burton
Audrey Leach
Danny Middleton
Tony Munro
Jessie Stockdale
Peter Moody
Jean Collinson
Alan Gray
Hilda Mary Rhodes
Stephen Perrins
Joan Stark
Brian Johnson
Graham Finn
Terence White
Susan Stone
Herbert James Porter
Peter Brown
Julie Web
Four “foetus allegations” where Bush falsely told mothers the ashes he gave them were the remains of their unborn children:
Jasmine Beverley
Katie Woolston
Stacey Foster
Lucy James-Guest Ness
Fifty-seven victims of fraud over ashes:
Michelle Drewry
Shelly Chearman
Richard Collins
Brooke Atkinson
Linda Hall
Billie-Jo Chapman
Petrina Featherstone
Carl Osler
Dianne Scandole
Carol Brown
David Greensides
Norma Ellam
Maxine Penrose
Sharon Shimmells
Claire Wilkinson
Mark Anderson
Kadie Laws
Tracy Hudson
Paul Whitehead
Harry Welsh
Tracey Hartley
Jackie Delaney
Jillian Townhill
Christine Colville
Kirstie Hobden
Michelle Martin
Donald Leslie Brigham
Lee Clark
Curtis Neylon
Susan Brown
Gillian Owst
Sheila Robinson
Brett Moses
Richard Shaw
Mandy Bailey
Valerie Coates
James Meikleham
Yvonne Robinson
Heather Welford
Michael Endall
Debra Lawson
Joyce Rispin
Peter Welburn
Samantha Rosenquest
Lisa Thompson-Frazer
Sylvia Rawson
Mark Hague
Lynn Farmery
Macey Urry
Kirsty Young
Tracey Brigham
Bille-Jo Suffill
Jill Hall
Brendon Brown
Rebecca Windas
Sophie Tibbles-Carrott
Rebecca Thompson
Twelve charities that Bush stole from by failing to pass on donations collected at funerals
An architect of change, his achievements touched every corner of Greater Manchester. His wisdom, leadership and ability to bring people together inspired many. He was a man who got things done.
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Eamonn Boylan OBE, one of the region’s most influential and powerful political figures, has died aged 66. He leaves behind wife Maria and two children.
In a career spanning more than four decades, he worked roles in local government in Greater Manchester, Sheffield and London. He dedicated his life to public service and left his mark wherever he went.
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“When he spoke, you listened,” one former colleague said. He made Greater Manchester an ‘effective, efficient machine’.
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He was deputy chief executive in Manchester from 2001 to 2008 and served as Stockport’s top boss from 2010 for seven years, laying the foundations for the town’s future success.
Mr Boylan led the Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) as chief executive from 2017 to 2024, with responsibility over Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS).
In 2019, he also took over Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM), overseeing the return of buses under public control.
Mr Boylan steered the GMCA and TfGM through a period in which the government gave the organisations more responsibilities to make decisions and run services locally. He spearheaded the ‘trailblazer’ devolution deal, giving politicians and public officials in more influence over transport, education and housing.
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He guided the GMCA through difficult times – from the Manchester Arena terrorist attack that led to big changes at GMFRS, to the Covid crisis and the appointment of a new chief constable of GMP after the force’s failings were exposed in 2020.
Mr Boylan stepped down from the GMCA in 2023, saying: “I am immensely proud of what we have created together in Greater Manchester, and I hope that we continue to grow and prosper and make this city-region the best place to get on, grow up and get old.”
A return to Stockport soon beckoned as interim chair of Stockport Mayoral Development Corporation (MDC). And in 2024 when Manchester needed an interim chief executive while a permanent replacement was found for Joanne Roney – there was only one name in contention. He also served as Homes England interim chief executive in 2025.
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When he was needed, he stepped up. He was trusted. In the world of local government, where change is slow and difficult, Mr Boylan had a knack for getting things done.
Like the man he deputised for in Manchester, he was a fixer who talked big and delivered. Like the late, great Sir Howard Bernstein, Mr Boylan led with steely determination and dedication. His leadership inspired those around him.
Following Mr Boylan’s death, less than two years after Sir Howard, former colleagues sense the end of an era in drawing is near. His fingerprints are all over Greater Manchester’s finest achievements, But Mr Boylan wasn’t one to hog the limelight.
“Eamonn was the public servant’s public servant and a giant of English devolution,” Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham said.
“He led from the front but was rarely in the spotlight, taking every opportunity to lift up and empower those around him.”
“At the most crucial moment in Greater Manchester’s devolution journey, he took the foundations laid by past leaders and built it into an effective, efficient machine that continues to deliver.”
