Politics
Office Romance Cast: Where Have You Seen The Stars Before?
Office Romance is the type of rom-com we have all been yearning for.
Written by and starring Brett Goldstein alongside romantic comedy queen Jennifer Lopez herself, the film dropped on Netflix on Friday, and quickly became a hit with viewers looking for something fun to help pass a night in.
Besides its central couple, the movie boasts an all-star cast that includes some of the funniest performers working right now from both sides of the Atlantic.
If you’re one of those who wasted no time in hitting play on Office Romance, here is where you’ll recognise some of the main cast from…
Jennifer Lopez

To be honest, if you don’t know who is Jennifer Lopez, you may well have been living under a rock for the last 30 years.
Just in case you need an update, though, J-Lo is a world-famous triple-threat who has primarily made a name for herself as a popstar, selling more than 80 million records worldwide, in addition to her successful career as an actor.
First finding fame in the biopic Selena, she has since become best known for her role in rom-coms like The Wedding Planner, Maid In Manhattan and Monster-in-Law.
Her recent career resurgence included her role in 2019’s Hustlers, which critics cited as one of the best of the year, and even generated Oscar buzz (although she didn’t end up getting nominated).
Jen is as known for her personal life as her career, thanks to her on/off relationship with Ben Affleck and past romances with the likes of Mark Anthony and baseball player Alex Rodríguez.
Brett Goldstein

Writer and actor Brett Goldstein is best known for his performance as Roy Kent in the sports comedy Ted Lasso, but he has had a career in comedy that spans more than a decade.
He first found fame when he appeared in Ricky Gervais comedy Derek as Tom, before going on to appear in Jessica Knapett’s comedy Drifters, Nick Helm’s Uncle and the – thankfully, long forgotten – David Hasselhoff mockumentary Hoff The Record.
Since going global as his mouthy footballer alter-ego in Ted Lasso, Hollywood has come calling. He previously made a cameo in Thor: Love & Thunder as Hercules, as well as writing and co-starring in rom-com All Of You and voicing the twins Ronnie and Reggie in The Sheep Detectives.
Since 2018, Brett has also hosted the podcast Films to Be Buried With, where guests talk about films that have been important in their lives.
Betty Gilpin

Betty Gilpin is one of America’s most underrated character actors.
After years of playing small, but scene-stealing, roles on TV, she found recognition when she was cast as Dr. Carrie Roman in the popular series Nurse Jackie.
Her following continued to grow when she began playing Debbie “Liberty Belle” Eagan in Netflix’s wrestling drama Glow, a role for which she was nominated for an Emmy and a Critics Choice Award.
Since appearing in Glow, she’s had a starring role in Gaslit alongside Julia Roberts, played a nun battling AI in Mrs. Davies and starred opposite Michael Shannon as former US president James Garfield’s wife, Lucretia, in Netflix’s Death By Lightning.
Her most famous – or, perhaps, infamous – role on the big screen came in 2020, when she starred in The Hunt, which a satirical dystopian drama which sent up political divisions in the US.
On stage, Betty was the first actor to play Mary Todd Lincoln after Cole Escola’s departure from their award-winning play Oh, Mary!.
Amy Sedaris

Comedy Central/Kobal/Shutterstock
Amy Sedaris is one of the most iconic names in modern comedy thanks to her performances as Jerri Blank in Strangers With Candy, Mimi Kanasis in the Tina Fey sitcom Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and numerous characters in her Emmy-nominated show At Home with Amy Sedaris.
You may also know Amy for playing scrap owner Peli Motto in both The Mandalorian and The Book Of Boba Fett.
Office Romance isn’t Amy’s first J-Lo film, either.
She also appeared in Maid In Manhattan as Natasha Richardson’s snobby friend, while her other big-screen credits include Elf, the ill-fated Bewitched remake and the cult horror Jennifer’s Body.
Tony Hale

20th Century Fox Television/Kobal/Shutterstock
Comedy fans will definitely be familiar with Tony Hale’s work.
Tony is most recognisable for his role as the hapless Buster Bluth in Arrested Development, as well as his performance as the doting assistant Gary in the political comedy Veep.
Besides his stand-out roles, he also played minor characters in the likes of Sex And The City, ER, The Sopranos and Dawson’s Creek in the early years of his career.
On film, Tony is a prolific voice actor, most known for playing Forky in the Toy Story franchise, as well as The Angry Birds Movie, the animated Harley Quinn TV show and Inside Out 2, in which he replaced Bill Hader as the voice of Fear.
Bradley Whitford

