logo
Close call! Former celebrity couple Megan Gale and Andy Lee narrowly avoid each other at Sydney Airport as the comedian jets off with fiancée Rebecca Harding

Close call! Former celebrity couple Megan Gale and Andy Lee narrowly avoid each other at Sydney Airport as the comedian jets off with fiancée Rebecca Harding

Daily Mail​09-05-2025
Former celebrity couple Andy Lee and Megan Gale narrowly avoided a reunion at Sydney Airport this week.
Andy, 43, and Megan, 49, were one of Australia's favourite celebrity couples before calling time on their four-year romance in 2010.
The pair were both spotted at the airport on Friday, missing each other by just ten minutes.
Megan was arriving on a flight from Melbourne, while Andy and fiancée Rebecca Harding, 34, were jetting out of Sydney at an airport gate close by.
Megan cut a stylish figure, arriving in a black top that she wore over a chic wool overcoat with a brass clasp.
She matched this with a pair of plain black jeans and finished her outfit with a pair of black ballet flats.
She was also spotted descending an escalator wearing a pair of stylish cat-eye sunglasses, later replacing them with a pair of specs.
The supermodel accessorised with a $5000 Louis Vuitton tote bag slung over her shoulder.
She also wheeled a luxe $5000 Luis Vuitton suitcase through the airport.
Andy, meanwhile cut a very casual figure in a plain white T-shirt and a pair of navy blue sweatpants.
He finished his flight attire with a pair of white Puma sneakers and a blue baseball style cap, while also carrying a blue back pack on his shoulders.
Rebecca was also dressed for comfort, stepping out in a flowing black blouse that she wore with a pair of cream-coloured jeans.
Wheeling a silver suitcase through the terminal, Rebecca finished her outfit with a pair of flats.
The couple were not afraid to flaunt their love, happily holding hands as they prepared to board their flight.
Despite Andy and Megan's split reportedly being amicable, the model revealed in 2020 that it had tarnished her reputation when the public turned on her for moving on with her current partner, Shaun Hampson, shortly after the breakup.
'It was very demeaning. I get how it happens, I don't like it, I don't accept it. It was really challenging to navigate for a while,' she said in an interview with Mamamia.
'It wasn't a good time. It almost felt like I had done something wrong and I had been tarnished like I'd done something wrong. When I was with [Andy], everyone loved us together.'
The former David Jones ambassador went on to explain that the couple had been dealing with their issues privately, so by the time everyone found out about the split it was 'old news' for them.
Megan started dating former AFL player Shaun, who was 12 years her junior, in January 2011.
Now engaged, the couple are still going strong, sharing two children, son River, 11, and daughter, Rosie, six.
Meanwhile, Andy and Rebecca went public with their relationship at the 2015 Australian Open.
In 2022, the couple confirmed they had briefly split for six months in 2016 after Rebecca felt 'immense pressure' dating someone in the public eye.
However, they soon realised they were meant to be during their time apart.
After a decade together, Andy finally popped the question to Rebecca in May 2024.
Andy recently revealed that between opening an Australian themed pub in New York, and their mammoth $5million Melbourne mansion renovatio the couple have barely had time to plan their nuptials.
'Most of out planning times and decision time we spend on the house,' Andy said with a laugh on TMZ's Big Down Under podcast in March.
Asked by host Charlie Cotton for details about the wedding, Andy said he was 'lo-fi' while Bec is very 'hi fi'.
'When people come round to our house I don't feel the need for napkins for instance,' he joked.
'But because Bec is very hi-fi, I'm lucky because I get the benefit of that...everything is nicely laid out and its the right cutlery...
'And I'm worried that [the wedding] is going to be that X a 1000.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sydney Sweeney heckled at premiere after controversial ad and Donald Trump endorsement
Sydney Sweeney heckled at premiere after controversial ad and Donald Trump endorsement

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Sydney Sweeney heckled at premiere after controversial ad and Donald Trump endorsement