As tributes poured in, one word continued to appear in former colleague’s statements – ‘humour’. Mr Burnham spoke of his ‘great support, guidance, good humour and friendship’.
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Tom Stannard, current Manchester chief executive said: “He has been a mentor, confidante and adviser to me and many colleagues – always a source of great wisdom, advice and humour in the face of challenges, generous with his time and attention, and someone with an unswerving commitment to improving the whole of Greater Manchester for the benefit of its residents.”
GMCA group chief executive Caroline Simpson said Mr Boylan was a ‘a friend and a mentor whose massive intellect, humility, humour and kindness shone through every day’.
‘Stockport is the place it is today because of him’
It was while working at Stockport MDC that Mr Boylan planted the seeds of much of the town’s staggering transformation, which has seen it win national accolades as a place to live and work.
A massive £1bn of investment has flooded into the borough, creating a new transport interchange, apartments and business hub. The changes are not stopping anytime soon, with the regeneration area recently expanding to cover the entirety of Stockport town centre.
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Councillor Mark Hunter, a former Stockport council leader, said of Mr Boylan: “He was a public service man through and through and helped shape the vision for the town centre transformation.
“He was there at the very beginning, he was one of the architects of the whole thing. He played a key role, there is no doubt about that, both in Stockport and across the wider Greater Manchester region.”
Councillor David Meller, former leader of the opposition at Stockport council, said Mr Boylan’s ‘fingerprints are all over the borough’.
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He added: “He was plain-talking, really pleasant and focused on wanting to get stuff done. He wanted to cut through the blockers and find ways to get things done, bringing people together.
“He just had that gravitas and expertise in what he had done. He was a person who when he spoke, you would listen.”
Mark Roberts, current leader of Stockport council, said: “Stockport is the place it is today because of the strong foundations Eamonn helped to build. His leadership gave our borough confidence, and his legacy can be seen in our town’s physical investment and ambition that carries through to today and the future.
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“Eamonn dedicated his life to public service and was held in high regard not just for his professionalism, but for the way he worked with people across the council and across political lines with a focus on always doing the right thing for local communities.”
Mr Boylan was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his services to local government in 2023. It marked the pinnacle of an extraordinary career.
GMCA group chief executive Ms Simpson said: “His dedication and his determination to get things done will leave a lasting legacy here. He will remain an indelible part of the fabric of our city region’s growth and success.”
“Grenfell is not a throwaway line. It is a national tragedy that demands respect. If these are the voices Reform is putting forward, then this is what the party stands for, and voters should take note”
Reform UK’s Simon Dudley’s comments about Grenfell are as shocking as they are revealing.
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To dismiss a disaster that claimed 72 lives with “everyone dies in the end” is not just callous, it is utterly devoid of humanity. Nigel Farage was right to sack him.
But this cannot be waved away as a one-off mistake. It raises serious questions about Reform UK – the tone it sets, the judgment it shows and, crucially, the kind of people it chooses to represent it.
Take Councillor Lynn Dean, suspended by the party this week, after it was alleged that racist posts were made on an X account belonging to her. Time and again, figures linked to Reform have displayed a willingness to provoke, to trivialise serious issues, show a startling lack of empathy, or worse.
That is not bad luck. It is a pattern. Grenfell is not a throwaway line. It is a national tragedy that demands respect, care and accountability. If these are the voices Reform is putting forward, then this is what the party stands for, and voters should take note.
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‘This devastating breach of trust can never happen again’
It is a betrayal almost beyond words. Families trusted Robert Bush at their most vulnerable and he repaid that trust with deception and cruelty.
Preventing burials, handing over the ashes of strangers and stealing charitable donations is not just criminal, it is profoundly cruel. Funeral directors are meant to offer dignity in death and comfort in grief.
Instead, this case has caused unimaginable distress to families who deserved far better. The scale and duration of these offences only deepen the horror.
Justice must now follow. As this case moves to sentencing, the priority must be accountability and ensuring such a devastating breach of trust can never happen again.
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‘A very happy Easter to you’
Even in these uncertain times, Easter reminds us of hope, renewal and togetherness. As the world feels in turmoil, may this time bring moments of peace, laughter and love.
However you spend it, with family, friends or quiet reflection, we wish you a happy and restful Easter.
The Netflix star has explained why her TV partner attended the reunion solo
Kimberly Nhundu Under 35s Screen Time reporter
18:14, 02 Apr 2026
An Age of Attraction star has gone public with her new relationship after notably skipping the cast reunion. The Netflix dating programme brought together 40 singles aged between 22 and 60, for a chance at finding love without knowing their partner’s age.