Warner Bros Tv/Kobal/Shutterstock
Bradley is synonymous with his Emmy-winning role as Josh Lyman, the White House’s Deputy Chief of Staff, in The West Wing.
He is also known for his role as the father in Get Out, who uttered the iconic line: “I would have voted for Obama a third time if I could.”
His other TV work includes playing a drug addicted producer in Studio 60 On The Sunset Strip, Marcy in eight episodes of Transparent and Commander Joseph Lawrence in The Handmaid’s Tale.
He recently reunited with his West Wing co-star Allison Janney in the Netflix drama The Diplomat – as well as appearing in Death By Lightning with fellow Office Romance actor Betty Gilpin.
Edward James Olmos

Sci-Fi Channel/Kobal/Shutterstock
Edward is most recognisable to TV fans for playing Lieutenant Martin “Marty” Castillo in Miami Vice and William Adama in Battlestar Galactica.
More recently, he had a leading role in Sons Of Anarchy spin-off Mayans M.C as Ezekiel and Angel’s father Felipe Reyes.
On the big screen, Edward starred as police officer Gaff in Blade Runner and was Oscar-nominated for Stand And Deliver, where he played real-life inspirational mathematics teacher Jaime Escalante.
He also played Jennifer Lopez’s on-screen father in her breakout movie, Selena.
Rick Hoffman

Dutch Oven/Kobal/Shutterstock
If you watched the drama Suits, you’ll remember Rick Hoffman for his role as Harvey’s rival Louis Litt.
Outside of Suits, he had parts in the comedies The Bernie Mac Show and Samantha Who?, as well as playing Dr. Swerdlow opposite Damien Lewis in the drama Billions.
Rick is also a frequent collaborator of the horror writer and director Eli Roth, appearing in Hostel and its sequel, as well as 2023’s Thanksgiving.
Jodie Whittaker

Jodie Whittaker is a mainstay of British TV, although arguably no role was bigger than when she played the Thirteenth Doctor between 2017 and 2022 in Doctor Who.
Before she entered the Tardis, Jodie found fame playing the mother of the murdered Danny in Broadchurch, before appearing in firefighting drama The Smoke, medical show Trust Me and a stand-out episode of Black Mirror, The Entire History Of You.
In the last couple of years alone, Jodie has appeared in Toxic Town alongside Aimee Lou Wood, starred with Suranne Jones in the ITV crime drama Frauds and played real-life sports psychologist Pippa Grange in the football drama Dear England.
Will Sasso

Will Sasso started his career as part of sketch series Mad TV, before going on to appear in a wide range of comedies, including his most recent stint as Mandy’s dad, Jim, in both Young Sheldon and its spin-off Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage.
His film credits include playing Curly in a 2012 biopic about The Three Stooges, Sienna Miller’s on-screen brother-in-law in the drama American Woman and a sheriff in the 2025 horror Clown In A Cornfield.
Mary Wiseman

Science fiction fans will be familiar with Mary Wiseman thanks to her portrayal of Sylvia Tilly in the Star Trek series Discovery.
Mary also had a supporting role in Longmire as Meg Joyce, and more recently played White House executive chef Marvella in the Shondaland drama The Residence on Netflix.
You might have also seen her portraying the serial killer John Wayne Gacy’s sister, Karen, in the US crime series Devil In Disguise, featuring Orange Is The New Black’s Michael Chernus in the central role.
Tony Plana

David Giesbrecht/Disney General Entertainment Con
Tony Plana is best known for playing Betty’s dad, Ignacio, in the hit comedy Ugly Betty.
Before that, Tony was a prolific TV actor who appeared in the likes of Hill Street Blues, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, The West Wing, 24, and Cagney & Lacey.
He also had a supporting roe in Desperate Housewives as Gabrielle’s abusive stepfather, working alongside Eva Longoria.
Roger Bart

Ron Tom Disney General Entertainment Con
Talking of Desperate Housewives, if you watched the show, you’ll know Roger for his performance as the homicidal pharmacist, George Williams, who was infamously obsessed with Wisteria Lane resident Bree Van de Kamp.
Although the Tony-award winning theatre actor is better known for his on-stage work, he also played true crime writer Mason Treadwell in Revenge, the smug TV writer Roger in Matt LeBlanc meta-comedy Episodes and Vice Principal Nero Feint in the Netflix adaptation of A Series of Unfortunate Events.
He also played Roger Bannister in the remake of The Stepford Wives and Carmen Ghia in the musical The Producers, as well as lending his singing voice to the Disney musical Hercules, performing the film’s signature ballad Go The Distance.
Michelle Hurd

