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Truth behind Cotswolds 'poshfluencer' Lydia Millen: Her VERY different background and the unearthed Daily Mail interview she gave with her husband that she'd perhaps rather forget...

Truth behind Cotswolds 'poshfluencer' Lydia Millen: Her VERY different background and the unearthed Daily Mail interview she gave with her husband that she'd perhaps rather forget...

Daily Mail​2 days ago
With a different pair of Hunter wellies for every day of the week, an array of Barbour jackets, her own thoroughbred pony and a vast collection of designer bags, Lydia Millen embodies what many would consider the epitome of very British luxury.
Her Instagram page is full of carefully curated photos featuring wildflower meadows and beach holidays and videos talking through her designer outfits in perfectly clipped vowels. Recent snaps show her driving down country roads in Land Rovers and on days out to Ascot and .
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From cuffing season to orbiting and yassify, the A to (Generation) Z of modern dating terms – how many do you know?
From cuffing season to orbiting and yassify, the A to (Generation) Z of modern dating terms – how many do you know?

The Sun

time11 minutes ago

  • The Sun

From cuffing season to orbiting and yassify, the A to (Generation) Z of modern dating terms – how many do you know?

SHAKESPEARE said that 'the course of true love never did run smooth' – and that was before online dating. Finding your perfect match has its challenges, and Gen Z boasts an ever-evolving glossary of terms to describe their romantic lives. To help you keep up, read our A-Z of modern dating lingo and know your DINKs from your kittenfishers. A – Affordating: Low-cost dates, like a picnic in the park or a romantic stroll, if you can't afford fancy flowers and expensive meals. B – Benching: Keeping a potential partner on the back burner while you pursue others. C – Cuffing season: Spanning from October to just after Valentine's Day, this is the time it's deemed best to commit to a relationship. D – DINK: Both working and you've got no kids? Lucky you — you're a DINK. The acronym stands for 'dual income, no kids'. E – Ethical non-monogamy: It's not cheating if you talk about it first — or so say believers in this dating style, where couples agree to have other partners. F – FLR: A 'female led relationship' sees traditional gender roles flipped. Women make the majority of the decisions or earn the most money. It should hardly be worthy of comment in 2025! G – Green flag: The opposite of red flag, this term is used by Gen Z for positive qualities in a romantic partner, such as being a good listener, sharing interests or getting on with your friends. H – Hard launch: Not just for celebs, this is where one or both partners confirm the relationship on social media with pics or a status change. I – Ick: Olivia Attwood made the term popular on the 2017 series of Love Island. Getting the ick involves developing a sharp revulsion towards a potential or current partner. The things i've learned as a gen-z traveller J – Jekylling: When someone shows you their 'best self' at first, but later reveals a much darker or toxic side. Named after alter-egos Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. K – Kittenfishing: If catfishing is creating a completely fake online ID, then kittenfishing is its less extreme cousin. It involves, for example, using old photos or exaggerating qualities. L – Love bombing: Showering a potential partner with excessive affection and gifts early in a relationship. M – Micro-cheating: Any blurred-line interactions which could be seen as cheating, such as private messaging someone of the opposite sex without your partner knowing or even liking their Insta snaps. N – Negging: Using insulting or negative comments about someone. O – Orbiting: Being ghosted means never hearing from someone again — but an 'orbiter' is an ex who lurks, watching your social media. P – Pocketing: When a date avoids introducing you to friends and family or posting about you on social media, keeping you 'in their pocket'. Q – Quiet quitting: The act of emotionally disengaging from a relationship without actually ending it. R – Rizz: Shorthand for the word charisma, rizz is the ability to charm and attract someone using confidence, style or good chat. S – Ship: To ship two people means you're rooting for them to be together. T – Talking stage: The period before a couple commit to a relationship, but do have some level of romantic or sexual involvement — which, confusingly, often goes beyond just talking. U – Undercover dating: Otherwise known as sneaking around, this is when you keep a relationship secret as you get to know each other. V – Vibe check: Basically a first date, and a chance to check if you click. W – Win: A successful move in dating or flirting, like scoring a kiss. X – Xennial dating: The outdated practices of Gen X and millennials. If you prefer face-to-face to WhatsApp and have never used Hinge, this term may well apply to you. Y – Yassify: To make yourself look good to impress. Z – Zombieing: When someone who ghosted you suddenly reaches out, it's like they are back from the dead — hence, zombieing. 1

Ozzy Osbourne's final resting place is nod to infamous career moment
Ozzy Osbourne's final resting place is nod to infamous career moment

Daily Mail​

time11 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ozzy Osbourne's final resting place is nod to infamous career moment