Euphoria actress Sydney Sweeney was shouted at by a fan as she arrived at the Los Angeles screening for Americana. It comes days after her American Eagle advert was slammed Actress Sydney Sweeney was heckled by an angered fan after she received backlash for the controversial American Eagle advert she starred in. The Euphoria star, who was also recently outed as a registered Republican, was seen arriving at the special screening of Americana at Desert 5 Spot in Los Angeles on Sunday. ‌ The Anyone But You actress, 27, ignored the backlash and posed for snaps wearing a cream bustier dress with a tulle skirt custom-made by Danielle Frankel. She had her blonde hair in light waves and added a cream headband to complete the look. However, as she was walking into the venue, one person was heard calling out her name. ‌ They said: "Stop the ad! That is being racist!" as Sydney smoothly and hurriedly walked inside the venue. The American Eagle advert featured the star putting on a pair of blue jeans. It comes after Donald Trump's mental state 'clear to see' as lawmakers urged to 'act now'. ‌ In the advert, she said: "Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality, and even eye colour. My jeans are blue." A voiceover then adds: 'Sydney Sweeney has great genes." In the US, American Eagle's billboard ads show the word 'genes' crossed out and replaced with 'jeans'. ‌ While some think the campaign is harmless, many say it taps into the ideology of eugenics - the belief that the human race could be 'improved' by increasing the presence of traits considered desirable, traits historically linked to whiteness. Eugenics was developed in the late 19th century by Sir Francis Galton, and later used to justify discrimination against minority groups and people with disabilities. Although the ideology is now widely condemned, it helped lay the groundwork for how society continues to define beauty and value. ‌ Not long after the advert was released, Sydney was outed as a registered Republican. While on the runway in Pennsylvania on Sunday evening, Donald Trump stopped to answer questions from reporters who were gathered there. One informed the US president that actress Sydney is a Republican. "I'm glad you told me that," he replied to the reporter before adding that the nugget of information certainly swayed his opinion on the American Eagle advert. The interaction came when Trump was about to board Air Force One before heading back to Washington from Allentown. ‌ When he was told that it had come out that Sydney, 27, was a registered Republican, he was clearly surprised and told reporters: "Oh, now I love her ad. "You'd be surprised at how many people are Republicans. That's one I wouldn't have known but I'm glad you told me that. If Sydney Sweeney is a registered Republican, I think her ad is fantastic."

Dick Diver review – beloved ‘dolewave' band's one-off reunion brings out Melbourne for four magical shows
Dick Diver review – beloved ‘dolewave' band's one-off reunion brings out Melbourne for four magical shows

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Dick Diver review – beloved ‘dolewave' band's one-off reunion brings out Melbourne for four magical shows

Dick Diver embodies a time that is both long gone and ever-present. They may have never been a household name but the Melbourne quartet, or what they represent, are a part of the national cultural fabric. Their lackadaisical affect belies the seriousness and sophistication of both their musicality and lyrics, which are unpretentiously and undeniably Australian. The band combine the slacker vibes of Pavement with the bookish lyricism (they take their name from a character in an F Scott Fitzgerald novel) and jangly 'striped sunlight sound' of the Go-Betweens. Releasing three albums and an EP between 2009 and 2015 through the celebrated Melbourne indie label Chapter Music, Dick Diver's encapsulation of millennial malaise under capitalism made them the unwitting leaders of a genre jokingly nicknamed 'dolewave'. The band, and much of the underground music press, bristled but the moniker nonetheless expressed something true: this was the music of the everyman, suburban poetics for the struggles and quiet joys of daily living. Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning For me, Dick Diver was the sound of moving to Melbourne and starting my independent adult life. Living in sharehouses in Richmond and Carlton North, my housemates and I would cycle down to the Tote after working our entry-level jobs to see Rupert Edwards, Alistair McKay, Al Montfort and Steph Hughes play these songs that were somehow about us. Dick Diver soundtracked the changing tides of my life, spinning on a record player or blasting from a stage as I learned how to work, how to love, how to live. It's been a while between drinks: Dick Diver's last shows were in 2018 and, despite the memorable lyric 'Europe's fucked, probably', half the band now lives there. In the intervening years they have busied themselves with other musical projects, including Sleeper and Snake, Terry and UV Race, and undergone new personal adventures, such as raising children. This surprise reunion was initially a one-off but demand ballooned it into a four-show affair, including two all-ages matinees. Despite it being 10 years since their last album, the cheekily named Melbourne, Florida, this is not the typical album-in-full nostalgia show. The sentimentality is there, of course – 'It's been such a treat to learn these old songs. It's been a while since we've been together,' McKay tells the sold-out crowd on Friday night – but you'd be forgiven for forgetting any time had passed at all. It does take a little time to warm back up: the band feels a little subdued at their first show on Friday night, with their signature banter missing, and loud crowd chatter throughout the sprawling Amber – one of their best – dulling the meditative impact of the song's languorous pace and surrealist imagery ('When I was young, I saw a horse in a stream / One day it looked at me and said, 'Get a grip, dreamy, it's the 21st century!'') But the music sounds great and the band remains as tight as ever, with guest musicians on saxophone and trumpet elevating songs such as Lime Green Shirt and Private Number. Band members swap instruments and vocal duties, and it's not hard to see how this ramshackle crew got together and made this magic. By Saturday, with two shows under the belt, the energy is immediately higher. The show kicks off with Alice, a highlight from the 2013 album Calendar Days that sounds like REM's Losing My Religion if it were set in the Northern Territory on a scorching summer's day. The setlist is similar but for the addition of the 'ancient' Flying Teatowel Blues, a strange, epic beast of a song that takes its cues from spaghetti westerns and shows the band's versatility. Sign up to Saved for Later Catch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tips after newsletter promotion The easy repartee reminds us of where we are and who they are. 'Who can recite their CRN number?' Montfort says before the band plays New Start Again, the title track from their 2011 debut album. During the anthemic Head Back, the crowd roars 'burn the flag' in unison – a lyric that clearly captures a mood in 2025. These songs are evergreen. Dick Diver's value today is in more than just remembering the past: here is a band who manage to both embody the larrikinism of Australian culture and provide a howl of truth about what it means to live here, what it means to live at all. A Dick Diver show, rare and special as it is now, is a look both back and forward: things change, things stay the same.

