Daniel Simpson told a jury that he was not aware of what was going to happen before the car he was in was rammed into a parked VW Passat.
Teesside Crown Court has watched harrowing CCTV footage of the four accused males jumping out of their black Chevrolet 4×4 and attack the occupants of the VW with machetes and a BB gun.
The 32-year-old told the court: “I didn’t know that was about to go on. If I knew that was going to go on, I would have gotten out of the car.”
Anthony Lee Dickons (Image: Cleveland Police)
Anthony Dickons was fatally injured when he was slashed with a machete in a car park on Orme Court, Middlesbrough, on November 6, last year.
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The security footage captured the defendants block in the car before they all rushed out of the vehicle and launched what the prosecution say is a “ferocious” attack while someone was shouting ‘where’s the f****** gear?’.
During cross examination, John Elvidge KC, prosecuting, asked Simpson why he got out of the car ahead of the attack, Simpson said: “I made a stupid decision to get out of the car.
“There was no purpose to me getting out of the car, I shouldn’t have even been involved in it.”
The defendant claimed he was told to get out of the car, but said he didn’t go there to support them or help them and didn’t realise what was going to happen as he was ‘too busy sniffing coke in the back of the car’.
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He said he was simply ‘in the wrong place at the wrong time’.
Orme Court, North Ormesby, Middlesbrough (Image: Google)
Morgan Caldwell has pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Anthony Dickons and causing grievous bodily harm to a second man, Stephen Law, during the violent attack.
Caldwell and Simpson travelled to Scotland, and days later they boarded an early ferry to Belfast, in Northern Ireland, where they were arrested on November 11.
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The court heard how Simpson made a number of internet searches on his phone, including ‘cheap flights to Dubai’ and ‘non-extradition countries’.
Simpson, 32, of Coledale Road, Berwick Hills, 24-year-old Dominic Hall, of Greencroft Walk, 26-year-old Caldwell, of Cannock Road and the teenager, all of Middlesbrough, deny the murder of 44-year-old Mr Dickons.
They also deny a charge of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm against Mr Law.
Clay is not Sabalenka’s strongest surface even though she has won three times in Madrid, where the high altitude makes the conditions similar to a hard court.
Nor did she have a good build-up to Roland Garros. Six match points were squandered in a quarter-final defeat by Hailey Baptiste in Madrid in April, before she let a set and a break lead slip against Romanian veteran Sorana Cirstea in Rome.
But, given her quality and pedigree compared to the other Paris quarter-finalists, it is hard not to think another golden opportunity has slipped through Sabalenka’s fingers.
Sabalenka’s four Grand Slam singles titles – two Australian Open and two US Open triumphs, all on hard courts – are more than most people can dream of.
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But she has also lost four finals and six major semi-finals, despite a consistency on the biggest stages that is unrivalled among her peers.
Sabalenka has the proud record of not losing before the quarter-finals of a Grand Slam since the start of the 2023 season.
However, she has not always dealt well with the pressure of the latter stages – particularly during the period where she has clearly been the best player in the world.
Sabalenka was the heavy favourite to beat underdog Madison Keys in the 2024 Australian Open final, but came unstuck. Twelve months later, she reached another Melbourne final – and a flurry of mistakes saw her squander a break lead in the deciding set against Elena Rybakina.
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At last year’s French Open Sabalenka played what she described as the “worst final” of her life, hitting 70 unforced errors in windy conditions as she lost from a set up.
Against Shnaider, Sabalenka looked in control at 6-3 4-1 up before losing 12 of the final 13 games.
“I just think that there is something in specific moments during the match [where] I lose control,” said Sabalenka, whose 57 unforced errors outweighed her 46 winners.
A rolling road block was put in place by South Wales Police on the M4 while the demolition took place
Residents said their homes “shook” after a loud bang was heard in Port Talbot on Wednesday evening. It came from the Tata Steel site where a demolition was carried out on one of its now redundant coke ovens gas holder.
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It ceased operation together with the site’s heavy-end in September 2024. A rolling road block was put in place by South Wales Police on the M4 between junctions 37 Pyle and 38 Margam at 6.30pm as the demolition took place.
