TV
Strictly star splits his pants in wardrobe malfunction as Sarah Hadland performs ‘dance of the night’
STRICTLY star Vito Coppola was left red-faced as he split his pants during during tonight’s performance.
Actress Sarah Hadland and pro dancer Vito performed an Argentine Tango set in a haunted house for their Halloween dance.
But his ghoulish moves got out of hand when he ripped his trousers while dancing live on Saturday night.
During their routine, Vito dressed in a pair of figure-hugging three-quarter pants, white tights and a waistcoat.
He was seen throwing Sarah around in a series of daring lifts and at the end of the dance, before his pants split.
Vito was seen holding his bottom to conceal the rip when he left the dancefloor and during the judges feedback.
He was then seen uncomfortably walking to the staircase with his hand behind his back, to conceal his modesty.
Speaking to Claudia Winkleman in the clauditorium, Vito said: “Everything is together, a bit of overbalance, everything happened right now.
“My wig and you and the dress, and my trousers broke right here.”
He then proceeded to show the host the rip, before Claudia quickly moved things on.
Fans were left in hysterics at the awkward blunder, with one writing: “What’s that? Vito split his britches?”
A second said: “Oh NO Vito’s torn his trousers,” with a third asked: “Has Vito split his trousers?,” with a laughing face emoji.
The judges scored the pair an impressive 38 for their dance, with Anton Du Beke and Motsi Mabuse awarding a 10 points.
Head judge Shirley Ballas gave them a standing ovation.
While Craig Revel Horwood was full of praise, saying it was “the most wonderful Argentine Tango we’ve seen”.
Motsi simply said: “I’ll keep it short, dance of the night. Congratulations.”
Shirley gushed: “It was really quite spectacular, I thought the lifts were fantastic, it was done with ease.
“You worked as a team. You had it all going on, you’re magic really sprinkled on you tonight.”
TV
I’m a Celeb winner to return to Australia to host new spin-off show alongside Joel Dommett
REIGNING King of the Jungle Sam Thompson will return Down Under next month for the new I’m A Celeb spin-off.
The star, 32, who won the show last year, will help Joel Dommett host the jungle’s behind-the-scenes sister show.
And his former Love Islander girlfriend Zara McDermott, 27, could come along for the ride.
Presenter Joel, 39, was on the ITV show as a campmate in 2016.
The spin-off show, axed in 2020, has previously been known as Get Me Out of Here! Now!, Extra Camp and Daily Drop.
A telly source said: “Show bosses are over the moon to land Joel as their host.
Read more on Sam Thompson
“He’s now a massive primetime star.
“They’re delighted that Sam will be joining up for proceedings as he’s so popular with viewers.
“Joel is a popular presenter and part of the IAC family and was the number one choice for host when bosses decided to bring back the spin off show.
“The spin off show is set for an overhaul and will have a new name when it returns.
“It’s had a few names, hosts and incarnations over the past 20 plus years.”
I’m A Celeb presenting duo Ant and Dec are also believed to be making several guest appearances on the sister show.
TV
Strictly Come Dancing’s Sam Quek has plenty to celebrate — despite her place on the leaderboard
With the first Argentine Tango of the series, jaw-dropping transformations and enough wigs to make Dolly Parton’s collection look small, Strictly Come Dancing Halloween week (once again) truly delivered.
Saturday night’s episode saw a number of this year’s contestants impress on the dancefloor with three of them winning 10s for their routines. They included EastEnders star Jamie Borthwick — who is beginning to look like a serious contender for the Glitterball trophy — and Sarah Hadland, who spectacularly recovered from an early mishap to deliver a dramatic performance. The third was Tasha Ghouri, who has consistently pulled off high-scoring routines.
But it’s a celebrity closer to the bottom of the leaderboard who has the most to celebrate.
Prior to Saturday night’s show, Sam Quek had been struggling to make her mark on the competition and last week, she was left in tears after errors during her Quickstep. “I’m just so disappointed because that could have been our moment,” she told Claudia Winkleman in her post-dance interview.
What a difference seven days can make.
This week, Quek and her professional partner Nikita Kuzmin were given the honour of closing the show (as Strictly bosses decide the running order once they’ve had a glimpse at the dances, the schedule itself can hint at who will deliver the most memorable moment). The pair began their Jive to “Time Warp” as the dowdy Janet and Brad before both ripping off their outfits to reveal black lace, corsets and suspenders.
