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Wayne Carey roasted by ex-fiancee Kate Neilson in mocking video reenacting alleged toilet tryst

Wayne Carey roasted by ex-fiancee Kate Neilson in mocking video reenacting alleged toilet tryst

7NEWS8 hours ago
Wayne Carey's ex-fiancee Kate Neilson has mocked the controversial AFL champion with a reenactment of the viral video that he denies was the aftermath of a toilet tryst.
In the video that began circulating last week, Carey was filmed putting his phone to ear as he emerged from the restrooms of a Melbourne bar just moments after a woman walked out.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Wayne Carey mocked by ex-fiancee in wake of viral video.
Both Carey and the woman in the video, marketing executive Kate Aston, have slammed the people behind the camera and the sexual presumptions they triggered — suggestions the pair have both emphatically denied to be true.
But that hasn't stopped Neilson, who had a rocky four-year relationship with Carey during the late 2000s, from poking fun at the man she was once engaged to marry.
The Australian actress and model posted a video of herself looking deliberately sheepish as she came out of a toilet, moments before her partner emerges from the same door and pretends to take a phone call.
The video was posted with a duck emoji in the bottom right corner. One of Carey's nicknames is 'Duck'.
It is also scored by the audio of Coldplay frontman Chris Martin's reaction to the viral cheating scandal that his band inadvertently uncovered earlier this week.
Aston says her life has been suddenly turned 'upside down' and her 'suffering over recent days has been colossal'.
Melbourne marketing executive Kate Astin is taking legal action after being filmed leaving a bathroom, sparking a scandal involving former AFL player Wayne Carey.
She has called the video a 'deliberate act of bullying' and says she will now take legal action against the people who filmed it and made it public.
In the video, an unseen woman can be heard saying 'she looks embarrassed' before someone else says 'what's he doing in there?'.
The relationship between Carey and Neilson is most infamous for an incident in the US in 2007 when Neilson suffered a bleeding lip after it was allegedly hit with glass.
Last November, she expressed her public disgust after Carey downplayed both the incident and their relationship.
Carey said on a podcast last year that it was 'an incident with a girl that I was seeing on and off, I wouldn't call her a girlfriend'.
'Wayne's story about the glassing in Miami has again changed from when he did the Andrew Denton story (in 2008) saying he didn't mean to break the glass on my face, but now he is saying he threw the glass on the ground,'' Neilson fired back with last November.
'He was locked up in jail for a reason. Not because he poured wine on my face. I was bleeding profusely and the FBI took photos, which I have.
'So, to say I was hardly a girlfriend is insulting when I lived with him for years and he flew to Tasmania and met my family, wrote about my dad in his autobiography and I was engaged to him.
'I'm extremely insulted by the downplay of all of this.'
Carey has four children, two of which he shares with his current partner, Jessica Paulke.
Wayne Carey says he will take legal action against the people who filmed him in this video.