But some in the local area claimed they had no idea it was going to happen. Stay informed on everything Neath Port Talbot by signing up to our newsletter here.
One woman wrote online: “Would have been nice if residents had been informed, my whole house shook.”
A second added: “You could of warned us, my patio door shook and my animals were scared as well as myself.”
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And a third wrote: “A day’s notice would have been nice. My daughter is terrified now.”
A statement from Tata Steel reads: “People working and living in the Port Talbot area may have just heard a loud noise emanating from the Port Talbot steelworks.
“This was the result of the planned demolition of the empty, redundant coke ovens gas holder, which has been completed safely as part of the ongoing engineering works on the site.
“The gas holder ceased operation with the closure of the site’s heavy-end in September 2024.
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“This demolition was required to make space for future raw materials handling areas for the new three million tonne per year capacity electric arc furnace.
“Our thanks goes to the whole team involved from Tata Steel and our contractor partners Thompson of Prudhoe and PDC, in what was a complex programme of work. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.”
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The ministry also said that two paramedics were killed and a third was seriously wounded when Israeli forces “directly targeted an ambulance” in the Chehour area, which is about 14km (9 miles) to the east. The ambulance belonged to the Risala Scouts Association, which is affiliated with the Amal movement, an ally of Hezbollah.
John McGowan-Fazakerley says he never questioned Jamie Varley’s devotion Preston Davey
Rachel Smith Court reporter and James Holt Senior Live and Breaking News Reporter
20:03, 03 Jun 2026
A man accused of allowing the death of his 13-month old adopted son told a jury his trust in his murder accused partner was ‘misplaced’. John McGowan-Fazakerley, 32, said he never considered Preston Davey was at risk of physical or sexual abuse from 38-year-old Jamie Varley.
Mr Varley is also on trial, and is accused of murdering the young child. On July 27, 2023, Preston was carried into Blackpool Victoria Hospital in cardiac and respiratory arrest. He died at 7.20pm.
A post mortem concluded Preston died from upper airways obstruction with experts stating he had been physically, psychologically and sexually abused in the four months he lived with the couple in Staining Road, Blackpool, the court heard.
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Peter Wright KC, prosecuting, said the risk to Preston was ‘foreseeable and indeed foreseen’ by the defendant four days earlier when it is alleged both men sexually abused the toddler in his cot, LancsLive reported.
A series of photos recovered from Mr Varley’s phone showed Preston ‘suspended’ over his cot bars. His lips were turning gradually blue in what the prosecution say was the aftermath of a serious sexual assault, the court was told.
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley denied any form of sexual involvement with Preston and said he only saw the baby ‘fleetingly’ when he was called upstairs to see the ‘funny position’ Preston was in.
He said he told his partner to lie Preston down before returning downstairs to cook Sunday dinner. He only saw the photos when he was questioned by the police two years later, he said.
On his second day in the witness box, McGowan-Fazakerley said he ‘never questioned Mr Varley’s devotion to their adoptive son’. Mr Wright KC, prosecuting, showed a series of photos and videos which he suggested showed Mr Varley treating the tot as ‘a plaything.’
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley said: “I feel as if there’s information, messages, videos, pictures, that I wasn’t aware of. I feel at times that he’s prevented me from protecting him and doing something about it.”
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When asked about a video recorded hours before Preston’s death, which showed the baby seriously unwell, he said: “Preston’s life was like an iceberg and there are things under the water that I didn’t know about.
“I feel… I feel that on the 27th July, that when Jamie took the video of him being poorly, I feel like if that was me and I saw that I would have acted, I would have took him to hospital….”
He said Mr Varley was his ‘best friend’ and he always felt they were honest with their thoughts and feelings. He said he did not see any signs of depression and was not aware of any ‘dark thoughts’ of drowning or suffocating the baby, as reported by a work colleague of Mr Varley’s earlier in the trial.
Mr Wright KC said: “I’m going to suggest what happened to that little boy was both foreseeable by you and indeed foreseen. That’s the truth, isn’t it? Mr McGowan-Fazakerley replied: “No it isn’t. If I could have foreseen that happening and foresaw that happening it wouldn’t have happened. I would have took that little boy out.”
