logo
Jamie Redknapp joins his stunning wife Frieda as well as chic Binky Felstead and Alex Jones as they led the celebrities at day six of Wimbledon

Jamie Redknapp joins his stunning wife Frieda as well as chic Binky Felstead and Alex Jones as they led the celebrities at day six of Wimbledon

Daily Mail​19 hours ago
was joined by his stunning wife Frieda as they attended day six of Wimbledon at The All England Lawn Tennis Club on Saturday.
The couple led the celebrity arrivals for the Tennis Championships with Binky Felstead and Alex Jones also in attendance.
Saturday's tennis action will see Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner as men's headliners at the All England Club, while Iga Swiatek, Mirra Andreeva and Barbora Krejcikova will play on the women's side.
Jamie looks smart in a clean-cut navy blue suit with a white shirt while Frieda wore a co-ordinating collared midi dress.
Binky showed off her chic sense of style in a yellow two-piece set consisting of a tailored waistcoat and high waisted shorts.
The former Made In Chelsea star teamed her outfit with a matching pair of mules and carried a woven clutch bag.
Alex wore an elegant polka dot dress that featured a highneck and semi-sheer tiered skirt.
Actor Glen Powell opted for a chequered beige suit which he teamed with a white shirt and brown loafers.
The presenter topped off her look with a pair of strappy heels and added a brown leather crossbody handbag.
Saturday will see Djokovic take on Miomir Kecmanovic in the prime-time slot after Sinner has played Pedro Martinez.
For the women, Swiatek will play Danielle Collins, while Krejcikova prepares to take on Emma Navarro.
Earlier this year, former footballer and Sky soccer pundit Jamie was banned from driving for twelve months today for clocking-up multiple speeding offences.
It was the ex-Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool FC star's second driving ban for speeding, meaning he was disqualified for twice the usual length of time.
The former England international, who lives in a six-bedroom £10.5m house in Kensington, did not appear at Bexley Magistrates Court.
He pleaded guilty in advance of the hearing and declared his income to the court as £9,230 per week.
Redknapp pleaded guilty to exceeding the 20mph limit on June 26, last year on the A219 Putney Hill, near the junction of Westleigh Avenue, Putney, where a camera snapped him doing 26mph.
He also admitted exceeding the 50mph limit on November 2, last year on the M4 near Burghfield, Reading, where he was caught driving at 58mph.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Add to playlist: ddwy's blissed-out downtempo and the week's best new tracks
Add to playlist: ddwy's blissed-out downtempo and the week's best new tracks

The Guardian

time18 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Add to playlist: ddwy's blissed-out downtempo and the week's best new tracks

From Greater LondonRecommended if you like The Starseeds, Sun Electric, the Orb Up next Beaming Backwards out now on Test Pressing Recordings Welding dubbed-out instrumentals with dreamy vocals and cosmic flourishes, ddwy's music captures the spirit of a 90s Ibiza chillout set. In fact, their last label joked that their tracks were 'perfect for Balearic DJs'. But the project actually has its roots far away from the flurry of the white isle: many of the songs were made from a kitchen table in a Greater London suburb where the duo are based. Made up of wife and husband Naomi Pieris and Ronan MT (ddwy means 'two' in Welsh), the project was born in 2020 from Covid-era home experiments. Their tracks conserve that intimacy: layered around guitars, percussion and washes of synths, Pieris's vocals are soft and half-murmured, while field recordings are drawn from visits to her native Sri Lanka and voicemails from relatives. Some of their material has an almost ambient quality – spacious, drumless – but other parts adopt more of a club sensibility, drawing on progressive and deep house. In the years since those early lockdown jams, the pair have gone on to release a small handful of records which they perform live at clubs and beachside festivals across Europe, as well as dimly lit DIY venues closer to home. On their new EP Beaming Backwards, ddwy continue to explore these (interlocking, rather than clashing) sides. Alongside the pulsing late-night rollers (Beaming Backwards, Peak Smile), there's a blissed-out downtempo moment (Stars, Stars), and a gorgeous take on a Sri Lankan lullaby, complete with piano and strings (Heuldro'r Haf – Welsh for 'summer solstice'). It's the perfect soundtrack for this time of year, when the days are still long and the nights are still warm: sweet, but a bit melancholy too. Safi Bugel Mammo – TractionOne of six universe-sharpening tracks on the Dutch producer's stunning new album, this has the ethereal throb of dub techno's greats, but with counter-rhythms inveigling themselves from the edges. ​George Riley – SlowAfter recent appearances on tracks from Logic1000, HiTech and Sherelle, one of UK dance's best vocalists keeps the werk rate high with this exquisite house track, Riley holding back from a too-intoxicating romance. Oasis – Acquiesce (Unplugged)As the band play their first reunion tour date tonight in Cardiff – follow the Guardian's live blog later! – Noel Gallagher has brilliantly remixed a version of their classic B-side, making it more insistent and grooving. Ethel Cain – Fuck Me EyesNot what a Yorkshire person says when it's a bit bright out, but rather pulp fiction done as a synthpop power ballad, about a wayward young woman who 'goes to church straight from the clubs'. ​John Glacier – Fly With MeComing after an excellent Glastonbury set, and rolling over a distorted head-nodding beat, the British rapper casts herself as a supernaturally powerful figure transcending earthly bonds thanks to her own skill. Perfect 100 – SundayThe debut single from this solo​ grunge-pop project by Brooklyn's Andrew Madore is a ripper, with distorted guitar ​reminiscent of Yo La Tengo or Dinosaur Jr, and​ harmonised vocals adding a dash of vanilla sweetness. Naemi – Hutchison​Closing out their gorgeous new dream-pop album Breathless, Shorn, this track features acoustic guitar and bass motifs repeating around bird-chirrups and reverb: one for post-picnic snoozing this summer. Ben Beaumont-Thomas Subscribe to the Guardian's rolling Add to Playlist selections on Spotify.

