
Katie Price cruelly slammed by mum-shaming trolls as she poses with son Harvey at home
The former glamour model, 47, came under fire after she posted a sweet snap with son Harvey, 22, at home
4
4
4
It came after Katie shared a picture of her and Harvey doing some baking.
In the photo the mother and son are posing in the kitchen, with a packet of cake mix in view.
Katie captioned the shot with: "Baking with Harvey 🍰 carrot cake for all the family today."
While the majority of comments were kind, there were some trolls who used the picture to mum-shame her.
One wrote: "Thought you were really worried about Harvey's weight!!! And you make a cake?!"
While another added: "Bake it from scratch Katie. You can make one much healthier than from that cake mix, and use real butter not spread."
This one said: "Wouldn't it have been healthier for Harvey if you'd made it from scratch."
Another chimed in: "You moan about his weight but feed him cake."
HARVEY'S WEIGHT JOURNEY
Meanwhile, last week Katie gave her fans an update on Harvey's weight loss journey.
She has been worried about her son's health after his weight reached 30st.
Katie Price drops huge hint daughter Princess Andre is in talks for Love Island after boyfriend split
But now she has revealed they have looked at weight loss jabs to help him.
Speaking on the latest episode of her The Katie Price Show podcast, she said: "Hopefully Harvey starts his Mounjaro this week, but we'll talk about that next week and I'll go through all of what's happening about that."
The mum-of-five previously opened up on how Harvey's life was at risk because of his size.
The TV personality's eldest child has Prader-Willi syndrome, which sparks a constant desire to eat food and a permanent feeling of hunger which leads to obesity.
4
Harvey battles a series of debilitating conditions including autism, septo-optic dysplasia, ADHD and oppositional defiant disorder.
In a video posted in April, Katie revealed: 'I'm so heartbroken and gutted that his weight is just going up.
'I just googled it in stones, 188kg is just a few kg of being 30 stone.
'It's so life-threatening now, I'm still waiting for the doctors to get back to me starting on the Mounjaro and his journey to a healthy life.'
She continued: 'It's so sad his quality of life at the moment where he's so big, he just can't really do much.
'It's just another thing I have to deal with because he's at high risk of having a heart attack, he struggles to put his trainers or struggles to walk anywhere but I love him and I'm going to help him through this.
'So sad, obesity and his condition is sad, it's sad to see someone go through it and he doesn't understand.'
In February Katie told The Sun she consulted top doctors who suggested starting Harvey on the jabs in a bid to improve his chances of living longer.
Harvey's biological dad is former footballer Dwight, 53, dated for a short period between 2000 and 2001, but split shortly after Katie told him she was pregnant.
Everything you need to know about fat jabs
Weight loss jabs are all the rage as studies and patient stories reveal they help people shed flab at almost unbelievable rates, as well as appearing to reduce the risk of serious diseases.
Wegovy – a modified version of type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic – and Mounjaro are the leading weight loss injections used in the UK.
Wegovy, real name semaglutide, has been used on the NHS for years while Mounjaro (tirzepatide) is a newer and more powerful addition to the market.
Mounjaro accounts for most private prescriptions for weight loss and is set to join Wegovy as an NHS staple this year.
How do they work?
The jabs work by suppressing your appetite, making you eat less so your body burns fat for energy instead and you lose weight.
They do this my mimicking a hormone called GLP-1, which signals to the brain when the stomach is full, so the drugs are officially called GLP-1 receptor agonists.
They slow down digestion and increase insulin production, lowering blood sugar, which is why they were first developed to treat type 2 diabetes in which patients' sugar levels are too high.
Can I get them?
NHS prescriptions of weight loss drugs, mainly Wegovy and an older version called Saxenda (chemical name liraglutide), are controlled through specialist weight loss clinics.
Typically a patient will have to have a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher, classifying them as medically obese, and also have a weight-related health condition such as high blood pressure.
GPs generally do not prescribe the drugs for weight loss.
Private prescribers offer the jabs, most commonly Mounjaro, to anyone who is obese (BMI of 30+) or overweight (BMI 25-30) with a weight-related health risk.
Private pharmacies have been rapped for handing them out too easily and video calls or face-to-face appointments are now mandatory to check a patient is being truthful about their size and health.
Are there any risks?
Yes – side effects are common but most are relatively mild.
Around half of people taking the drug experience gut issues, including sickness, bloating, acid reflux, constipation and diarrhoea.
Dr Sarah Jarvis, GP and clinical consultant at patient.info, said: 'One of the more uncommon side effects is severe acute pancreatitis, which is extremely painful and happens to one in 500 people.'
Other uncommon side effects include altered taste, kidney problems, allergic reactions, gallbladder problems and hypoglycemia.