Asked by his own barrister, Anne Whyte KC whether he felt his trust in his partner of eight years was misplaced, the defendant replied: “Yes, I do feel like my trust in Jamie has been misplaced.”
Mr Varley, 38, is accused of murder; manslaughter; sexual assault of a child under 13; inflicting grievous bodily harm; five counts of child cruelty; and further counts of making, taking and distributing indecent images.
Mr McGowan-Fazakerley is accused of causing or allowing the death of a child; two counts of child cruelty; and sexual assault of a child under 13. Both men deny all the charges against them.
The Topping & Company store, on the corner of Museum Street and Blake Street, is set to open its doors on Friday, June 5, at 10am.
Company director Saskia Topping said they could not wait to welcome customers to the shop.
It comes as works to convert the vacant building on the corner of Museum Street and Blake Street have been ongoing since the shop was approved.
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Company founder Robert Topping said told a City of York Council planning hearing in July last year it would be the largest independent book store to open in the country in living memory.
The York store is set to join other Toppings shops in Bath, Edinburgh, Ely and St Andrews.
Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) earlier this week, company director Ms Topping said people would soon be able to spend hours browsing their shelves in York.
The director said: “We’ve had lots of friendly faces peering in the windows whilst we’ve been getting the books on the shelves – it will be wonderful to fling open the doors and show everyone the space at long last.
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Shelves with interior design books in the Topping & Company bookshop, in Museum Street, York
“It’s taken us four weeks to get all the books on the shelves, and hopefully in the right order.
“It’s such a big, labyrinthine space that one of our booksellers has drawn a map to help everyone find the right sections.
“We consider ourselves to be range booksellers – for us, there’s great joy in browsing a bookshop and not just finding the popular new titles, but a whole range of brilliant books that have been published in decades past, alongside those from smaller publishers that you might not find elsewhere.
“We want our bookshops to be spaces of discovery.”
A listed building consent application from Harrogate Tipple to create a beer garden at the back of The Little Ale House, in Stonegate, has been approved by City of York Council.
The company’s plans stated it would have space for about 50 people and bring a space by the Grade I-listed Norman House into use for its patrons.
Council planning officers stated the proposed works were acceptable and would preserve the special architectural interest and setting of the main bar building which is also listed.
They added separate planning permission would be required for the freestanding bar in the beer garden.
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The plans follow the opening of The Little Ale House in the Grade II*-listed 46-50, Stonegate in December.
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Little Betty’s Café was previously based there until it closed in 2021.
An existing concrete and asphalt surface is set to be replaced with bricks or stone flags as part of the plans to convert the rear yard into a beer garden.
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Timber benches, stools and picnic tables are set to be brought in along with moveable planters and pots while a dead tree will also be removed.
A timber-clad outdoor bar would be built and covered with a pitched slate roof if officials grant it planning permission.
Part of the ruins of Norman House run alongside the border of the courtyard where the beer garden is set to go.
An impression showing how the beer garden planned for The Little Ale House, in Stonegate, York, could look (Image: Harrogate Tipple/City of York Council planning portal)
The ruins are thought to be the remains of the oldest surviving domestic building in York.
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Harrogate Tipple’s plans stated the works would replace the existing unattractive yard with a landscaped space which would the settings of the Norman remains and the business’ viability.
The application stated: “The existing courtyard is visually unattractive and inaccessible to patrons, yet it enjoys glimpsed views towards York Minster and the Norman House.
“Creating a small beer garden would support the viability of the new business, provide an outdoor meeting space in keeping with York’s tradition of courtyard inns, and give the public the opportunity to appreciate the Norman remains from within a managed environment.”
The plans were supported by York Civic Trust and Historic England stated they would provide a great opportunity to provide information about the medieval ruins.
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No objections were lodged against the plans.
Council planning officers stated an interpretation for Norman House should be included as part of the redevelopment.
Officials said: “The proposed works for a free-standing bar to the rear of 46 Stonegate will require planning permission, neighbouring impact will be considered as part of a planning application.”
Human remains were found beside a busy road in Bristol by a member of the public on Tuesday night, June 2. Avon and Somerset Police says officers were called to Portway in Bristol following the discovery.