Among Michelle Hurd’s stand-out roles is her recent work as Raffi Musiker in Star Trek: Picard.
She first came to prominence playing Monique in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit before going on to portray Kerry’s girlfriend Courtney in the iconic medical drama ER, Eleanor Waldorf’s strict assistant in the first seasons of Gossip Girl and a main role in the drama series Blindspot.
You may also know her for her recent work as D.A. Samantha Reyes in Jessica Jones and Daredevil, as well as the Sydney Sweeney rom-com Anyone But You, in which she starred as Alexandra Shipp’s character’s mum.
Lisa Gilroy

Actor and comedian Lisa Gilroy is a star on the rise.
Her work so far has included a minor role in The Studio as Zoe Kravitz’s publicist, in addition to playing Vermin in Anthony Mackie’s Twisted Metal and Kelseigh in Ted Danson comedy A Man On The Inside.
Her recent work has seen her playing Lily in the new reboot of Scrubs, and a woman who is overcome with Jimmy’s grief in the latest series of Apple TV+’s Shrinking.
Norm Lewis

Vivian Zink Disney General Entertainment Con
If you’re a theatre-goer, you may have seen Norm Lewis in action during one of his many on-stage performances, which include playing Javert in Les Misérables and the title role in The Phantom Of The Opera, as well as its sequel Love Never Dies.
As for his work on screen, he appeared in Spike Lee’s war film Da 5 Bloods and the Hilary Swank crime thriller The Good Mother, as well as portraying Senator Edison Davis in the gripping Scandal.
X Mayo

X Mayo rose to fame earlier this year thanks to her performance as Janelle James in the Marvel series Wonder Man.
She also had a lead role in the sitcom American Auto, and appeared in Maya Rudolph’s Apple TV+ comedy Loot.
Office Romance is streaming now on Netflix
Politics
I have psoriasis and scientists THINK they might've found the cause
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Politics
Can You Finish The Rivals Quote? (With Season 2 Cast)
We gathered some iconic quotes from Jilly Cooper’s books and the Rivals series so far. Can Alex Hassell, Nafessa Williams, Bella Maclean, Katherine Parkinson, Danny Dyer, Emily Atack, Rufus Jones and Luke Pasqualino identify the missing word?
Politics
When Is Rivals Season 2 Back? Why The Disney+ Hit Is Facing A Major Break
This article contains spoilers for the most recent episode of Rivals.
The second season of Rivals has arguably been an even bigger hit than the first.
So far, critics are loving it – and fans are loving it even more thanks to the steamy affairs, swooning romances and dramatic feuds that have unfolded in the new episodes .
However, fans have now been left reeling at the news that Rivals is taking a mid-season break.
It had previously been announced that Disney+ would be splitting season two of the Jilly Cooper adaptation into two separate sex-episode halves, with Friday’s instalment the last to come before the show’s months-long hiatus.
As fans contemplate when they will next see David Tennant’s Tony, Danny Dyer’s Freddie and Alex Hassell’s Rupert Campbell-Black again, here’s what we know about the return of Rivals …
Why has Rivals been split into two parts?
Episode six of the second season of Rivals ended on a huge cliffhanger, with a tragic death in the Baddingham family and a reignited affair between Lizzie and Freddie.
As a result, we’re already itching to know exactly what’s going to happen next.
The show’s writer, Laura Wade, hinted to TechRadar that this cliffhanger was exactly why such a frustrating wait between episodes six and seven of Rivals was introduced.
Prepare yourself, as the writer teases that these shockers are just the tip of the iceberg for what’s to come.
“We’ve got some really huge story moments coming up later in the series and it’d be lovely for those bits of story to just have a moment to sink in with viewers, building up some anticipation,” she explained.