Welcome to Crack Alley: Desperate locals call high street a 'no-go zone' with 'more tents than Glastonbury' as homeless drug addicts leave them terrified
Welcome to Crack Alley: Desperate locals call high street a 'no-go zone' with 'more tents than Glastonbury' as homeless drug addicts leave them terrified

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Welcome to Crack Alley: Desperate locals call high street a 'no-go zone' with 'more tents than Glastonbury' as homeless drug addicts leave them terrified

It was once the the wool capital of the world and the richest UK city outside London. Now, parts of Bradford have become Britain's latest no-go zone, where drug-fuelled chaos and violence have left locals scared to walk the streets and businesses are going to the wall. Fed-up traders and shoppers say parts of the once-thriving city centre are overrun by rough sleepers camped out in tents, using the street as their personal drug den and toilet. One of the worst-hit spots is Rawson Square, where heroin and crack cocaine are smoked openly and fights break out daily. Tattoo shop, The Crow & Cartridge, said their staff face aggressive behaviour, public vomiting and broad daylight drug use outside their door. Manager Philippa Leach, 32, said: 'We see them smoking drugs, injecting themselves. Drinking, fighting, urinating. You name it, we've seen it. 'There are ambulances called quite often because they're passed out on whatever they're on. 'There's up to 20 or 30 of them there at a time, just doing what they like and seemingly with very little consequence. 'We've got female staff members who are quite young and they don't want to go outside on their own. 'It is really intimidating and it's round-the-clock. It's when you come to work, it's when you leave work. 'It's hurt our trade because people just don't want to walk up here because they don't feel safe'. Trainee tattooist Jasmin Stevens, 21, added: 'I'm usually the second person here in the morning and I hate waiting outside. 'You get accosted by the crackheads and it's really intimidating.' Signs of drug abuse were everywhere when MailOnline visited the square this week. Outside a former Wilko store, two men were huddled in a fire exit clearly dealing drugs with little concern of who was watching. Another man kept lookout as addicts queued up for their next fix. Nearby, a used crack pipe was obvious among the littered cans of high-strength lager and pool of vomit on the pavement. And a woman could be seen paying for pills with pound coins as children walked by. Subhan Abnan, 21, who runs barbers Hairology, said Bradford council's efforts to move on the rough sleepers were not working. He said: 'The council's been coming and taking the tents, but the next morning there's five or six more. 'By the evening, they're all back again. It's full of tents - it's like Glastonbury but without the fun. 'There'll be 30, 40 of them gathered here. It's like their community centre. People avoid the area. They see it and just keep walking. 'We've had one of them screaming, "I'm going to burn the shops down." Why should we have to hear that? We're just trying to run a business. 'It's affecting our business. People are scared to come down here. We've actually cleaned up the litter ourselves, but by the next day, it's worse. It feels pointless. 'You don't even feel safe leaving the shop in the evening. We literally stay inside because we don't want to get caught up in something. 'We promote our business on social media, but new customers always ask: "What's going on outside? Who are they?' How do you even explain it?" 'You see young girls, 24 or 25, sat on benches surrounded by men touching them up, doing all sorts. Who wants to see that? Especially when you're bringing kids around here.' The chaos, locals say, was made worse by a recent city centre revamp which displaced many rough sleepers and addicts - pushing them into the northern area of the city centre. A workman in a high-vis jacket, who recalls Bradford's status as Britain's 2025 City of Culture, said: 'Twenty years ago, it was beautiful around here. Now look at it. 'City of Culture? It's shocking.' Shooing off a beggar, Sheryn Leech, 36, told how she had been scalded when a drug-addled man turned violent when she refused to add extra food to his order at her chip shop in the city. She said: 'He ordered a scallop but then demanded that I give him the chips for free. 'When I said no, he threw the scallop at me, burning my wrist. It was piping hot with oil. This was six weeks ago and it's still healing. 'I've been threatened with a knives so crackheads can get food for free. I've come home with bruises. I've had a tub of salt thrown at my eyes. I've had all sorts and I'm fed up with it.' 'It really is disgusting. The businesses are dying. Nobody's coming down here anymore. 'I only come to this part of town because I've got work. It's just become a complete no-go zone.' Sheryn's mother-in-law, Marilyn Atkinson, 52, added: 'I feel so anxious when Sheryn is coming home from work. I panic until I know she's safe. 'It's scary coming to town. You're scared of getting robbed.' 'Look at me - I'm hiding my bracelets because you've got junkies just walking about like zombies. 'I can't run if someone tries to rip my bracelet off. 'I've grown up in Bradford. I remember when it was safe. Now, I fear for my kids coming to town.' Jamie Telford, 36 pointed to a two-year 'pocket park' built with Lottery funding opposite his Northgate Bistro coffee shop. He said: 'When they were redeveloping it, all the druggies and drinkers had to move on. 'As soon as it was built, they were back. Now they've got a nice new place to loiter at the expense of everyone else. 'There's a camera there that goes straight to the police, but no one ever seems to do anything. 'Don't get me wrong, the homeless need help. Everyone needs help, but when they're up here, they are just permitted to do what they want. 'Which isn't helping anyone and certainly not them.' West Yorkshire Police said it was 'committed to making Bradford city centre a safe and vibrant place to live and work.' Chief Inspector Nick Haigh insisted: 'Those who are committing offences will be dealt with appropriately.' A spokesperson for Bradford Council said 16 people were reviewed for causing 'serious nuisance' in 2024. This led to interventions such as acceptable behaviour contracts and final warnings. Seven of the most serious offenders received criminal behaviour orders from the courts. A council spokesperson added: 'We work very hard to tackle anti-social behaviour by collaborating with police, partners, and stakeholders to address issues while supporting individuals to make positive changes. 'These challenges are common to big cities and Bradford is no different in that regard. 'We are aware of the issues in Rawson Square and are visiting the site daily to progress case files against ASB perpetrators and offer relevant support.'

