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Noel Edmonds complains he is 'haemorrhaging money' on £15m New Zealand estate

Noel Edmonds complains he is 'haemorrhaging money' on £15m New Zealand estate

Yahoo20-06-2025
Noel Edmonds reveals he is losing money with his business in New Zealand when the pouring rain puts people off coming to his pub. "We're haemorrhaging money at the moment," he says in ITV's Kiwi Adventure.
The Deal or No Deal presenter, 76, set up life across the pond in New Zealand, leaving behind the UK forever in 2018. He bought up a £15m estate, River Haven, of 12 properties including a pub called The Bugger Inn and his own vineyard.
Inviting the cameras into his life once again, the TV star has filmed a fly-on-the-wall reality show Kiwi Adventure which is now streaming on ITVX.
In dramatic scenes in episode two, Edmonds is stood watching the downpours at the start of the season where he shares that the business is losing money as a result of the weather.
He says: "When you come to New Zealand, you change your view about your relationship between the weather and the economy.
"We're haemorrhaging money at the moment because you have to take staff on in anticipation of the guests coming. We're going to have to have a spectacular November and December to balance the books."
Ever the optimist, Edmonds doesn't lose hope that things will turn out for the better. He says: "I believe in the cosmos. I believe everything happens for a reason." Although, he does admit: "Just struggling at the moment to come up with a good reason here!"
It's early spring and The Bugger Inn pub should have lots of customers but there is barely anyone in sight because of the rain — despite their best efforts of trying to get people to come in.
Earlier on, Edmonds had admitted it has been hard setting up his own business. He tells the cameras: "New Zealand is a great place to come to but it's not the easiest place to set up a business. We've done a fascinating thing with the River Haven adventure. Will it be the move that sustains us for years to come? Watch this space!"
Despite the struggles, it's clear that Edmonds loves his new life in New Zealand with his wife Liz. "We were drawn here by the energy of the area," he says.
Their new life in New Zealand is a far cry from their lives when they first met on the set of Deal or No Deal in the UK in 2006.
It's been six years since they packed up their lives in the UK. The TV star has the chance to share why he decided to leave the UK for good in 2018.
He says in Kiwi Adventure: "When people say to me, 'What do you miss at the UK?' I find myself going back to why I left. Because all the things I miss about Britain are the reasons I left. By that I mean that the country changed so much, so fast, so fundamentally, that I found myself missing a quieter country... We are not trees so you can move."
Edmonds reveals he aims to have no regrets when he "gets to the end".
Elsewhere, Liz also explains the couple had not initially thought they would set up the business. She says: "None of this was planned. None of it was planned at all. There was no plan whatsoever to buy a vineyard and do this. I don't know it was just a feeling of we could work on this, we could develop this."
Noel Edmonds' Kiwi Adventure airs on ITV1 and ITVX on Friday, 20 June at 9pm.
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Unknown Mortal Orchestra's Ruban Nielson Channels Sister's Death Into His Darkest Music Yet
Unknown Mortal Orchestra's Ruban Nielson Channels Sister's Death Into His Darkest Music Yet

Yahoo

time38 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Unknown Mortal Orchestra's Ruban Nielson Channels Sister's Death Into His Darkest Music Yet