Quek, who clearly has a blast with Kuzmin in training, finally looked like she was having fun on the dancefloor too, beaming as she high-kicked her way through the energetic routine. The nerves of previous weeks were well and truly banished. She threw herself into the Jive and appeared completely at ease – which is no mean feat during such a fast-paced routine. Compared to her shaky Samba from week four, Quek seemed like a different person.
After positive feedback from the judges — with Motsi Mabuse describing the performance as the “cherry on the cake” for Halloween week – Quek landed a score of 31, her highest yet. The total puts Quek eight points behind first place (and eighth on the leaderboard) so she still has some way to go before becoming a serious contender in the series. But for now, the Olympian should bask in the glory of her ‘Strictly moment’.
TV
Clarkson’s Farm star Kaleb Cooper reveals why he felt ‘terrible’ when fianceé gave birth to son Oscar
KALEB Cooper has opened up on why he felt ‘terrible’ after his wife gave birth to their daughter Willa.
The Clarkson’s Farm star is a proud dad to 16-month old Willa and Oscar, who is three.
Kaleb, 26, said he felt ‘useless’ during fianceé Taya‘s labour as he didn’t know what he should be doing at the time.
He explained: “It was f***ing terrible, because when I’m helping that cow, I know exactly what I’m doing. I can bring the calf around to the mum and so on.
“Now, when Taya was giving birth, I felt useless. I’m seeing her in pain having one of my kids.”
Kaleb and Taya have been together for eight years.
The farmer continued to tell The Times Magazine how he and Taya decided to have kids earlier in life – a once popular trend with previous generations.
He said: “I wanted a girl and boy, which I’ve got and am very grateful.
“Then when I get older I can go down the pub with them, or out on the tractors, and I can still be energetic.”
Kaleb concluded: “I’ll make all the money now, hopefully have a farm, then chill out, go partying and be in Ibiza, though I can’t think of anything worse than being in a nightclub.”
Meanwhile, earlier this month it was revealed that Kaleb had landed his own solo show as his popularity continues to soar.
A special performance from his national theatre tour The World According to Kaleb will land on Prime Video.
It will be available on Prime Video globally from November 29.
The show will give viewers a front-row seat as Kaleb hosts an evening at Cheltenham Everyman Theatre.
Meet the cast of Clarkson’s Farm
Clarkson’s Farm began streaming in 2021 and follows Jeremy Clarkson and his team managing Diddly Squat Farm in the Cotswolds. Here’s a ‘who’s who’ of faces in the Clarkson’s Farm cast.
- Jeremy Clarkson: Presenter and journalist; also known for Top Gear, The Grand Tour and Who Wants to be a Millionaire?
- Lisa Hogan: A former actress and Jeremy’s partner, who assists in the running of the farm shop.
- Kaleb Cooper: A young farm worker from Chipping Norton, who forms a double act with Jeremy on-screen. He’s later promoted to farm manager in series three.
- Gerald Cooper: Specialist in the construction and maintenance of dry stone walls and the farm’s “head of security”. Of no relation to Kaleb.
- Charlie Ireland: Nicknamed “Cheerful Charlie”, a professional land agent who advises Jeremy on land management.
TV
Lizzo unveils ‘genius’ South Park-inspired Halloween costume
Lizzo has been hailed as a “genius” by fans for her 2024 South Park-inspired Halloween costume, which is in direct reference to a joke made about her on a May episode.
On Saturday, the 36-year-old pop star shared a series of photos and videos of her in costume as the fictional weight loss drug “Lizzo” that was featured in the show’s Ozempic special titled The End of Obesity.
“Ok Halloween… you can start now,” Lizzo wrote in the first Instagram post, alongside a mock advertisement of the weight loss drug with the phrases: “Need self love? Try Lizzo,” “Lose guilt, gain confidence,” and “side effects include: a smile on your face and a pep in your step.”
The “About Damn Time” hitmaker can be seen standing in a one-piece costume resembling the Lizzo weight loss medicine with a yellow tape measure tied around her waist.
In a second post of a behind-the-scenes clip of her costume photo shoot, Lizzo can be seen dancing to Comedy Central’s Lizzo jingle with a large cutout of South Park character Eric Cartman standing behind her.
“Oh OH oh… it’s Lizzo b****,” she wrote in the caption, adding: “LizzOzempic dump,” in a subsequent post.
Fans have since flocked to the posts’ comment sections to praise the Grammy-winning singer for being able to make light of the situation.