Laura added: “There’s a massive plot twist at the end of episode six. I think that’s when we break off for four or five months. But I think that will keep people thinking, talking and arguing about what’s going to happen next… in a very good way.”
The woman behind bringing our favourite characters to life explained that Rivals’ producers wanted to “drag out that enjoyment a little bit” and leave fans wanting more.
But Laura also has a more practical reason for why the show is having such a long hiatus
“Also, we’ve got the Fifa World Cup coming up, so we’re releasing the first half before the football,” she pointed out. “Get that out of the way, and then release the second half.”
When will Rivals season 2 episode 7 be released?
We know season two of Rivals consists of 12 episodes, but Disney+ has yet to release news on when we can watch the remaining six.
However, what we do know is that we can likely expect the remaining episodes to land after the World Cup, which finishes mid-July and in the Autumn period.
Rumours have suggested we could be waiting as long as October, with the writers telling Film Hounds they expect episode 12 to come in December.
Laura explained to Tech Radar that the first part of season two of Rival had “spring like stuff” and that the second half has “autumnal vibes”.
“On screen, it runs into Christmas, which allows us to sort of parcel it out for everybody to savour the story,” she said, hinting at the time period of part two of series two of Rivals.
Rivals is available to stream on Disney+ now.
Politics
Iran strikes Israel after Israel bomb’s Beirut’s Dahiyeh to kill peace talks
Iran has launched at least two and as many as five (so far) waves of drones and at least ten ballistic missiles against Israel. The strikes, described by Tehran as a “warning shot”, came in retaliation for Israel attacking Dahiyeh in southern Beirut. Iran had warned Israel that it would strike its north if Netanyahu launched attacks on Dahiyeh. Israel claimed to have shot down all the incoming barrage, but even UK state-corporate media have reported numerous successful strikes. The attack was the first direct Iranian retaliation against Israel in two months. Local footage also appears to show missiles reaching targets:
The diaper force claimed they had intercepted all missiles, but this POV shows impact of an Iranian missile on northern occupied Palestine! pic.twitter.com/1CEIdRcjia
— Marcus d’Osint
(@WarFrontIntel) June 7, 2026
The barrages were watched by Palestinians in Gaza, giving them a rare reprieve from daily Israeli war crimes:
Palestinians in Gaza get some respite from the genocide as Iranian missiles fly high in the sky in response to Israel bombing Lebanon. pic.twitter.com/SMmCnILz6X
— Paddystinian (@Paddystinian) June 7, 2026
Peace-talk killer
The wanted war criminal Netanyahu ordered the attack in an obvious attempt to provoke an Iranian response in the hopes of killing even the limping peace talks between Trump and Iran. Trump’s supposed peace deal was plainly ridiculous. Israel would have a free hand to destroy and murder in southern Lebanon but not bombing Beirut, in return for Lebanese resistance forces ceasing all defence. But even that was too much for the Tel Aviv warmonger and the ethno-supremacist fanatics holding him up.
Iran — More than they can chew
However, as on previous occasions the Israeli regime has almost certainly bitten off more than it can chew. Iran has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to destroy large areas of Israel if provoked. It has also repeatedly shown it can make US bases in the region untenable, destroy Arab vassal-states and keep the Hormuz Straight closed.
The scale of Iran’s response appears so far to be moderate. But it is already draining Israeli and US air defences that the imperialist powers are nowhere near replenishing. Netanyahu shows no sign of ceasing his attempted ‘scorched earth’ land theft until he is battered into doing so. And like any nazis, he and his faction are threatening mass reprisals against civilians for the successes of the regional resistance.
Featured image via Twitter
By Skwawkbox
Politics
Mango x Eckhaus Latta Is The Cool Girl Summer Collab, And It’s Going Fast
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
The fashion high street fashion collabs have been dropping thick and fast over the last couple of years – Sandy Liang x GAP last year, Victoria Beckham x Gap and Cecilie Bahnsen x Uniqlo earlier this year.
Now, Mango has dropped the designer collab of the summer, with its Eckhaus Latta collection that dropped everything.
Having already spent an embarrassing amount of money on the collab, it’s safe to say I’m obsessed.
From bright red woven bags, to chunky bangles, foiled jeans, and breezy dresses, there’s something for everyone.
Whether you’re looking for a refresh to your work wardrobe, need new ‘going out’ clothes, or want a new jangly accessory to spice up your summer looks, I’ve rounded up my faves from the collection to shop now. But move quick, it’s selling out…
Politics
Israel and the US are weaponising starvation in Lebanon
In the current negotiations over Lebanon’s borders, the United States does not sit at the table as an impartial broker of peace, but as the orchestrator of a calculated financial siege.
The Trump administration is utilising underhanded economic warfare, targeted banking blockades, and weaponising the global dollar system to deliberately starve the Lebanese state into a position of absolute geopolitical capitulation.
Lebanon — Weaponised interdependence
As formal diplomatic delegations gather under the polished chandeliers of international summit rooms to debate lines on a map, an ordinary Lebanese citizen stands in a dim Beirut neighbourhood, calculating whether their remaining cash can cover both a gallon of generator fuel and tomorrow’s bread.
Six years into an unprecedented financial collapse, the average Lebanese family does not experience geopolitics as an abstract chess match of border demilitarisation or sovereign decrees; they experience it as a crushing, daily struggle against acute inflation, a worthless currency, and a state that has systematically evaporated their life savings. It is precisely within this landscape of exhaustion and human despair that the true nature of modern diplomacy reveals itself.
This is not a failure of diplomatic mediation; it is the deliberate application of what political scientists call “weaponised interdependence” — the exploitation of a weaker state’s reliance on global financial networks to force geopolitical compliance.
This financial warfare translates into concrete reality through a dual-track strategy of surgical exclusion and conditional lifeline dependency, transforming the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) into an auxiliary wing of military command.
On the first track, Washington aggressively suffocates domestic liquidity by targeting Lebanon’s highly vulnerable, post-collapse cash-and-carry economy. By blacklisting government-licensed financial entities — such as the recent sanctions levelled against widespread exchange houses like Jood SARL — and threatening to sever the country from the global SWIFT banking network, the U.S. creates a profound chilling effect.
