logo
Revealed: The reason why England hero Lauren Hemp is clutching a Lego Disney set as she leaves Swiss hotel ahead of triumphant homecoming

Revealed: The reason why England hero Lauren Hemp is clutching a Lego Disney set as she leaves Swiss hotel ahead of triumphant homecoming

Daily Mail​7 days ago
England star Lauren Hemp was seen holding a Beauty And The Beast-themed Lego set as the Lionesses prepared to return to the UK on Monday.
After celebrating with her England team-mates long into the night following their 3-1 penalty shootout victory over Spain to win Euro 2025, Hemp, 24, was seen leaving the team hotel in Zurich, Switzerland with the giant sculpture.
The sculpture is a Lego replica of the Beast's castle from the popular Disney film, which was first released in 1991 before a live-action remake came out in 2017.
Hemp is known to be a huge fan of Lego, having previously built Star Wars character Yoda and a mini version of Barcelona 's Nou Camp stadium.
During the 2023 World Cup, she revealed her love for constructing the toys, stating: 'I've been waiting for a delivery actually, which came a few days ago so I've been really excited for that.
'I've recently done a motorbike that you've probably seen on social media that I bought on the plane because I didn't trust it to get to me in one piece without me physically holding it.
'And I'm working on this globe at the moment. So I'm going to have both hands on the plane holding this motorbike and globe all the way back to England!'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kerry Katona reveals she developed alopecia after her stressful split from ex Ryan Mahoney and admits she still struggles with hair loss
Kerry Katona reveals she developed alopecia after her stressful split from ex Ryan Mahoney and admits she still struggles with hair loss

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Kerry Katona reveals she developed alopecia after her stressful split from ex Ryan Mahoney and admits she still struggles with hair loss

Heartbroken Kerry Katona has revealed she developed alopecia during her stressful split from ex-fiance Ryan Mahoney. Kerry, 44, and personal trainer Ryan, 36, separated in November after six years together, citing a 'breach of trust'. Now, Kerry says she was left 'exhausted' by her heartache, which saw her hair fall out in clumps towards the back of her head while she performed a gruelling schedule on stage in Cheshire in a Cinderella pantomime. 'I was doing two to three shows a day, doing Christmas panto,' she told the Daily Mail of the gruelling pre-Christmas period. 'It was heartbreak, it was exhausting. I also got alopecia. It was really stressful.' Asked if her hair had started to regrow yet, the former Atomic Kitten star said: 'No, I'm still bald,' explaining she still has a bald patch where her hair has not grown back. Alopecia can be temporary or permanent, and can affect the entire body or just parts of the scalp. Kerry confirmed her hair loss was confined to the scalp, as other areas such as her eyebrows were not affected. However, she is handling the traumatic experience with typical resilience. 'It's only hair,' she said. 'It will grow back. I wear tape extensions because it all started falling out.' Showing the shortest areas, she joked: 'I look like a cross between the Tiger King and Garth from Wayne's World.' In 2021, Kerry described how her hair fell out due to the extensions she was wearing, which left her hair 'fine and wispy', though her most recent hair loss was due to stress. After her heartbreak, Kerry is back dating again, after meeting personal trainer Paolo Margaglione while filming the upcoming series of Celebs Go Dating in Ibiza earlier this year. While she and Ryan, who she credits with raising her youngest daughter DJ, are still 'good friends' and own businesses together, she said there is no chance of a reunion for the pair. 'I would never go back to him - not in a million years,' she said defiantly. 'I know my worth.' 'I don't want to slag any of my exes off. They all make you who you are for a reason,' she continued. 'But it was a slow burner. I hung on by the skin of my teeth. I was starved for conversation, emotional intelligence and emotional availability. 'I look at him like a little brother, I really do. He brought DJ up. And I can't live with resentment or regret or anger because that just makes me an unpleasant person. I want to be the best version I can be of me. 'I wake up every morning thinking: 'How lucky am I? I'm so blessed.' Kerry said she was devastated when Ryan broke her trust, explaining cryptically that 'he ended up somewhere he should have been'. But she joked that she was grateful for the 'heartbreak diet' that followed their break-up. Kerry first appeared in Celebs Go Dating in 2019, before she started dating Ryan, who she met on a dating app. Ryan proposed to mother-of-five Kerry during a family holiday to Spain in 2020. Kerry has previously been married three times, first to Brian McFadden from 2002 to 2006, who she shares daughters Molly, 23, and Lilly-Sue, 22, with. From 2007 to 2011, she was married to Mark Croft, who is father to her children Heidi, 18, and Max, 17. From 2014 to 2017 she was married to George Kay, who fathered her youngest daughter, 11-year-old Dylan-Jorge, known as DJ. George died in 2019 of a drug overdose. Viewers can see Kerry looking for love with the help of the Celebs Go Dating experts including Dr. Tara Suwinyattichaiporn next week. Kerry features alongside a star-studded cast including Christine McGuinness, 37, S Club 7's Jon Lee, 43, Love Islander Olivia Hawkins, 30, and Mark 'The Beast' Labbett, 59, from The Chase. The new series of Celebs Go Dating starts Monday, August 11, at 9pm on E4. WHAT IS ALOPECIA? Alopecia, which causes baldness, is thought to be an autoimmune disorder. The immune system - the body's defense system - turns on itself. What are the symptoms? 'Typically, one or more small bald patches, about the size of a 50p piece, appear on the scalp. The hair can start to regrow at one site, while another bald patch develops. Hair may also begin to thin all over the head,' says Marilyn Sherlock, chairman of the Institute of Trichologists. What causes it? 'For some reason, the body's immune system begins to attack its own hair follicles. Special white blood cells in the body, known as T-lymphocytes, cause the hair to stop growing,' she adds. Can worry make it worse? Stress has been shown to prolong the problem. Is it an inherited condition? There is strong evidence to suggest that alopecia, like other auto-immune diseases, runs in families. About 25 per cent of patients have a family history of the disorder. Who gets it? Alopecia areata usually affects teenagers and young adults, but it can affect people of any age. It is just as common among men as women. Is there a cure?