Unknown Mortal Orchestra's Ruban Nielson doesn't make eye contact as he holds his phone up to his face with both hands. He is at his Palm Springs home, where he lives when he's not in Portland, Oregon, his residence since the mid-2000s after moving to the city from his native New Zealand. His setting is nondescript, which is a relief as what he is sharing about his most recent release, the six-song Curse EP, is heavy, and unexpected. It's easier to focus on the eye tattoo in the middle of his neck. Curse is Nielson's second release this year. The first was IC-02 Bogota, part of his Instrumental Cities series. Curse stands apart from that album as it is the aural representation of Nielson's emotional experience during the cancer diagnosis of his sister, who was 12 years younger than him, and her demise within two months in November 2024, as well as its aftermath. More from Spin: Sean 'Diddy' Combs Found Not Guilty On Three Most Serious Charges 'Today' Is The Day For A New Foo Fighters Song Dropkick Murphys are 'For the People' The EP holds a lot of feelings, from sadness and anger to isolation and despair. At times it is claustrophobic and at other times it is a release. Curse is the heaviest and the most horror-based Nielson has ever been. But it's also exploratory and uninhibited. It almost didn't get made as he felt it might be 'self-indulgent.' Yet the EP is what has helped him move from one stage of grief to the next, and looking back on it, he realizes he 'had no choice.' Nielson apologizes at regular intervals after bursts of what he feels is oversharing, and questions whether what he's saying makes sense. I assure him it does and that sometimes it's easier to talk to a stranger, and that with the amount of experience I have had with loss, I consider myself the death keeper, and am willing to help him hold his loss too. What inspired the EP? A lot of things on a few different levels, but the thing that mostly sent me on the path of how dark it is, is my sister passed away recently. She had a pretty hard life. She discovered that she was riddled with cancer. As soon as I found out, I got a flight back to Auckland in New Zealand, where I grew up, and where she lived. She was quite a strange person. She had so much anxiety, she needed someone around all the time. I was with her every day for a couple of months through the whole process. She was 12 years younger than me. She was my baby sister. Being around her through that process left me feeling like I could only watch horror movies and only listen to really heavy music. I wasn't able to feel good at all for a long time. It was such a horrible thing, I didn't feel inspired to work or be creative. But then I realized, I make music a lot to get past feeling depressed or feeling negative emotions. So I started making music. I was watching horror movies most days. I don't know what it is about that. Maybe it's catharsis. Surround yourself with horrible images and it kind of dulls out bad memories. How come you decided on an EP rather than an album? Originally, all that material was supposed to be the next album. I didn't know if it was good music, but I knew it was real. It comes from an honest place. I thought, 'Why don't I put out what I have now instead of completing a full album of this? If I stay here for another six months in this mindset, I don't think I'll be able to escape this stage of grief.' The more I thought about it, the more it felt like a good amount of this feeling, and a good amount of time to be here. I want to move to the next stage. Because I was doing everything by myself, I'd gone back to being insular. I didn't want to be around my bandmates. But I was thinking, 'I don't know if it's good for me if I stay here and make an entire album of this. 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I'd been through this intense thing, at times nightmarish, but also really intimate. What my sister and I went through, she's the only other person that knows. So going through this thing that was really intense, but then having no one to talk about it with was really strange. I didn't even think to spend time with other people. It feels like I'm in a different stage of grieving, where I can start to talk about it. I'm not even sure if I should have talked about it, but it's hard to talk about the EP without being honest. I feel like I'm in another phase now and I'm grateful that music can do that for me. If not music, I'm not quite sure what my way out of that period of time was going to be. Feeling very nihilistic and dark about everything, it's good to turn it into something I can put outside myself and feel a little bit detached from now. What 'heavy music' were you listening to? I was trying to pick things from my childhood that were dark. 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The thing about horror movies that I really have always liked is they're always about our subconscious fear, what we're afraid of at the moment, or some angst we're feeling. Then the movie can be about something that is kind of on the surface, makes us feel an adrenaline rush when we jump, or can make us feel scared on a surface level. But the theme of the movie is usually something that's going on underneath. I was thinking, maybe this is how I connect to other people. We're all going through things. It's not like I'm going through this really dark period and everybody else is normal. These themes connect in ways that I don't understand, in the same way as horror movies. If I stay in that mindset, then it makes sense. Maybe it'll be music that other people will be able to get something out of. What's the draw to horror films? On the surface, watching horror movies is a horrible thing. It's an awful thing to do to yourself. But it's got something to do with catharsis. When I was a kid, I used to feel this huge relief after watching a horror movie. That thing that I was just afraid of, that's not my life. It's like waking up from a nightmare. You can feel terrible, but at the same time you feel exhilaration. That's not my life. My life is more normal than that. Earlier in the year, after getting back from New Zealand, after everything that happened, I was thinking, this is like a bad dream, but it's real. You wake up and it's like Groundhog Day. Every day sucks. And people tell you it gets easier. I don't want it to get easier. I want to feel terrible in tribute to my sister. I want to feel terrible for the rest of my life. It does get easier, but not because you get better. It's with you every day. You get used to this awful reality. You don't forget them. That's the crazy part of it. You get comfortable with this growing list of people that you miss. I think that's what the name of my band is about. 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This is not about what happened with my sister. I just have to get this feeling out. Once I found that place, I could immediately feel that somehow this is helping. It was helping in the same way that watching horror movies and listening to death metal was helping. It's almost like it takes me out of myself a little bit. Instead of everything folding back in on itself, it was like something was coming out of me. Even if I felt like it was ugly or scary, it didn't feel unhealthy. So I just kept going. At times like that, you don't get to choose behaviors. I'm really glad I wasn't going for anger. I was worried that I might relapse, pick up some particular drug or something. I lost a few important people in my life and I had been like this before, so I was a bit worried. When I started making music, I thought, 'This is the way. This is the beginning of me starting to be normal again. Maybe it is tacky, but I'm doing it now, and it's helping, so it doesn't really matter.' 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Meg Donnelly And Milo Manheim Talk ‘Zombies 4' And Beyond
Meg Donnelly And Milo Manheim Talk ‘Zombies 4' And Beyond