Because the Lebanese banking sector is effectively comatose, this threat of secondary sanctions forces surviving local financial agents into a state of structural hyper-compliance, blockading the nation from the inside out and cutting off access to the global dollar system unless Beirut adheres to American political dictates.
US finances the Lebanese Army
On the second track, the United States exercises direct leverage by financing the daily operations of the bankrupt state apparatus itself, weaponising Lebanon’s institutional paralysis at the negotiating table. Recognising that the severe depreciation of the Lebanese Lira had reduced a soldier’s monthly wage to a fraction of its original value, Washington stepped in with $230 million in massive “livelihood support” programs.
This funding directly bankrolls the salaries and cash stipends of over 70,000 Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) and internal security personnel. Far from a gesture of pure “selflessness”, this direct dependency ensures that when the LAF is tasked with securing southern borders, its soldiers fuel their patrols and feed their families using money provided by the very “mediator” demanding their strategic compromise. This multi-million-dollar lifeline is explicitly tied to geopolitical benchmarks, heavily pressuring the Lebanese cabinet into adopting secret disarmament timelines and enforcing UN Resolution 1701 on Western terms.
By simultaneously choking the private financial sector and directly paying the state’s defenders, the United States forces Lebanon to enter high-stakes negotiations not as a sovereign peer, but as a financial dependent unable to separate its national defence doctrine from its immediate fiscal survival.
Financial blackmail
By withholding structural IMF packages and essential reconstruction funds, the U.S. ensures that every diplomatic demand — be it the surrender of territory or the granting of Israeli operational freedom — is framed as a necessary transaction for a loaf of bread or a pack of medicine. In this environment, the “negotiating table” is merely an ultimatum disguised as a choice: Lebanon must either trade its foundational security for a respite from manufactured poverty, or face total economic liquidation.
This financial extraction reaches its peak in the post-war reconstruction framework, where the U.S. and its Gulf allies have transformed humanitarian recovery into a tool of political blackmail. While basic emergency aid is permitted to trickle in to keep the country on high-stakes life support, the multi-billion-dollar funding required to rebuild shattered towns and vital civil infrastructure is being explicitly withheld behind a wall of geopolitical conditionalities.
Lebanon — the ultimatum
Lebanon is presented with a calculated ultimatum: it will receive no structural economic relief, no international sovereign loans, and no capital to resurrect its obliterated border-region economy unless it capitulates to sweeping security concessions that compromise its territory and disarm its defensive capabilities.
By weaponising the very devastation of the landscape, this strategy ensures that the physical rubble of Southern Lebanon remains a permanent economic monument of punishment, forcing a starved population to choose between the immediate necessity of a roof over their heads and the abstract principle of a compromised national sovereignty.
In conclusion, evaluating these critical diplomatic talks through the lens of traditional conflict resolution is a deliberate act of blindness. When a nation enters negotiations with its financial sector structurally blockaded and its national army dependent on its mediator’s payroll — just to feed its soldiers, the results will more than likely be dire.
By weaponising Lebanon’s engineered poverty and conditioning its post-war reconstruction on sweeping security concessions, the United States and Israel have fundamentally altered the landscape of modern diplomacy. They have demonstrated that a dominant superpower no longer needs to achieve total military victory on the battlefield to rewrite a country’s geography or displace its population; it merely needs to starve its institutions into submission.
If the international community continues to celebrate these predatory agreements as triumphs of peace, it will codify a dangerous global precedent: that true sovereignty is a luxury reserved for the affluent alone, and that for the broken and bankrupt, stability will always come at the price of capitulation.
Featured image via Marwan Tahtah/Getty Images
Politics
Active Grandparenting Could Slow Brain Ageing
Not all of our dementia risk is in our control. But The Lancet’s standing commission on dementia previously found that 45% of factors that can increase our likelihood of developing the condition are “potentially modifiable”.
This includes things like not smoking, exercising more often, and controlling high blood pressure.
But these might not be the only ways to lower our risk of cognitive decline, sometimes seen as a precursor to dementia.
According to research published in Psychology and Ageing, being an active grandparent might slow brain ageing.
“Grandparents who provide care for their grandchildren tend to show better cognitive functioning than those who do not”
This paper looked at 2,887 grandparents aged 50+ (their average age was 67) who took part in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing.
Researchers asked participants to fill in questionnaires and take cognitive tests three times in the period from 2016-2022.
Questions centred on how active grandparents were in their grandchildren’s lives, including by watching them overnight, caring for them while ill, helping them with homework, playing with them, prepping meals for them, and more.
Generally, grandparents who provided childcare for their children’s children had better memory and verbal fluency results than those who didn’t. This association stood regardless of how often they cared for the kids or the type of care.
Grandmothers, but not grandfathers, who took care of their grandchildren saw less cognitive decline according to the study’s tests across the years than those who didn’t.
The paper read, “Grandparents who provide care for their grandchildren tend to show better cognitive functioning than those who do not. For grandmothers, these benefits also result in a slower cognitive decline later on.”
You don’t have to grandparent constantly to see benefits
The study stressed that providing childcare for grandkids at all, regardless of hours spent doing so, was linked to a lower risk of cognitive decline.
“What stood out most to us was that being a caregiving grandparent seemed to matter more for cognitive functioning than how often grandparents provided care or what exactly they did with their grandchildren,” study author and lead researcher Flavia Chereches told the American Psychological Association.