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Music has helped Adam Thompson navigate life's high and lows since his world was turned upside down with the death of his mother to cancer when he was 13. Almost 50 years later, the Chocolate Starfish frontman and his bandmates are rocking audiences around Australia on their Bat Out Of Hell tribute to the 1977 Meat Loaf album that got him through his darkest days. In many ways, Thompson says, he's been preparing for the Bat Out Of Hell shows since the album soundtracked his grief and hope as a teen. "I remember jumping off the corner of the couch pretending it was a stage when I played the album and practising, practising," he tells AAP. "It's the dynamics and the complexity - the operatic and the theatrical part of it definitely appealed to me." Composed by the late Jim Steinman, with gloriously melodramatic vocals by Meat Loaf, Bat Out Of Hell remains the highest-selling album in Australian music history (1.7 million copies), trumping John Farnham's Whispering Jack. 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Formed in 1992 and renowned for singalong singles Mountain, All Over Me and a cover of You're So Vain, Chocolate Starfish have been rocking a new confidence since Thompson opened up about the mental health challenges he faced after his mum passed. "I love the vulnerability of being on stage now, being truly vulnerable," he says. "The audience loves being part of a wow factor show but the narrative in between the stories and links are very real and they come with years of experience. "If I look at a song like For Crying Out Loud (from Bat Out Of Hell) - it is some of the most beautiful poetry. "They're words I just adore singing because they're very from the heart and that's how I try and live my life." Thompson says opening up has strengthened the shared empathy forged across 30 years between band and fans. Crowds are already on their side when they take the stage these days. No need to win them over. "They're not standing back, looking and waiting," he says. "They can feel it because your struggles are their struggles and they can feel the moments just as powerfully." The band will take a night off from the Bat Out Of Hell tour - which visits Sydney, Thirroul, Bendigo, Brisbane, Cairns and Adelaide before ending in Perth on August 30 - for a return performance at the Mundi Mundi Bash near Broken Hill. Thompson says regional Australia and Chocolate Starfish are dear old friends. "If you think about the year we came out, that was also the birth of grunge, so it was cool to be introverted," he says. "It was cool to wear flannels and not communicate, whereas I'm a larger-than-life, theatrical guy who was showing outwards, not inwards, and the band and the songs were like that too. "The regional areas embraced us. When we revisit some of these areas now, it is like a homecoming." And who knows - maybe home to a few flamboyant teenagers jumping off couches, dreaming big as they sing along to some great Australian songwriting. Music has helped Adam Thompson navigate life's high and lows since his world was turned upside down with the death of his mother to cancer when he was 13. Almost 50 years later, the Chocolate Starfish frontman and his bandmates are rocking audiences around Australia on their Bat Out Of Hell tribute to the 1977 Meat Loaf album that got him through his darkest days. In many ways, Thompson says, he's been preparing for the Bat Out Of Hell shows since the album soundtracked his grief and hope as a teen. "I remember jumping off the corner of the couch pretending it was a stage when I played the album and practising, practising," he tells AAP. "It's the dynamics and the complexity - the operatic and the theatrical part of it definitely appealed to me." Composed by the late Jim Steinman, with gloriously melodramatic vocals by Meat Loaf, Bat Out Of Hell remains the highest-selling album in Australian music history (1.7 million copies), trumping John Farnham's Whispering Jack. "The year it came out, I was just turned 14 and mum died that year from cancer and I'm just in the throes of puberty and trying to work out what it's all about," Thompson says. "The songs gave me promise, gave me a voice - even if it was just to express it to myself in my bedroom. I could get it out." Heavily influenced by teenage angst, the magnum opus was loaded with hits - from You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth to Two Out of Three Ain't Bad, Bat Out of Hell and Paradise by the Dashboard Light. "I dreamt about singing those songs," Thompson says. "I dreamt about meeting Meat Loaf and literally years later, I was backstage with him for his 50th birthday. "He drew everyone into a big circle and sang Happy Birthday. And he's got his arm around me and I've got my arm around him. "You can't orchestrate that unless you're a 14-year-old boy putting it out to the universe all those years ago that a moment like that should happen." Formed in 1992 and renowned for singalong singles Mountain, All Over Me and a cover of You're So Vain, Chocolate Starfish have been rocking a new confidence since Thompson opened up about the mental health challenges he faced after his mum passed. "I love the vulnerability of being on stage now, being truly vulnerable," he says. "The audience loves being part of a wow factor show but the narrative in between the stories and links are very real and they come