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

Meg Donnelly And Milo Manheim Talk ‘Zombies 4' And Beyond

ZOMBIES 4: DAWN OF THE VAMPIRES - (Disney/Matt Klitscher) MILO MANHEIM, MEG DONNELLY In the earlier Zombies installments, fans of the hit Disney franchise got to behold zombies, werewolves, and aliens in all their spooky, sci-fi glory paired with incomparable music and dance numbers. Incorporating vampires and their rivals, the "Daywalkers", into the mix for Zombies 4: Dawn of the Vampires felt like a natural progression. The fourth film, which premieres July 10 on the Disney Channel and the next day on Disney+, welcomes in singer and actress Freya Skye as the Daywalker 'Nova' and Villains of Valley View star Malachi Barton as 'Victor' the vampire. The pair gave memorable performances as their characters found themselves in a Romeo and Juliet tale with a vampire twist. According to the young actors, they were able to establish chemistry before arriving on set in New Zealand to shoot the movie. 'We had group FaceTimes and stuff like that before we started and I feel like the connection literally started from the beginning,' Barton said. "It was from this room that we're in right now is when I first met Freya and where we first met each other and I knew she was Nova and I hope she knew I was Victor, but we started a connection on FaceTime. I remember DMing Freya. Did I DM you? 'No, yeah, I DMed Freya and then I DMed MK (Mekonnen Knife) and all the whole other cast. And I was like, 'Hey guys, we're making a movie together.' And then we made a group chat, you know, started the connection. And then it felt like we were already best friends by the time we got to New Zealand.' 'I mean there wasn't a ton of time, I guess, in between kind of finding out we were all doing the movie together and being on set," Skye recalled. "So I feel like we're really lucky that it all just came so naturally. And I feel like we very naturally built a friendship and built that chemistry, which resonated on screen too. So yeah, it all came really naturally.' As the franchise's storyline progresses in part 4, Zombies stars Meg Donnelly and Milo Manheim, whose powerhouse performances as 'Addison' and 'Zed' made them the undeniable heart and soul of the franchise in the first three movies, take on a secondary role in the fourth installment. Meg Donnelly, Malachi Barton, Freya Skye, Milo Manheim at the Disney 2025 Upfront Red Carpet held at ... More North Javits Center on May 13, 2025 in New York, New York. (Photo by Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images) Donnelly and Manheim served as executive producers for the first time on Dawn of the Vampires. It seems their involvement with the franchise moving forward may be more behind the camera, making decisions that serve the fans and the young onscreen performers. 'I don't really know how I'm thinking about it other than we're welcoming this new family in, and they're definitely taking on a role that we have been in for the whole Zombies franchise,' Manheim said after I asked if this would be it for him and Donnelly with the franchise. "But, you know, I know we're definitely going to be involved with further Zombies movies, at least behind the camera. 'We'll see if it makes sense for the story, for us to be back or not. But I could not be happier that we're passing the torch to this group of kids. "They're incredible and they embody everything Zombies stands for. So I wish I could give you a more concrete answer, but the answer is the universe will let us know.' Meg echoed Milo's thoughts on the duo's Zombies future. 'I think if, hopefully, and when there's another Zombies movie, I think, regardless of if we're in it or not, I think executive producing this time around was so fulfilling. And I would love to even step into that more on the next one, if they would have us,' she added. 'So I think that really excites me about (the future) is being even more involved than we were. And we were super involved in Zombies 4. But yeah, I think kind of the same thing. Let the universe decide.' 'We spent so much time just with the producers on Zombies 4, the only time we weren't with them was when we were in costume and character shooting these things," Manheim said. "But I think if we were to do another one and be less a part of it in front of the camera, we would just be able to have more time figuring out universe building, world building, if you will.' Being co-producers on Zombies 3 opened the two actors up to a new level of involvement and input on a project. 'I think we actually had so much say and our changes really made it in the movie, which was really cool,' Donnelly stated. 'And then now being executive producers, I feel like we were now involved in the casting decision and the wardrobe and some of the dance numbers, like how they're filmed and even like order of scene filming. "We really got to be involved even more so and so it was really an honor because we've been with this (franchise) for almost 10 years now and I think just being able to be behind the scenes like we always are talking about creative ideas, but to actually do them was just really cool. And it's a very unique position that is very rare. So I'm really grateful that we are one of the rarities in that sense.' A decade ago, Meg and Milo were just two hopefuls among a plethora of young performers hoping to get a shot at starring in a new Disney project. 'Our audition process was wild,' Donnelly recalled. "We had a lot of individual auditions where we just auditioned alone. And then we had chemistry reads where there was a bunch of boys going out for Zed, a bunch of girls going out for Addison, and we were all mix matching and reading the scenes, and even singing together. LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 25: Actors Meg Donnelly (L) and Milo Manheim attend a soundtrack ... More signing for Disney Channel's "Zombies" at Barnes & Noble at The Grove on February 25, 2018 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by) "And they just do that to find who has the best chemistry, what looks the best on screen. We weren't actually paired up with each other at first. But we were talking a lot, even though we should have been talking to the other people we were paired up with. And we ended up reading together and it kind of worked from there. And we did an impromptu duet to Love Is an Open Door (from Frozen)." 'We did, they wanted us to sing together. So we were like, give us like five minutes. And then we went outside and we figured out Love is an Open Door and then we went in there,' Manheim remembered. After the gauntlet of an audition for the first film, Meg and Milo have become household names for their young fans. They've also succeeding in inspiring upcoming generations of performers. So what advice do they have? 'I would say, I mean, it sounds kind of cliche, but just bear with me. Do the things that you love to do. I mean, this goes within our industry and outside of it,' Manheim said. 'I think it's very easy for us to try to do the things that we feel are expected of us. You know, like your family does this thing, so you should do that thing, too. I think really find what you love, what excites you and then you'll be a lot better at that thing because you'll be super interested in it. You're very passionate about it, so you take that extra step to learn a little bit about it. So I'd say just seriously follow your passion follow anything that excites you.' 'And stay in theater!' Donnelly added.