Evidence has so far been inconclusive about whether the injections are damaging to patients' mental health.
Figures obtained by The Sun show that, up to January 2025, 85 patient deaths in the UK were suspected to be linked to the medicines.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
26 minutes ago
- The Sun
Helen Flanagan reveals sad reason she's selling her house as she swears off dating after latest split
HELEN Flanagan has revealed the sad reason she's selling her house as she swears off dating after her latest split. 6 6 6 Since her split from Scott, Helen has been undergoing a makeover with a series of treatments and "tweakments" – most recently £400 in skin jabs. She also had a romance with a new man, Robbie Talbot, which ended earlier this year after a year together. Now, two months after splitting from Robbie - Helen was ready to talk about what's next when it comes to dating. She said: 'I'm done with men for the time being." Helen explained that after everything that happened over the last year, she now wants to focus on her family and career reports OK! Magazine. She said: 'I'm concentrating on the kids, work, moving house and being with my friends. 'I'm actually quite sensitive and to be honest, I struggle with dating a bit. "I feel like there's always something with men. So right now I want to be single and keep my peace a little bit, you know?' Perhaps Helen's split with Robbie has put her of dating? But Helen explained that's not the case: "Robbie was very sweet and very kind. He was older than me and he cared about me. Helen Flanagan reveals she feels 'overwhelmed' as she opens up about parenting struggles "I've had a lot of struggles with relationships, first with the father of my kids, and I then dated an idiot for quite a while after that. "But Robbie was more mature and emotionally supportive, and he was very, very funny. I had a really nice time with him. "And listen, sometimes relationships just don't work long term. We both knew it was coming before I ended it. "But I like to think something good always comes out of these things.' Helen has also set the record straight about her finances as she shared the sad reason why she has decided to sell her eight-bedroom £1million Cheshire mansion. "I'm not in a financial crisis. I'm moving because I really need a fresh start,' she told OK! Magazine. "Scott surprised me with this house and it was always supposed to be our happy family home, and it wasn't that. "I like to be light-hearted and I hate to sound depressing, but there is a sadness in this house." The former soap star admitted it had been 'a turbulent three years' and that she wanted to start fresh with her children. Helen hopes to move to London eventually, but for now, they are planning to stay where they are to avoid disrupting her kids' education. However, the soap star admitted that she will struggle to downsize from her lavish eight-bedroom house. Helen put the six-bedroom property on the market for £1.5million but in June she slashed more than £300,000 off the price. The couple, who have three children together, bought the property at Belmont, near Bolton, in June 2021 for £840,000. It has five reception rooms, six bathrooms and six bedrooms including two en-suites. The house is situated on the edge of moors and is said to have 'breath-taking views'. after being brutally trolled for posing in sexy lingerie. Just days after the 34-year-old actress posed in a sheer corset, thong, fishnet stockings and suspenders, the mum-of-three has now responded to haters who slammed her as "embarrassing." 6 6 6


Times
29 minutes ago
- Times
The secret history of Shoreditch
You won't find anyone who doesn't use the word 'grim' somewhere in their recollections of what Shoreditch was like in the early Nineties. The east London neighbourhood on the edge of the City was a vista of Victorian factories and warehouses, Second World War bombsites and tired-looking wholesalers. Those who discovered its early charms included the renowned art photographer Nick Waplington. 'We needed hardcore iron bars on every window, everything would be nicked by the junkies,' he recalls. 'There were no cops, it was lawless, grey and desolate — but it was a good place for a studio.' At first Waplington commuted from 'the safety of Camden' to the 10,000 sq ft electricity substation he, along with the artists Jake and Dinos Chapman, used as a studio (and regular rave venue). 'But increasingly I found I was there all the time.' Shoreditch and its environs were slowly populated by the brave and the bohemian. 'There was a definite sense of it being the place to be, but it was still, functionally, quite shit,' says the artist Gavin Turk. Many of the Young British Artists (YBAs) lived and worked in the area — Sarah Lucas and Tracey Emin were pioneers with their live/work/gallery space The Shop, along with future stars like Gary Hume, who occupied a space so large and cold he 'lived in a tent in the middle of it', remembers the artist Darren Coffield. The area became known for its affordability and DIY attitude: when Deborah Curtis had a child with Turk, she opened a makeshift crèche in their warehouse home. The YBA Abigail Lane 'had an 'art salon' at my place because I didn't like going to the hairdresser. I had a large flat, everyone needed their hair cut, I knew a hairdresser.' Several Turner prize afterparties were held there too. • Your guide to