Officers said that although formal identification has yet to take place, the family of a man who was subject to a missing persons appeal has been informed.
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Rebaz, 40, was last been seen on Monday, May 4, off Fishponds Road. Officers had launched a public appeal due to concerns about his welfare.
A statement from Avon and Somerset Police released on Wednesday reads: “Police were called to the Portway on Tuesday evening, June 2, by a member of the public who had found human remains.
“Sadly, our initial enquiries suggest the deceased is missing Rebaz, 40, from Bristol, who hadn’t been seen since Monday, May 4.
“While formal identification has yet to take place, his family have been informed and have our sympathy in their loss.
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“Officers would like to thank everyone who contacted us with information or shared our appeal to trace Rebaz.”
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It’s the end of a 36-year journey on the professional tour for Ken Doherty (Picture: Getty Images)
Ken Doherty will no longer compete on the professional snooker tour, but it’s fair to say he has made the most of his 36 years taking on the best players on the planet.
‘It’s been coming for a while,’ the 1997 world champion told Metro. ‘I was sad initially that I’m not going to be competing on the main tour anymore, but it’s probably relief as well. The time is right.’
One of the finest players in the world for much of the 90s and 00s, Doherty’s game started to slip after 20 years on tour and he says he has been hoping to rediscover the magic for a long while now.
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‘I was trying to search for something, thinking maybe things will improve,’ he said. ‘I played with a new cue to maybe get a bit of confidence, but no, it’s just not there anymore.
‘You just come to realise you can’t play the way you used to and it becomes frustrating. You feel a bit embarrassed sometimes with your performances and I don’t want to go through that again.
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‘I’ll say thank you, I’ve had a great time, great memories. I’m delighted to have won the things I’ve done. Disappointed to lose some of the matches and finals that I’ve lost, but winning the World Championship was the greatest day of my life as far as being a snooker player’s concerned. And to do it with a £2 cue and against one of the greatest of all time was the icing on the cake.’
Doherty has already been a popular pundit and commentator for many years (Picture: Shutterstock)
The 1997 World Championship win over Stephen Hendry was one of six ranking titles on Doherty’s CV, but he had a number of other close calls in big events.
Two more Crucible finals, three at the UK Championship and two at the Masters, with the Darlin of Dublin experiencing the vast difference between winning and losing those huge matches.
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‘When I won it in ’97, I came home on an open-top bus, 250,000 people lining the streets. Then the following year after losing in the final to John Higgins, came back to Dublin airport the next day and I had to get a f***ing taxi home! That’s the difference between winning and losing in a final! But that’s life.’
Doherty made his Crucible debut in 1991 against Steve Davis (Picture: Getty Images)
Crafty Ken duked it out with legendary names for years, experiences that will live for him forever.
‘Playing all the greats: [Ronnie] O’Sullivan, [John] Higgins, Hendry, Jimmy [White], [Steve] Davis, playing all those great players, some of the greatest players that will ever play the game, that was a joy,’ he said.
‘That was a joy to compete against them and play them in big matches. And overcome them, not all the time, but I did overcome them through my career, I beat them all.’
The most testing opponents are of little surprise, with Doherty saying: ‘Stephen and Ronnie, John Higgins and Williams, they were the toughest.
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Doherty taking on Ronnie O’Sullivan at the 2003 Masters (Picture: Getty Images)
‘They were the ones I loved to have battles with, funnily enough, even though they were the toughest. Whether it be at the Masters or the UK or the World Championship, playing those guys at those championships, they were great occasions. And that’s what I miss. Those big, big matches against the big players.
‘I think the best one was I played Ronnie in the final of the Irish Masters at Goffs [in 1998]. He beat me, he played really well. The atmosphere was electric, it was just amazing.
‘But of course he failed a drugs test, there was marijuana in his system, so he had to hand me the trophy and the cheque for an extra 30 grand. It was the most expensive joint that he ever smoked in his life! He never spoke to me for about six months afterwards.’
Outside of the most obvious nightmare foes, Doherty remembers one of his punditry colleagues being a serious test.
‘I tell you who was really tough and he was such a clever player who I loved playing against, because it was a battle of strategies, was Alan McManus,’ he said.