“More research is needed to replicate these findings, yet, if there are benefits associated with caregiving for grandparents, they might not depend on how often care is provided, or on the specific activities done with grandchildren, but rather on the broader experience of being involved with caregiving.”
Politics
A Guide To Postpartum Sex And The Best Sex Toys For New Parents
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
You might be thinking: I’ve just had a f*cking baby, sex is the last thing I want to be thinking about right now. Or you could be thinking the opposite.
Either way, your path back to having sex after birth is completely your own. There’s no right or wrong way to do it.
But if you have questions, we’ve asked sex and relationships therapist Georgina Vass everything you need to know about starting to have sex again as new parents.
How soon is too soon?
While the NHS has little to no guidance on how long to wait until you can have sex after birth, around four to six weeks is a good benchmark.w
“Guidance varies, but for most births six weeks tends to be the recommendation of when one can medically return to penetrative sexual activity,” she says. “However, having the desire or feeling physically or emotionally ready to resume sexual activity may take much longer than six weeks.”
Research by Lovehoney last year found that 83% of women experience changes in their sexual function postpartum, including pain, libido drops, and body image concerns.
How will sex change after birth?
Naturally, these changes – not to mention the stress and fatigue of being responsible for a new life – can cause new parents to have less frequent sex.
“It usually requires more planning compared with before becoming parents,” Vass explains.
“Not only do some couples need to identify a time when they can both be available, but the logistics and changes in physical space may disrupt or diminish their capacity for private time.”
Intimacy is likely to look different when your little one arrives, which can take time to adjust to.
“Another common challenge is grappling with the shift in identity from parents/providers during the day to romantic partners in the bedroom, and this can take time to adjust to,” adds Vass.
How to explore sex again as new parents
However, intimacy doesn’t necessarily have to mean penetrative sex, or even sexual touching.
“Open communication about your desires, compassion for yourself and your partner, and prioritising time together as a couple are all important,” Vass advises.
“Invest in your relationship with your partner, whether that’s through arranging pressure relieving childcare, enjoying time as a couple on date nights or embracing forms of non-sexual intimacy like cuddling on the couch uninterrupted for an hour.”
When you’re ready to explore sex again, foreplay will be your best friend, says Vass.
“Once things become physical, enjoy generous foreplay or outercourse to re-familiarise yourselves with your bodies, gain comfort, and increase arousal,” she says.
“Moving slowly whether through prolonged foreplay or shallow and gentle penetration may be helpful to avoid discomfort. Using water-based lubrication may help with dryness, which can be common for new mothers.”
While it might take time for your sex life to feel normal again, remember: change is normal. “Becoming a parent has an impact on your body, and things may feel or look different to how they did before, but this time in your life is temporary and things are likely to change over time,” says Vass.
“Take the opportunity to discuss any concerns or questions with your medical provider, they may have useful information or helpful resources.”
Can I use sex toys after birth?
Just as intimacy with a partner will feel different, mothers could experience a changing relationship with their body. Masturbating or using a sex toy could help to reconnect.
“Sex toys can be used to reconnect with your body on your terms and explore new sensations,” says Vass.
“High-quality clean toys may work well for new mothers. Read reviews, check the materials of the toys, clean them thoroughly before use, go slowly and enjoy!”
Best sex toys for new parents to shop
If you’re thinking about exploring sex for the first time after birth, here are some of the best sex toys, lubes, salves, and toys to try.
Designed in collab with Mumsnet, this soft bullet vibrator is created specifically to be soft on new mums. As well as being coated in silky silicone, it comes with a gentle three vibration speeds and two patterns so it’s just the right intensity for postpartum sensitivity. Just as the name suggests, it’s whisper quiet, so you won’t disturb your little one. Plus, that tapered end means you can choose between more pinpoint stimulation or something broader, depending on what you’re ready for.
If there’s one thing Denmark does really well it’s sex – seriously, they’re one of the only countries where Gen Z is still having sex – so trust Danish sex brand Sitre to make water-based lube that’s skincare-grade. It’s not only pH-balanced, making it perfect for sensitive skin, but it’s blended with aloe vera to hydrate down there, too. Plus, water-based lube is compatible with sex toys.
Things are likely to be a little numb down there for a while, but if you want to improve your pelvic floor muscles while also getting a little buzz down there, this trainer will whip you into shape in no time. It doesn’t require an app (because no one has time for that) but instead has eight training modes to work your way up through and sends a vibration out when you engage properly.
Can’t decide whether you want an external or internal toy? Don’t worry, this vibe from Dame can do it all, as that curved end is just as suitable for playing with your external erogenous zones as it is rubbing against your G-spot. Should you be after something that you can work towards, this is an ideal toy as you can get used to the intensity externally before delving in when you’re ready.
After a literal new human enters your life, it can be hard to find time to connect as a couple. To make a little game of it, Luxus has created a sex toy powered by the same technology as car sensors. Slip the ring over his thing-a-ling, and place the vibe over her clit (you can hold it in place with the finger grip, stickers, or harness) and it’ll vibrate more intensely the closer you move together. Or, change settings so it vibrates simply when it hears you clapping – I’ll leave you to figure that one out for yourself.
If you’re not ready for penetration, an external vibrator could pose a less threatening feat. This one from sexologist and engineer-founded brand Dame slots around your clit, with those little wings reaching around your labia for hands-free stimulation. With just three speeds, it’s not too powerful, and it’ll also make a great solo tool for when you next get some alone time…
Intimacy doesn’t have to involve direct genital stimulation, so if you’re looking for a low-pressure way to delve back in, a wand vibrator could introduce something new into your dynamic. Originally intended to be used as as neck massager (throwback to that iconic Sex and the City episode) their vibrations can be used all over the body, and this rechargeable one has a bendy neck and is completely cordless, so you can get into even the tightest of spots.