Among the hopeful contestants was Pfeifer Hill, 23, who sparked a connection with Derrick Fleming, 43. Despite their 20-year age gap, the pair formed a strong bond and left the show hand-in-hand. However, fans were left puzzled when Derrick attended the reunion alone, confirming that their relationship had broken down away from the cameras.
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Pfeifer has now revealed exactly why she turned down her invitation to the reunion. Sharing a video on Instagram, she explained: “I never want to speak on a podcast that doesn’t feel like an authentic choice or one that I’m not enthusiastic about,” reports the Mirror.
“I want the first time that I speak out about the show to be on a platform that aligns with me and is one of my choosing. I want to tell my story on my own terms.” Unlike other Netflix dating shows, the Age of Attraction reunion aired on hosts Nick Viall and Natalie Joy’s podcast, The Viall Files.
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Pfeifer has suggested she would have preferred an alternative platform to discuss her experience. The graphic designer added: “This is not shade to the hosts of the podcast, anybody who went on the reunion or anybody who listens.”
She continued: “I made a different choice because for me, that choice for me upholds what I believe in, which is authenticity to myself. Derrick and I ended on good terms, I have no bad blood with anybody in the cast, so I kind of just wanted to leave it that way honestly #protectyourpeace.”
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The reality star went on to disclose that she has found a new partner, who whisked her away on a surprise birthday trip around the time the reunion was being filmed. “I am in a relationship, my partner is my best friend,” she said.
“Even though our relationship is relatively new, it is one of the biggest joys in my whole life. For my birthday, my boyfriend surprised me with tickets to Japan.
“Even if I had wanted to attend [the reunion] in the first place, I would have had to reschedule our trip. I always want my boyfriend to know that our relationship is my priority,” she explained. While Pfeifer didn’t find her perfect match on the dating show, she appears perfectly happy with her new romance.
Fans will be delighted to hear that a fresh batch of singletons will be taking part in the experiment for Age of Attraction Season 2, which will see married couple Nick and Natalie return to the helm as hosts.
A mother and daughter from Bolton have been banned from keeping equines after leaving an emaciated pony for dead on a freezing Bolton field.
The pair also received suspended prison sentences after admitting to neglecting a pony that had to be put down.
Chloe Hudson, 27, and Shantel Tansley, 46, of Ainsworth Lane, were prosecuted by the RSPCA and sentenced at Wigan Magistrates’ Court on March 20.
The offence related to the neglect of a bay pony named Jewell, one of five equines kept by the pair in a field at Higher Pasture Barn on Broadhead Road in Bolton.
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Jewell had to be put down (Image: RSPCA)
A concerned neighbour who kept horses on adjacent land contacted the RSPCA on January 7, 2024, after becoming alarmed by the ponies’ condition.
In a statement, the neighbour described two of the ponies as “skin and bone,” and said Jewell “looked ready to drop.”
The neighbour noticed she was suffering from diarrhoea and was uninterested in eating after she had offered to put hay out for the defendant’s equines during a period of snowfall a week later.
When she was looking after her own horses a couple of days later she saw that Jewell had collapsed in the neighbouring field.
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A vet attended the scene and determined that the only humane option was to put Jewell to sleep.
Jewell at Higher Pasture Barn in Broadhead Road, Bolton, (Image: RSPCA)
“I ran down to the field and saw that the pony was laid on her side and not moving. She was breathing but she didn’t get up. The temperature was around minus six, it was freezing cold,” said the vet, who tried unsuccessfully to contact Hudson.
“The pony had profuse diarrhoea around her back end and on her tail and that had frozen to the ground. I was shocked by her condition.”
RSPCA inspector Jennie Ronksley said none of the equines kept in the field had natural or man-made shelter and the field was open to the elements with witnesses describing 80 mph gusts of gusts.
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The vet, who attended at the field, stated the pony was dying and he put her to sleep. When he rolled her body over the extent of emaciation became clear as her pelvic bone was protruding and femur was visible through wasted thigh muscle.
“It was clear that this pony did not get into this condition overnight and with more timely intervention and treatment (for a possible parasite infection) there would have been a different outcome. Her owners were negligent in failing to move her to a more sheltered and warmer environment and failing to seek veterinary help,” concluded the vet.
In mitigation, the court heard that both defendants were “very regretful” and had now rehomed all the other equines they owned. Hudson was pregnant at the time of the offence and suffered from mental health issues, while Tansley has received treatment for cancer.
As well as the disqualification, Hudson was sentenced to a 20-week prison sentence, which was suspended for 24 months. Tansley received a 16-week prison sentence which was also suspended for 24 months.
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