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Alan McManus and Doherty met at the 2014 World Championship (Picture: Getty Images)
‘He was he was such a wonderful player, he knew every inch of the snooker table. They called him Angles because his safety was was second to none, he was brilliant. It was a great battle of mind games against him, he was a quality player.
‘Although he won the Masters, which was great, he doesn’t get the proper recognition that he probably deserves. But he was a top player for a long, long time.’
The 1997 Sheffield final will never be topped, but there are plenty of other contests that stick in the mind of the Irishman.
‘There’s a few finals,’ he remembers. ‘I beat John [Higgins 9-8] from 8-5 down in Malta in the final. And then both got so drunk we got thrown off the plane and we’re on the front pages and the back pages when I got home!
‘The Williams World final that I lost 18-16 in 2003, the semi-final against Paul Hunter from 15-9 down to to win 17-16. That was probably one of the greatest matches and greatest comebacks I’ve ever had. The UK final I lost 10-9 to Williams. That was in the same season, 2002-2003. He pipped me in two of the major finals that year. There’s been lots of great matches.’
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Don’t worry, getting thrown off a plane with John Higgins the morning after the 2006 Malta Cup final does not pass by without explanation, as the two created a little slice of scandal.
‘We went out to a nightclub,’ said Doherty of hitting a Maltese town with Higgins after edging him in the final. ‘I got back at 5 o’clock in the morning. The taxi was already waiting for me outside the hotel when I staggered back in to to get my cue and suitcase.
‘I came downstairs, got into the taxi, we were driving to the airport and John was staggering up the road and he was on the same flight as me, the 7 o’clock flight.
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‘I checked in and went up to the hotel bar and had another drink. Then John was last to check in, he made it and had another drink with me and then we got on the bus. His cue got stuck in the doors, and everybody started laughing, including me, but you know what my laugh is like, I don’t think people appreciated my laugh at 7 o’clock in the morning.
‘He was last on the plane. I managed to get on and sit down and the captain stopped him as he was staggering up the stairs and said he’s not travelling. I got up to defend him and say, “oh, he’ll be okay, just let him sit down, he’ll be fine.” But he said, “no, he’s not travelling and neither are you. You’re getting off with him!”
‘We got on a flight to Heathrow that night and there were three paparazzi waiting for us as soon as we get off the plane! We were on the front and back pages. Rock n roll.’
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Some of that night in Malta might be a haze, but snooker has provided unforgettable moments away from the table for the Dubliner.
‘I think one of the favourites was when Alex Ferguson rang me up and invited me to Old Trafford to parade the trophy,’ he recalls. ‘First of all, I told him to f**k off because I thought it was one of my mates winding me up! He says, “Kenny, this is Alex Ferguson, and I’m not going to f***ing ask you a second time!”
‘So I got there and he took me down to meet the players. Eric Cantona came over and shook my hand. I went out on the pitch and my legs were like jelly carrying the cup. All the United fans singing “there’s only one Kenny Doherty” and all the West Ham fans in the away end singing “there’s only one Ronnie O’Sullivan!”
World champion Doherty walked out at Old Trafford (Picture: Shutterstock)
‘Playing a frame with George Best, shaking Muhammad Ali’s hand at the Sports Personality of the Year in 1999.
‘The Edge, tapped me on the shoulder once, when I was talking to Bono after one of their concerts. I was with Michael Stipe and Roger Taylor. The Edge says, “Ken, Ken, you wouldn’t do me a favour, would you? You wouldn’t come over and say hello to me mother and her two friends?” She had no interest in talking to Michael Stipe, Roger Taylor or Bono, but her and her friends absolutely loved snooker.’
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As his professional playing days come to an end, there is a tinge of disappointment of how it has come about.
Doherty has been playing on an invitational tour card in recent years and he has no issue with that no longer being offered, but feels he could have been informed earlier than he was.
Doherty landed six ranking titles over his career (Picture: Getty Images)
‘I don’t think the option was there anyway. They weren’t going to give me a card, so they sort of made my mind up for me, you know?’ Doherty said of retirement.
‘It would have been nicer to find out a little bit earlier, then I could have maybe planned something at the World Championship. The timing could have been a bit better, but it is what it is. I’m happy.’