Whether you’re having penetrative sex or not, there’s no excuse like growing a human in your body to convince your partner to give you a full-body massage. These candles from Maude smell divine, and once lit they melt into a delightful body oil that can turn your regular night time routine into a bit of fun (and, hopefully, relaxation).
While this toy looks like it’d only be suitable for internal play, it’s time to use your imagination! Just like the Whisperer, this seven inch vibe won’t alert everyone in the surrounding area to your antics. Plus, its ribbed edges can be used to venture into penetration for the first time, or run across the outside of your vulva for added texture.
Don’t count out mutual masturbation – it can be a fun way to explore your body again while reigniting intimacy with your partner. This vibrating grinding pad will give them a real show, without the need for penetration, and you can even hand over the remote control for them to get in on the action, if you’re feeling generous.
Politics
Wes Streeting Compares Reform UK To Nazis Over Attack Ad
Wes Streeting has compared Reform UK to the Nazis over a controversial advert attacking Kemi Badenoch.
The former health secretary condemned a Reform social media post which suggested the Tory leader cared about black people, but not those who are white.
Streeting accused the right-wing party of spreading “propaganda that is reminiscent of the 1930s”.
The Reform ad showed a quote from 2020 in which Badenoch said “black lives do matter”, alongside a partial quote she gave this week in which she said “I don’t care about white lives matter”.
However, her full quote, which she gave in an interview on ITV’s Good Morning Britain, was: “I don’t want to hear about Black Lives Matter. I don’t want to hear about White Lives Matter. Everyone matters.”
On The News Agents podcast, Streeting said Reform had “sought to grossly and dangerously misrepresent” the Tory leader.
“She said ‘I don’t care about black lives matter, I don’t care about white lives matter, all lives matter’,” said Streeting. “She was really clear about that.
“Then an ad goes up that quotes what she said in 2022, ‘black lives do matter’, set against one part of what she said on breakfast television this week: ‘I don’t want to hear about white lives matter’.
“Those two sentences slapped on an ad with Kemi’s face and promoted across social media like wildfire.
“Why? Because they want people to believe that the black woman who leads the Conservative Party cares about black people, but doesn’t care about white lives.
“And that was dangerous, it was incendiary, and I don’t say this lightly, this is the type of propaganda that is reminiscent of the 1930s.
“And that is the choice for the country. You can have a politics that is decent, or you can have a politics that is about rage, that is about division, and seeks to foment and stir hatred to politically profit from it.
“It is dangerous, it is nationalistic and it has got to be beaten.”
Streeting said Reform leader Nigel Farage “is an English nationalist, and nationalism is a dangerous and potent political force”.
“I’m not saying Farage is a fascist, but I am saying he’s an English nationalist,” he added.
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Andy Burnham Likely To Win Makerfield Seat
First, we’ll start of with good news for Andy Burnham. It looks as though he is all-but certain to win the Makerfield by-election.
With less than a fortnight to go until polling day on June 18, opinion polls – and the increasingly-confident Labour campaign team – suggest he holds a comfortable lead over Reform UK’s Robert Kenyon.
The most recent survey of voter opinion in the constituency puts Burnham on 49%, fully 10 points ahead of Kenyon on 39%.
Barring an unforeseen crisis, and in politics that can never be ruled out entirely, the Greater Manchester mayor will soon return to Westminster after a nine-year hiatus.
We now know, as Burnham himself confirmed on Question Time on Thursday night, that he will then move quickly to replace Keir Starmer and become Britain’s next prime minister.
It would be the culmination of a lifetime’s ambition for the former cabinet minister, who has twice tried and failed to become Labour leader before.
Burnham, the so-called “King of the North”, has vowed to change both the Labour Party and the way politics is done at Westminster, with a greater emphasis on public control of essential services and an end to 40 years of Thatcherite neoliberal economic theory.
With just three years to go until the next general election – he has already ruled out going to the country early – he is clearly a man in a hurry.
But his eagerness to depose Starmer and seize the crown has not gone down well with many of the Labour MPs he will rely on to get his agenda through the Commons – and is storing up trouble for the future.
“He’s an arsehole,” one backbencher told HuffPost UK. “All Andy cares about is himself. Loyal, hardworking MPs don’t want to support a coup and will now not go campaigning for him in the by-election.”
Another MP said: “Those who had already decided not to go and campaign for him now have the perfect excuse.”
Burnham’s admission that he plans to challenge Starmer has “gone down like a lead balloon” in the Labour ranks, an MP said.
“I don’t understand why he’s in such a rush,” the MP said. “It would have been plausible for him to come back and be offered a role by Keir, but he’s obviously decided he doesn’t want to do that and instead wants to move against the PM as soon as he gets back.
“It’s typical of Andy to act without thinking it through. People are furious with him.”
A minister said: “Plausible deniability that he was after the leadership was at least making it feel like what he is doing was within the rules.
“Now every door we knock in Makerfield is contributing to the instability of the government.”
But a Burnham ally told HuffPost UK: “Its hardly news that Andy would want to enter a leadership contest should one arise.
“I don’t think many colleagues believed he’d be sitting on the backbenches if he wins this by election, so refusing to support this existential fight against Reform is pretty disingenuous.”
Burnham has insisted he is sticking by his pledge to end parliament’s whipping system, whereby party managers tell MPs which way to vote and discipline those who rebel.
Instead, he has said he will rely on the “collective wisdom” of Labour MPs, effectively allowing them to vote with their consciences rather than necessarily take the government line.
If he doesn’t want his agenda to be upended, therefore, he needs to get his own backbenchers onside from the start.
But one said: “If you are simultaneously saying you’ll ease off whipping and also angering your colleagues, that does not bode well for the future of a putative Burnham administration.”
Another backbencher said they expected any boost Labour receives from a new PM to be short-lived.
“We’ll get the briefest of bounces before people realise that Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Iran and Vladimir Putin have not changed,” he said.