UK pornography taskforce to propose banning ‘barely legal' content after Channel 4 documentary airs
UK pornography taskforce to propose banning ‘barely legal' content after Channel 4 documentary airs

The Guardian

time39 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

UK pornography taskforce to propose banning ‘barely legal' content after Channel 4 documentary airs

The new pornography taskforce will propose legislation this autumn aimed at banning a type of 'barely legal' content produced by the porn star Bonnie Blue, the Guardian has learned. The proposed action by the independent pornography taskforce, launched last month by the Conservative peer Gabby Bertin, comes in response to the broadcast of the Channel 4 documentary 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story. The programme followed the performer for six months and included her claim to have had sex with 1,057 clients over the course of 12 hours. Visa and Smirnoff are among a number of businesses that have pulled online advertisements from streaming of the documentary, after reviewing the content. The film was condemned by the children's commissioner for England, Dame Rachel de Souza, for 'glamorising and normalising' extreme pornography. The documentary also includes footage of Tia Billinger, whose stage name is Bonnie Blue, in a classroom preparing to film an orgy with a group of models dressed in school uniform; the performers acknowledge that they have been selected because they look very young. Lady Bertin said she planned to lodge amendments to the crime and policing bill in the autumn to make it illegal for online platforms to host any content that could encourage child sexual abuse, including pornography filmed by adults dressed as children. 'This content is pushing at the boundaries. We will be trying to address the 'barely legal' aspect legislatively,' she said. The Online Safety Act charged the regulator Ofcom with monitoring whether pornography sites are protecting UK viewers from encountering illegal material involving child sexual abuse and extreme content, such as portrayals of rape, bestiality and necrophilia. However, other forms of harmful pornography that are regulated offline (in cinemas, for example) are not subject to similar restrictions online. This regulatory anomaly means adults role-playing as children to create pornography that appears close to child sexual abuse imagery is not prohibited online. The Channel 4 documentary only showed preparations for the classroom scene rather than the footage itself. Clips showing Bonnie Blue having sex with more than 1,000 men were pixellated, but the programme has still been widely criticised for promoting her brand and for failing to challenge adequately her assertion that her activity is harmless. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Bertin said the documentary would be on the agenda at the taskforce's next meeting. 'She has become extremely successful; she is an adult and it is consensual, so it may not be harming her, but it has potentially harmful effects on people who think that this is a normal way to behave,' she said. 'We should be asking more about the men who arrive with balaclavas on their head to have sex with her.' De Souza said: 'For years we have been fighting to protect our children from the kind of degrading, violent sex that exists freely on their social media feeds. Now this documentary risks taking us a step back by glamorising, even normalising the things young people tell me are frightening. Bonnie Blue's content showcases violence against women as entertainment and allows sexist ideas that women are 'lesser' than men to go unchecked.' Visa's advertisements were placed by a third-party agency, but the company requested that they be removed from online streaming of the Channel 4 documentary after staff viewed it and judged that the content did not align with its internal guidelines. Staff at the drinks company Diageo are assessing how a Smirnoff advertisement was cleared to appear during online transmission of the show, and have also subsequently pulled their advertising from streaming of the programme. An Ofcom spokesperson said the regulator was assessing the documentary and would decide whether to launch a formal investigation. The policing minister, Diana Johnson, said last week that she would discuss the ease with which children could access the documentary on Channel 4's website with ministerial colleagues. Channel 4 requires users to be 16 to register an account, but there is no age-verification process, so children could lie about their age. A Channel 4 spokesperson said the observational film was designed to provoke debate. 'The film looks at how Bonnie Blue has gained worldwide attention and earned millions of pounds in the last year, exploring changing attitudes to sex, success, porn and feminism in an ever-evolving online world. Director Victoria Silver puts a number of challenges to Bonnie throughout the documentary on the example she sets and how she is perceived, and the film clearly lays bare the tactics and strategies she uses, with the audience purposefully left to form their own opinions.'