life in London: what's new in culture, food and property More artists were lured by the eccentric curator Joshua Compston, who set up a gallery called Factual Nonsense on Charlotte Road in the heart of Shoreditch, opposite the Bricklayers Arms pub. With his vision for an art-driven bohemian community, he would be a bridge, persuading suspicious local landlords to rent to artists, whom he coaxed into the area. The artist and film director Sam Taylor-Johnson has described Compston as 'the dandy romantic of that time'. His happenings included the Fete Worse Than Death on Charlotte Road in 1993 and 1995, a chaotic street party with stalls by the YBAs who lived in the surrounding streets. Angus Fairhurst and Damien Hirst were made up as clowns by the performance artist Leigh Bowery: for £1 you'd get a spin painting, for 50p more a flash of Hirst's wedding tackle. Tracey Emin had a kissing tent and made rum cocktails. However, as the artist Simon Bill says in Factual Nonsense, a book about Compston's short life (he died, aged 25, in 1996): 'By 1999 the [Compston] era was forgotten … because there were young people with new hairstyles moving in.' Shoreditch's fame was due in some part to the nightlife that was flourishing there. In 1999 the promoter Neil Boorman launched the magazine Shoreditch Twat, the twisted child of Private Eye and a parish magazine. 'We never had it so good — design, music, art, fashion, clubs, architecture, technology — a mass convergence of grassroots culture. We will never have that symbiotic IRL moment again,' he says now. 'The geographic locus, the economy booming, property still cheap, everyone contained in a few streets.' Rob Star, the owner of the bar Electric Star, first came to the area in the mid-Nineties to club nights at the Blue Note, including Goldie's Metalheadz, and was also struck initially by the apocalyptic bleakness. 'You had to know where to go to discover what was really going on.' Star moved into a warehouse and threw parties there — for which he would become famous. He even started a festival, Eastern Electrics, in the area. 'It's no exaggeration to say that by the Noughties the area was as influential for nightlife as Berlin. Hackney council had to employ someone full time just to manage all the TENs — temporary event notices.' The haircuts kept coming and changing. A style magazine called Dazed & Confused set up offices on Old Street. Its editors — the photographer Rankin, the publisher Jefferson Hack and the stylist Katie Grand — lured even more famous people to the area. In 1996 Hack persuaded Radiohead's Thom Yorke to play an acoustic gig in an old tramshed. I was there and remember him telling the media twats at the back to shut up. • Best places to live in London 2025 'I wish I'd had my camera,' Waplington says, 'the night I popped over to [the photographer] Phil Poynter and [the stylist and Alexander McQueen collaborator] Katy England's place. Lee [McQueen] was there, Robbie Williams, Chloë Sevigny, Kate Moss … They all did an impromptu fashion show. I thought, is this really happening?' While there was no membership to pay, only talent to declare, Shoreditch was as impenetrable as any St James's gentlemen's club. Fashion was here, led by the phenomenon of talent and tailoring that was Alexander McQueen, who lived and worked in Hoxton Square. London Fashion Week was no longer the weird, ugly cousin ofthe more relevant and glamorous Paris, Milan and New York. The Bricklayers Arms became a fashion centre, full of McQueen's 'bumsters' trousers. A young Central Saint Martins graduate called David Waddington was managing the pub: 'East was no nirvana but it was quite something being at the centre of things.' The journalist Stacey Duguid moved to the area in the mid-Nineties and worked in another old-school Shoreditch boozer that would be reborn as a hip haunt, the Golden Heart. She remembers the moment when she grasped the power of her postcode. 'My flatmate [the fashion designer Marcus Constable] and I had matching black mullets. We all had mullets. Maybe Katy England started that. Very quickly that exact haircut was on the new Gucci ads. Seeing your hairstyle on a major brand campaign was odd.' The bars flourished and grew. The haircuts got madder —Star even had an event series called Mulletover, named after the infamous cut. Banksy arrived from Bristol, bringing graffiti into the mix, or 'street art' as it was now called. The street artists' HQ was the Dragon Bar, owned by Justin Piggott, the brother of Marcus of the influential fashion photographers Mert and Marcus. His girlfriend was Fee Doran, aka Mrs Jones, who styled Kylie. Then in 2005 Nathan Barley arrived on Channel 4. Barely ten years on from the second Fete Worse Than Death, this crucible of talent, spunk and youth was reduced to a parody beyond the self-critique in Shoreditch Twat. Two of the greatest satirists of their generation, a pre-Black Mirror Charlie Brooker and a post-Brass Eye Chris Morris, had been stalking the Shoreditch community and skewered all of it: the irony, the clothes, the language, the technology and obtrusive ring tones, the abject hedonism, the enormous self-regard and, of course, the haircuts and complex coffee orders. In fact, Barley's order looks reserved by today's standards: 'I want a real special coffee today, yeah. Triple size, four shots in it, and the best foam you've ever squirted from your milky pumps.' • Shoreditch and theatreland set for alfresco summer, but not Soho How did the cultural phenomenon of Shoreditch become a seven-part joke on TV at 10pm on a Friday? In one episode, one of the only sane protagonists wakes up after a big night out with his hair covered in house paint and beer bottle tops. Doing the walk of shame he is hailed as a style leader and copied. 