Coronation Street star Michelle Keegan takes trip to Cotswolds
Coronation Street star Michelle Keegan takes trip to Cotswolds

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Coronation Street star Michelle Keegan takes trip to Cotswolds

Brassic and Coronation Street star Michelle Keegan has been spotted in the Cotswolds. The actress first appeared on the ITV soap opera back in 2008 as Tina McIntyre, going on to play the iconic role for six years, leaving in 2014. After leaving Weatherfield, she went on to star in the BBC military drama Our Girl from 2016 to 2020. READ MORE: Oxford's Florence Pugh named favourite to be next James Bond girl Ms Keegan has also starred in all six seasons of Sky Max comedy Brassic from 2019 onwards as Erin Croft, with a seventh on the way. Taking a break from acting, the celebrity has taken a trip to the Cotswolds with an early summer holiday in the countryside. Posting on Instagram, Ms Keegan shared several snaps from her vacation including pushing a pram in the sunshine. READ MORE: Fan favourite Clarkson's Farm star announces new venture Our Summer Sale is LIVE! Get 6 months of trusted local news for just £6! 🌞🗞️ Full details here 👇 — Oxford Mail (@TheOxfordMail) July 2, 2025 She shares a four-month-old daughter, Palma, with her husband and former TOWIE star, Mark Wright. The 38-year-old also shared a snap of her petting one of the local horses, as well as visiting farmers' markets and eating out at restaurants. Mr Wright wasn't in the photographs, suggesting the trip was a mother-daughter venture only. READ MORE: Oxford University student Emma Watson tipped to be next Bond girl Help support trusted local news Sign up for a digital subscription now: As a digital subscriber you will get: Unlimited access to the Oxford Mail website Advert-light access Reader rewards Full access to our app The actress, originally from Stockport near Manchester, captioned her Instagram post: "Summer in the Cotswolds." One spot which was named was Bourton-on-the-Water, while one commenter asked if she visited Jeremy Clarkson's Diddly Squat Farm in Chadlington. Ms Keegan responded: "No, but definitely next time."

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