Doherty’s final match proved to be a 10-5 defeat to Patrick Whelan in the first round of World Championship qualifying, which felt like the end even before the decision was made.
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‘I think after this year’s World Championship I knew anyway,’ he said. ‘I tried to practice to have a good year and a decent run, but it just wasn’t there. I felt this could be my last game.
‘I knew it was coming, but I was putting it off, hoping, but in the end I probably could have done it a few years ago.
‘It’s just my love for the game, I wanted to keep on and keep searching for something and that will never die, your love for the game.
Doherty won matches in four ranking tournaments in his final season (Picture: Getty Images)
‘I’ll still play snooker because I love it and I will play exhibitions and I’ll still do shows and I’m still playing the seniors and I love that as well, but it’s not as much pressure, I can just relax. The time is right.’
Doherty will never be far from big time snooker, as a prominent pundit and commentator on major tournaments and still ready to play seniors events.
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He remains and will continue to be one of the sport’s most popular figures and greatest ambassadors, and someone snooker should be grateful for.
‘Well, listen, it’s given so much to me, it really has,’ he said. ‘It changed my life and I’m just so humbled by the amount of support that I’ve had over the years, and not just from fans all over the world, but also the snooker community themselves.
‘I will cherish that. I’ll always try to promote the game as best as possible and I’ll continue to do that.’
Attwood, 35, is set to appear alongside her mother Jennifer, in a duo she described as ‘chaotic but in the best possible way’.
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The ex-Islander added: ‘It’s not often that we agree on things, which I think the viewers may find entertaining.
‘My family are huge fans of the show so it’s a real honour to be a part of such an iconic British programme.’
Olivia Attwood described her and her mum as ‘chaotic but in the best possible way’ (Picture: Channel 4)
There’s much for Gladiators fans to enjoy this series (Picture: Channel 4)
Meanwhile, bodybuilder Morsia, who is best known as Legends on Gladiators, said: ‘Everyone knows how good I am at being on TV, but turns out I’m even better at watching it.
‘Wow. Absolutely incredible sofa performance.
‘I had a great time on the show and I need to say a massive thank you to Gogglebox for literally paying me to watch TV. What a time to be alive.’
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His co-star Aikines-Aryeetey, who competed alongside Clarke in the 2025 series of Strictly, said: ‘Filming Celebrity Gogglebox was pure fun from start to finish, just a proper night-in full of laughs, brilliant TV, and plenty of unexpected moments.
‘It was a really enjoyable experience and great fun to be part of.’
All the stars joining Celebrity Gogglebox
Olivia Attwood
Harry Aikines-Aryeetey
Matt Morsia
Nigel Havers
Julian Clary
George Clarke
Max Balegde
‘Just a proper night-in full of laughs, brilliant TV, and plenty of unexpected moments’ (Picture: Channel 4)
Clarke said filming Gogglebox gave him an excuse to tease his sofa partner and fellow content creator Max Balegde.
‘He reacts to everything, so you’re never bored. It’s so easy to get into as well, you just sit there, say exactly what you’re thinking, and before you know it, we’ve gone completely off track,’ he said.
Elsewhere in the line-up of Celebrity Gogglebox newbies, comedian and actor Julian Clary said of his contributions: ‘I do like to think my commentary brought a certain level of refinement to proceedings, and Nigel managed to stay awake, although there is an unsightly stain on my sofa.’
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George Clarke said filming Gogglebox gave him an excuse to tease his fellow content creator Max Balegde (Picture: Channel 4)
While the series goes out this summer, Channel 4 will confirm additional famous faces to take up their sofas for national telly.
The cast members set to return include Vernon Kay and Paddy McGuinness, Shaun Ryder and Bez, Roman and Martin Kemp, Ashley Banjo and Perri Kiely, Nick Grimshaw and niece Liv, the Mangans, as well as Rylan Clark and his mother Linda.
They will be joined by Mo Gilligan and Babatunde Aleshe, Denise Van Outen and Johnny Vaughan and finally Vicky Pattison and Pete Wicks.
Celebrity Gogglebox on Channel 4 at 9pm on Friday.
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