Loose Women set for major cast shake-up as ITV plan to replace the entire panel for one week only
Loose Women set for major cast shake-up as ITV plan to replace the entire panel for one week only

Daily Mail​

time43 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Loose Women set for major cast shake-up as ITV plan to replace the entire panel for one week only

Loose Women fans are in for a treat this week as the show is set for a one-off 'Loose Doctors' special. The hit ITV daytime show will change up their panel this Wednesday with a different array of faces, including Dr Amir Khan, Dr Zoe Williams, Dr Hilary Jones and Dr Nighat Arif. The medics will examine the health issues that matter most to viewers, as well as explaining how we can all improve our own wellbeing. The special follows on from other one-off versions of the programme including Loose Men panels on International Men's Day. Excited about the new prospect, Dr Amir said to The Mirror: 'This is the first time four of ITV's Daytime doctors will be on the panel together to look at the health issues that affect us all. 'We'll be sharing our expert medical advice and having some very candid conversations about the things that our patients are often too embarrassed to talk about, but shouldn't be, and hopefully giving them the confidence to make the most of their appointments. 'I'm really looking forward to the episode and hope that viewers will enjoy it, as well as learning some important and potentially life saving tips too.' Meanwhile, Dr Hilary, who works closely with Lorraine Kelly on screen, said: 'I think viewers are going to love the first-ever Loose Doctors episode. 'You'll see four of ITV's Daytime doctors open up about their personal journeys whilst offering some of our tips to look after you and your family. I hope that viewers will learn a lot and be entertained at the same time as we open the Loose Doctors doors for the first time.' It comes after panelist Linda Robson shared her fears as she ' prays' for the future of the ITV programme after huge budget cuts. It was revealed back in May the show has been axed for half the year and Lorraine's runtime has been slashed by 30 minutes, as Daytime bosses announced cuts with job losses in excess of 220. According to insiders, once ITV's budget cuts come into effect in January, Loose Women will no longer have A-list guests in the studio, and the broadcast is planned to only consist of the panel debating newsworthy topics from the week. Speaking at National Reality TV Awards in London, Linda said: 'We are all rallying together. It will be very sad if we can't have guests. 'It's a shame people are losing their jobs. We're all like a family. We've been together through births, marriages, deaths. It's been very hard. Everyone's worried about the show. 'We're just trying to stay positive and hope for the best. But hopefully it's not going be as bad as it already is,' The Mirror reports. Recently Loose lady Janet Street-Porter revealed which stars are at risk from brutal cost-saving cuts by ITV - and which panelists are safe. The 78-year-old has shed light on the reality behind the looming cuts proposed by the broadcaster, which are set to impact several daytime shows. Janet appears certain that the 'older' Loose Women stars are not likely to be cut, given they appeal more directly to the show's target demographic. But she warns that newcomers, younger stars or those with less experience could be at risk. 'There are no plans to get rid of the older women despite what some people have said,' Janet said.

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