Lynne McGranger shares shock career news after winning Gold Logie and retiring from Home and Away
Lynne McGranger shares shock career news after winning Gold Logie and retiring from Home and Away

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Lynne McGranger shares shock career news after winning Gold Logie and retiring from Home and Away

All signs pointed to Lynne McGranger retiring from acting for good when she won the Gold Logie on Sunday night. The veteran actress, who quit Home and Away earlier this year, appeared content to rest on her laurels after a decades-long career. But the 72-year-old revealed on Monday that she is far from finished when it comes to her acting aspirations. 'I'm not retiring, absolutely not,' she told The Daily Telegraph following her Gold Logie win. 'If I had the opportunity to come back to television at some point, of course I would consider it depending on the role and the show … but not another 33 years because otherwise I'd be very, very old.' The star has already lined up her next gig - she is touring with the stage play, The Grandparents Club. Lynne has the lead role in the musical comedy, which is on the road around Australia until October. The performer says that the 'stars have aligned' for her, and she's 'very comfortable' with her choice to quit the soap and pursue a stage career. McGranger took home the crown on Sunday night when she was awarded the Gold Logie at The Star in Sydney. She took to the 2025 Logies stage with a smile in her gold gown as she accepted the award from 2009 winner Rebecca Gibney. Lynne beat TV stars Ally Langdon, Hamish Blake, Julia Morris, Poh Ling Yeow and Sonia Kruger for Most Popular Personality on Australian Television. 'Wear a pretty dress they said. You'll be fine they said,' joked Lynne, who recently announced she was leaving her soap show after 33 years. 'I'm thrilled and honoured... I don't know if any of you have caught my press lately. There hasn't been much,' she said. 'I did promise if I won the Gold Logie, I would carry it around in my handbag for a year, which is better than baring my white a** on TV, Larry,' she added. The joke was in reference to The Morning Show host Larry Emdur having his behind tattooed live on air last year after he won the Gold Logie. Lynne then joked she would have her ashes put in the Logie when she dies, before thanking her Home and Away co-stars and crew. McGranger filmed her final scenes for Home and Away in March, saying goodbye to her character, Irene, after over 30 years in the cast. She was gifted flowers by her co-stars, including Ada Nicodemou, and looked very emotional - albeit elated - as she finished up at Seven's long-running serial. 'I've had the ride of my life. And I love each and every one of you so much: The cast – Ray, Georgie, Emily, Shane, Ada, James, all the young'uns,' she said in a statement. 'The art department, the writers, everybody – there are so many unsung heroes. This show is made up of so many parts,' Lynne continued. 'You're all amazing, and it's been my great privilege to work with each and every one of you. I'm touched, I'm humbled and I'm so honoured. Thank you so much.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store