Ed Sheeran teams up with school pals AND 00s rock legend for epic performance
Ed Sheeran teams up with school pals AND 00s rock legend for epic performance

The Sun

time20 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Ed Sheeran teams up with school pals AND 00s rock legend for epic performance

ED Sheeran marked one of his "favourite moments ever on stage" as he teamed up with his old band and a top Noughties fan-favourite. The A Team hitmaker, 34, took to Instagram to reveal the surprise collaboration as he gushed "what a night." 7 7 Chart star Ed teamed up with his old high school band and Wheatus frontman Brendan B Brown to perform a sizzling version of the American band's biggest hit for fans. In a sweet video, Ed showcased his childhood band, which he was part of aged 12. He said: "We used to cover Teenage Dirtbag and we re-formed after 20 years for our mates wedding. "Then I was like wouldn't it be cool to do at a big gig. "So I emailed Brendan and here we are." The clip showed the bunch rehearsing in an empty stadium before they were met with huge cheers later on. In his video caption, Ed wrote: "One of my fav moments ever on stage, thank you Brendan. What a night x" Wheatus' official Instagram page then replied and put: "BEST DAY EVER!!!!" One fan then gushed: "This was the coolest guest act on stage ever!" Another posted: "No flipping way?!" Incredible moment Olivia Rodrigo brings out Ed Sheeran at huge sold out BST gig ahead of Glastonbury One then confessed: "I didn't even know I needed this until this moment. So good." FORWARD PLANNING While Ed is clearly enjoying living in the present, The Sun reported in May how he was planning records to be released for his death. The Shape Of You singer said he has been gathering songs made throughout his life for a record called Eject. Speaking to Jimmy Fallon on TV in the US, Ed said: 'I want to make an album for all of my life that comes out the day I die called Eject. "I am not joking. 'Imagine when Paul McCartney passes there's a record with a song he made at 16, a song at 20, at 30. Fascinating.' Ed joked: 'People will be like, 'Still beyond the grave he f***s with us." 7 7 7 7

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