with years of experience. "If I look at a song like For Crying Out Loud (from Bat Out Of Hell) - it is some of the most beautiful poetry. "They're words I just adore singing because they're very from the heart and that's how I try and live my life." Thompson says opening up has strengthened the shared empathy forged across 30 years between band and fans. Crowds are already on their side when they take the stage these days. No need to win them over. "They're not standing back, looking and waiting," he says. "They can feel it because your struggles are their struggles and they can feel the moments just as powerfully." The band will take a night off from the Bat Out Of Hell tour - which visits Sydney, Thirroul, Bendigo, Brisbane, Cairns and Adelaide before ending in Perth on August 30 - for a return performance at the Mundi Mundi Bash near Broken Hill. Thompson says regional Australia and Chocolate Starfish are dear old friends. "If you think about the year we came out, that was also the birth of grunge, so it was cool to be introverted," he says. "It was cool to wear flannels and not communicate, whereas I'm a larger-than-life, theatrical guy who was showing outwards, not inwards, and the band and the songs were like that too. "The regional areas embraced us. When we revisit some of these areas now, it is like a homecoming." And who knows - maybe home to a few flamboyant teenagers jumping off couches, dreaming big as they sing along to some great Australian songwriting. Music has helped Adam Thompson navigate life's high and lows since his world was turned upside down with the death of his mother to cancer when he was 13. Almost 50 years later, the Chocolate Starfish frontman and his bandmates are rocking audiences around Australia on their Bat Out Of Hell tribute to the 1977 Meat Loaf album that got him through his darkest days. In many ways, Thompson says, he's been preparing for the Bat Out Of Hell shows since the album soundtracked his grief and hope as a teen. "I remember jumping off the corner of the couch pretending it was a stage when I played the album and practising, practising," he tells AAP. "It's the dynamics and the complexity - the operatic and the theatrical part of it definitely appealed to me." Composed by the late Jim Steinman, with gloriously melodramatic vocals by Meat Loaf, Bat Out Of Hell remains the highest-selling album in Australian music history (1.7 million copies), trumping John Farnham's Whispering Jack. "The year it came out, I was just turned 14 and mum died that year from cancer and I'm just in the throes of puberty and trying to work out what it's all about," Thompson says. "The songs gave me promise, gave me a voice - even if it was just to express it to myself in my bedroom. I could get it out." Heavily influenced by teenage angst, the magnum opus was loaded with hits - from You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth to Two Out of Three Ain't Bad, Bat Out of Hell and Paradise by the Dashboard Light. "I dreamt about singing those songs," Thompson says. "I dreamt about meeting Meat Loaf and literally years later, I was backstage with him for his 50th birthday. "He drew everyone into a big circle and sang Happy Birthday. And he's got his arm around me and I've got my arm around him. "You can't orchestrate that unless you're a 14-year-old boy putting it out to the universe all those years ago that a moment like that should happen." Formed in 1992 and renowned for singalong singles Mountain, All Over Me and a cover of You're So Vain, Chocolate Starfish have been rocking a new confidence since Thompson opened up about the mental health challenges he faced after his mum passed. "I love the vulnerability of being on stage now, being truly vulnerable," he says. "The audience loves being part of a wow factor show but the narrative in between the stories and links are very real and they come with years of experience. "If I look at a song like For Crying Out Loud (from Bat Out Of Hell) - it is some of the most beautiful poetry. "They're words I just adore singing because they're very from the heart and that's how I try and live my life." Thompson says opening up has strengthened the shared empathy forged across 30 years between band and fans. Crowds are already on their side when they take the stage these days. No need to win them over. "They're not standing back, looking and waiting," he says. "They can feel it because your struggles are their struggles and they can feel the moments just as powerfully." The band will take a night off from the Bat Out Of Hell tour - which visits Sydney, Thirroul, Bendigo, Brisbane, Cairns and Adelaide before ending in Perth on August 30 - for a return performance at the Mundi Mundi Bash near Broken Hill. Thompson says regional Australia and Chocolate Starfish are dear old friends. "If you think about the year we came out, that was also the birth of grunge, so it was cool to be introverted," he says. "It was cool to wear flannels and not communicate, whereas I'm a larger-than-life, theatrical guy who was showing outwards, not inwards, and the band and the songs were like that too. "The regional areas embraced us. When we revisit some of these areas now, it is like a homecoming." And who knows - maybe home to a few flamboyant teenagers jumping off couches, dreaming big as they sing along to some great Australian songwriting.

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