“I love it!” one wrote. “South Park can dish it and you can dish it right back.”
“Now that’s how you turn that s*** around,” a second praised, while a third simply said: “Genius.”
“This is how you clap back,” another agreed, with another calling it the “most iconic clap back of 2024.”
In the South Park Ozempic special episode, Eric Cartman is introduced to the drug, which was initially intended for people with Type 2 diabetes but is now marketed for weight loss.
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Lizzo was namechecked in a joke where a woman who had been unhappy with her weight revealed she was now on “Lizzo” a drug that “controlled all her cravings to be thinner.”
Shortly after the episode’s release, the “Truth Hurts” singer reacted in shock to the episode on TikTok, saying: “I really showed the world how to love yourself and not give a f*** to the point where these men in Colorado know who the f*** I am and put it in their cartoon that’s been around for 25 years.”
TV
Strictly Come Dancing fans ‘howling’ at Craig Revel Horwood and Anton Du Beke’s matching evil twin costumes
Strictly Come Dancing fans were left in stitches when judges Craig Revel Horwood and Anton Du Beke appeared wearing matching evil twin costumes during the dancing show’s Halloween Week special.
The judges fully embraced the show’s spooky theme when they arrived onstage looking unrecognisable as they held hands while in costume as The Grady Girls from Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, with both judges wearing identical brunette wigs, matching blue dresses and black dolly shoes.
Strictly fans were left shocked by the judges’ choice of the costume, since the pair creepily stayed in character throughout the show’s opening segment.
They kept the joke going as Revel Horwood referred to his fellow judge as his “sister” throughout the show, while Du Beke remarked that he had never looked so good.
“Craig and Anton as the twins from The Shining have just made my year!” wrote one fan online.
Another person said they were “absolutely not coping” with the pair’s costumes, which they found “way too creepy”.
“CRAIG AND ANTON! Holy hell that’s brillliant!” one fan wrote.
“I’m HOWLING at Craig and Anton,” said one viewer, as another called it “genius”.
The Halloween special sees the remaining 11 contestants show off their terrifying transformations as they fight for a place in next week’s competition.
JLS singer JB Gill and Amy Dowden, who were in the dance-off last week, are dancing a Foxtrot to “Dancing In The Moonlight” by Toploader while comedian Chris McCausland and his partner Dianne Buswell are performing a Samba to “Stayin Alive’” by The Bee Gees. Find the full list of songs and dances below.
Contestants are hoping to avoid following in the footsteps of Paul Merson, who was the fourth celebrity contestant to be eliminated last week, joining unsuccessful celebrities Nick Knowles, Toyah Willcox and Tom Dean.
TV
A predator used her 12-year-old face to make porn. She helped pass a law to make that a crime | Technology
Last year, Kaylin Hayman walked into a Pittsburgh court to testify against a man she’d never met who had used her face to make pornographic pictures with artificial intelligence technology.
Kaylin, 16, is a child actress who starred in the Disney show Just Roll With It from 2019 to 2021. The perpetrator, a 57-year-old man named James Smelko, had targeted her because of her public profile. She is one of about 40 of his victims, all of them child actors. In one of the images of Kaylin submitted into evidence at the trial, Smelko used her face from a photo posted on Instagram when she was 12, working on set, and superimposed it onto the naked body of someone else.
“I’ve had my fair share of crying uncontrollably because I don’t understand how some people are so evil,” she tells the Guardian in an interview. “I can never really wrap my head around that.”
Kaylin lives in Ventura, California, and Smelko was based in Pennsylvania when he committed these crimes against her. She was shocked when she learned her case could only be brought to trial because it was an interstate crime. Possessing depictions of child sexual abuse is criminalized under US federal law. But under California state laws, it wasn’t considered illegal.
Kaylin turned her horror into action. This year, she became a staunch public advocate in support of a new California bill, AB 1831, that expands the scope of existing laws against child sexual abuse material (CSAM) to include images and videos that are digitally altered or generated via AI. In June, she testified in support of the bill at the state capitol in Sacramento.
“I talked about how I felt violated and that I was absolutely appalled that this wasn’t already a crime in California,” says Kaylin. “California is such a huge part of the acting industry, and there are so many kids who were not protected from this crime.”
At the end of September, California’s governor, Gavin Newsom, signed the measure into law. Child predators creating such material can face imprisonment and fines of up to $100,000 in the state.
While the new law focuses on AI in the hands of child predators, other factors in Kaylin’s life put her at risk of encountering Smelko or those like him, according to her and her parents, Mark and Shalene Hayman.