No.10 were quick to respond to Burnham’s Question Time announcement, insisting the PM will not “walk away” from the job he was elected to do in July, 2024.
“The country expects us to focus on governing and to deliver change for hardworking people, not get distracted by Westminster debates,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.
“The Labour Party has a process for challenging a leader and it has not been triggered.”
Former health secretary Wes Streeting, who quit the cabinet in the wake of Labour’s disastrous performance in the May 7 elections, has already said he will stand in any leadership contest.
Burnham appeared to use that as cover for his own leadership ambitions, telling the Question Time audience: “I think Wes Streeting seems to have launched a leadership contest, so if that is running, I would seek to join it.
“But I’d have to persuade members of the Parliamentary Labour Party to do the same. So that’s the only question.”
But an MP accused Burnham of “insulting our intelligence”.
“Wes doesn’t have the numbers and Andy has been planning this since the general election,” the MP said.
“We can all see as plain as day what’s happened and trying to imply it’s a response to what Wes has said is disgraceful.”
Another minister, however, said Labour MPs should park any reservations they have about Burnham and do everything they can to get him elected.
“The alternative is Reform winning the seat, and if that happens, we are totally fucked,” he said.
“Andy’s got a strong personal vote and a strong campaign message, that places like Makerfield have been forgotten about and he’s the man to change that.
“We need to get behind him, and whatever happens after that will take care of itself.”
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
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