Ozzy Osbourne once said he didn't want to be remembered as the man who bit off the head of a bat, but the acclaimed musician's burial place had a cheeky nod to the infamous moment. The Black Sabbath frontman passed away on July 22 at age 76 and was laid to rest this week on the grounds of his mansion in England. That means the singer was buried just a stone's throw away from multiple bat boxes — man-made structures designed to provide shelter for bats. He had them installed in his Buckinghamshire abode in 2022 — a possible attempt to make amends years after he was slammed by animal rights activists for ripping the head off a bat with his teeth live on stage, which he later defended by saying he thought it was fake. A source close to the singer told the Daily Mail that the irony of him being laid to rest so close to the bat habitats did not go unnoticed amongst his loved ones. 'The subject of the bat boxes in the grounds has prompted some real laughter and joy — something for sure Oz would approve of,' they said. 'You cannot even make it up. He has spent decades being caught up in this drama around bats and animal rights groups — and then he is there at his final resting place in a space used to help encourage bats to thrive in the UK countryside. It has prompted quite a few laughs and funny reactions. It is like Ozzy had the last laugh.' Ozzy and his wife, Sharon Osbourne, bought the 250-acre estate, known as Welders House, in 1993, and according to the insider, it was a place they often 'escaped' to when they needed a break from fame during the height of his career. '[The mansion] had been where he and Sharon escaped from the showbiz world in the 1990s and 2000s to simply focus on family,' they explained. 'Once again it showed how despite all the amazing rock and roll success and celebrity he had, in his heart he was always a family man.' The Daily Mail has reached out to the Osbourne family for comment. Ozzy announced that he planned to move back to Welders House permanently in 2022 after years of spending most of his time living in Los Angeles. At the time, he had the home revamped, adding the bat boxes as well as a 'rehabilitation wing' following his Parkinson's disease diagnosis in 2020. Planning documents for a health and welfare exercise suite, a swimming pool, and decking were submitted to the local council in March that year. But his battle with Parkinson's and a crippling fall that exacerbated his old quad bike injury are thought to have delayed his return to the UK. Ozzy famously bit the head off a bat after a fan bizarrely hurled the animal on stage during a Black Sabbath show in January 1982. It's been debated whether or not the creature was alive at the time; Ozzy has claimed that it was and that he needed to be rushed to the hospital for a rabies shot, while audience member Mark Neal, who alleges he was the one to throw it, has insisted it was dead. Either way, Ozzy's mouth was seen filling with blood as the audience watched on in horror, and he never lived down the shocking incident. He has long insisted he initially thought the bat was a rubber toy rather than a live animal before he bit it. In a 2020 interview with the Los Angeles Daily News, Ozzy admitted, 'It's not the way I want to be remembered [but] I know I'll be the man that bit the head off the bat. That will be my epitaph. It won't be, 'Here lies Ozzy Osbourne … he did a bit of good…' It's going to be, 'The bat-biting lunatic,' which … I don't care.'

Children's literature has lost an all time great
Children's literature has lost an all time great

Telegraph

time11 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Children's literature has lost an all time great

It's not often that you meet your heroes, but I did a decade ago at a London book launch. I noticed a pleasant older man standing alone and went over to chat to him. He knew who I was and when asked, said modestly that he was an author, too. 'What's your name?' I asked, heart beginning to sink. 'Allan Ahlberg,' he said. I almost fell to my knees on the spot. Allan Ahlberg is someone whose work is known off by heart by millions of parents. Together with his first wife Janet, who illustrated his books, he created stories that have coloured the imagination, vocabulary and sensibility of three generations. The Ahlbergs were quietly revolutionary. Where today's picture books have a relentless cast of non-white, and often non gender-conforming protagonists, the Ahlbergs described life from the point of view of white working class children, with imagination, inventiveness and warmth. In an age where picture books believe all fathers are vanishingly absent and girls must be feisty. the Ahlbergs' nuclear families play together, live together and stick together. It was something that the author knew all about. Born in 1938, Ahlberg was adopted by a poor Black Country family. He grew up in a small house with a tin bath and outside privy. He was forever grateful for the love and sense of security his parents gave him. 'I am the Peepo baby,' as he put it. Too often, recent children's authors fail to see that class and poverty, not race, is the real handicap in British society. Peepo! is radical to 21st century eyes in depicting and celebrating life in an ordinary 1930s family that has a mother, a father and siblings: it is quite clearly underprivileged, with clothes drying on an airer in front of the fire and no books, if also rich in affection. The Ahlbergs turned the familiar game of I Spy into interactive stories – a child is encouraged to spot fairytale characters in Each Peach Pear Plum, with Cinderella dusting a cellar and the Three Bears encountering Tom Thumb – and made circular holes on every other the page that a child can see through. The idea of a text being permeable, previously confined to avant-garde literary fiction, took flight with best-selling books like The Jolly Postman in which characters send tiny letters to each other that a child (or parent) could take out of an envelope on each page. Ahlberg's gentle wit mixed the mundane with the fantastical. His ebullient child heroes and resourceful underdogs are incarnations of a strong moral core that has become lost or confused today. For instance, one of the better picture-books this year is Bethan Woollvin's gender-switched Robin Hood, whose girl protagonist (wearing a black bob strangely similar to that of Rachel Reeves) is justified in stealing from the Sheriff because he's stealing from the poor. The Ahlbergs had no qualms about showing children that all theft is wrong. Their Burglar Bill begins like a greedy thoughtless child. It's fun, until he nicks a lady burglar's baby by mistake, sees her in tears, and learns the error of his ways. 'I've been a bad man,' he announces remorsefully, and the lady burglar is equally regretful. Both whip off their black masks and instantly transform into honest citizens. It's hilarious – and speaks to a child's sense of justice rather than wokery. A picture book is a unique art form, whose limited vocabulary and striking pictures must withstand a thousand re-readings. With celebrities from Madonna to David Walliams making a quick buck by writing (supposedly) children's books, fewer children today get to understand the depth and brilliance of the real thing. The Ahlbergs said that 'we decided to put as much work into a picture book as Tolstoy put into War and Peace.' They did, and generations of children will not forget them.

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