'People dressed head to toe in some mad avant-garde designer just to get a quick coffee,' Star says. 'There were some pretty daft fashion trends. But anything out there like that is ripe to be pilloried by people who don't get it.' Yet Nathan Barley did nothing to harm Shoreditch. 'It stayed as a base for so many creative industries until about 2012,' Star says. 'Then it became an enemy of its own success — things combined to take it mainstream and a bit sterile, not least that it was now incredibly expensive to live there.' A few years on and the Shoreditch roots of experimentation and bravery filtered down into even the smallest of rural towns: think fancy coffee shops with exposed brick walls and turntables for vinyl, the Poundland offers on jam-jar-shaped drinking glasses, sweatshirts with 'Shoreditch' written on them in a 'Harvard' typeface seen as far afield as Sydney, and those funny, wonky haircuts on the walls of high street salons that aped the area's famous mullet and Hoxton fin. Now 50 and a vice-president at Coach, Boorman says Shoreditch was the epicentre of cultural cool, 'but there were elements that we needed to be irreverent about'. Indeed, Waplington remembers a certain cruelty. 'One night in the 333 [the socialite] Tamara Beckwith turned up and the whole crowd started a tribal chant, 'F*** off back to Notting Hill.' ' One wonders where the assembled crowd were from — certainly not the former wasteland that was now London's most fashionable neighbourhood. 'She left the club in tears.' The YBAs left too. The next generation of creatives would emerge out of more affordable places: the man fêted as the new McQueen, the designer Gareth Pugh, squatted an old gym in Peckham; they went to Emin's hometown, Margate; or they moved to more affordable streets deeper east. Boorman's personal death knell was 'when a wealthy Shoreditch twat bought a flat above a popular bar and promptly got the council to close it. The later arrivals drawn magnetically to the vibe always proceed to kill it.' And there might be a great place to stop, were it not for a twist in the tale: Shoreditch is still full of great shops, restaurants and denizens who are early adopters of the trends that will shape us normals in years to come. One of those tired-looking wholesalers, Dream Bags Jaguar Shoes, is an arts and party space still going strong 25 years after opening. It might have experimental DJs playing Jamie xx, Fred Again and Bicep on one night, and a poetry collective the next. Shoreditch still has it, it's just that more people know about it now and, yes, it's expensive. But with property struggling, Star has recently returned because he sees the corporate influence declining and creative talent moving back. It's real, Shoreditch is having a second coming. What's bad for the economy is good for struggling creatives. As Barley might say, 'That's well coincimental.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Have loved-up Fearne and her Rivals director boyfriend been hitting the his 'n' hers hair dye? Couple sport matching golden locks as they take a leisurely stroll in south west London
With their romance now out of the shadows, Fearne Cotton and TV director Elliot Hegarty stepped out hand-in-hand last week. Following the end of their marriages late last year, and having kept a low profile since being spotted kissing passionately during a night out in Soho in February, it was with a lighter step that the couple strolled around leafy Richmond in south-west London. And with Hegarty, 53, now sporting a fresh peroxide blond makeover to match 43-year-old broadcaster Fearne's golden locks, the kissing drama that exposed their relationship seemed to be a world away. At the time, both had split from their partners just weeks earlier and Hegarty's devastated wife Laura was said to have only known the pair were dating when the passionate photos were published. It was a plot that could have come from TV series Rivals, the Jilly Cooper bonkbuster novel which Hegarty had just directed, or perhaps his BBC1 drama Cheaters. An insider said Laura, 51, is still 'finding it hard to come to terms with Hegarty's new relationship' but has 'kept her head down and concentrated on the children' at their £2million marital home in north London. The source added: 'He has even changed his look and cropped and peroxided his hair since this all started. He was always handsome but more low-key with mousey brown hair. He's like a different person now.' Fearne's husband of ten years Jesse Wood, 48, son of Rolling Stone Ronnie, was said to have been equally shattered when he found she had moved on so quickly just 11 weeks after confirming their separation. Fearne, who has two children Rex, 12, and Honey, nine, opened up last week about her struggles as a single parent. 'Sometimes I have a cry in my car, call one of my best friends and go, 'Are you having a sh**show too?' Yeah... OK, it's not just me. And then I crack on. And then it feels slightly better the next day,' she told a Women's Health podcast.