Kaylin was 10 years old when she first got her Instagram account. The social network requires that its users must be at least 13 to sign up with the exception of accounts managed by parents. Smelko downloaded photos from her profile to create sexual images that combined her face with naked bodies of other girls and women.
“Disney set up her Instagram account specifically to promote the show and themselves,” says Mark. “But when these companies are employing these kids and making them post on there and not providing support – that’s where the bigger issue lies.”
This support should include training on dealing with harassment and blocking accounts, and counseling, he says. Kaylin likewise lays the blame at Disney’s feet.
“Disney’s PR team had me and all of the kids at Disney sign up for an app. They used to send us clips to post on Instagram every week that an episode would come out,” says Kaylin. “It started with my job and them planting that seed. I would like them to take some responsibility, but that has yet to happen.”
In recent years, men have harassed Kaylin via her Instagram and TikTok accounts by sending her nude photos. She has reported the unwanted messages to both social media companies, but she says no action has been taken.
“She’s certainly had her fair share of creepy stalkers who continue to taunt her,” says Shalene.
Mark believes that Sag-Aftra, the Hollywood actor’s union, also needs to be more proactive in educating its members on the risks of predators using AI and social media to victimize public figures. Both parents regularly check Kaylin’s accounts, which she still uses and has access to.
“We do read a lot of comments and think, ‘What is wrong with people?’, but I don’t know if you can get away from it. It’s difficult to be in this industry and not be on social media,” says Shalene. “I would like to see the social media companies do some responsible censoring and protections.”
Over the past few years, Instagram has announced several initiatives to increase protections for its users under 16, including parental controls and measures to determine who can message them. In September, the company announced it would make all accounts for users under 18 private by default, a move praised by child safety advocates. The same restrictions apply to minors’ verified accounts, according to Meta’s guidelines.
“There are so many inappropriate images circulated on Instagram. I just don’t understand why they are able to be sent to kids,” says Kaylin, who turns 17 this month. “Instagram should be like, ‘No, that’s not allowed,’ and take it down. But it doesn’t happen, and I don’t understand.”
Meta said in a statement: “We have detailed and robust policies against child nudity and exploitation, including real and images and those created using GenAI.”
“SAG-AFTRA has been educating, bargaining, and legislating about the dangers of deepfake technology since at least 2018, ” said Jeffrey Bennett, the general counsel for SAG-AFTRA. Bennett pointed to the guild’s publication of a magazine on deepfakes and participation in panels and published articles on the topic.
Disney did not offer comment.
The circulation of CSAM is on the rise online. Predators have used photo editing software in the past, yet recent advancements in AI models offer easy-access opportunities to mass produce more realistic abuse images of children. In 2023, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), a US-based clearinghouse for the global reporting of CSAM, received 36.2m reports of child abuse online, up 12% from the previous year. Most of them came from Meta.
While most of these reports received were related to real-life photos and videos of sexually abused children, the NCMEC also received 4,700 reports of images or videos of the sexual exploitation of children made by generative AI. The organization has been critical of AI companies for not actively trying to prevent or detect the production of CSAM.
Kaylin says that discovering her face had been used to create CSAM signaled the end of her childhood innocence. She is now more nervous about her safety and that of other children and teens she knows.
“If I see a man or somebody who looks at me a little bit weird or oddly, I’m always on edge,” she says. “I’m always thinking about the worst that can happen in certain situations. I think it’s something young women have had to get used to. It’s unfortunate that I had to have that wake-up call at 16. I guess it’s just part of life,” she adds.
A year ago, giving her testimony at Smelko’s trial signified her taking back some control over the situation, she says. In court, while she kept her focus on answering the prosecutor’s questions and faced in the direction of the jury, she shot one quick glance at the stranger standing trial for sexually exploiting her.
“When I did get a glimpse of him, it looked like he had a really sad life and he probably stayed inside for a lot of it because he was not a first-time felon,” she says. After she testified, Smelko was convicted of two counts of possessing child pornography.
Kaylin is determined to continue acting and wants to appear in movies someday. But right now she is focused on finishing her senior year of high school and her advocacy work against online child exploitation. The ordeal has also sparked a new ambition for her. She wants to go to law school so she can one day become an attorney specializing in children’s rights.
“I’m very fortunate that my case wasn’t worse. I know a lot of people have it worse than me,” she says. “I’m trying to add a little bit of good to something so bad.”
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