
LIZ JONES: I exist on a cold, sharp knife edge... even the thought of money or missing out triggers my PTSD
I'm in awe. If that was me, I would be catastrophising, hyperventilating: I might drown. I will have a heart attack due to the cold. Someone will steal my clothes and my phone. Why am I spending time doing this and not working? How do these women afford to go wild swimming? Do they have husbands? What?

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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Coleen Rooney looks radiant and glowing as she shares sweet family snap with husband Wayne and their sons on holiday
Coleen Rooney looked radiant and glowing in a sweet family snap with husband Wayne and their sons Klay, Kit and Cass, she shared on Instagram on Tuesday. The I'm A Celeb star, 39, was recently seen soaking up the sunshine by the beach in Portugal as Wayne enjoyed a night out with their family and friends. Sharing a look into their wholesome trip, Coleen took to social media to post the doting snap. Coleen and Wayne, 39, enjoyed some quality time with Klay, 12, Kit, nine, and Cass, seven. Her eldest son Kai, 15, was notably missing from the photo. Coleen's earnings have soared amid her huge TV projects as she looks set to become her family's 'main breadwinner '. The WAG reportedly boasts a net worth of £15million, with her hubby thought to be worth an enormous £170million thanks to his Premier League footballing days. But in the new phase of their lives, Coleen could be set to take over as the main breadwinner as her popularity soars. Amid her skyrocketing fame following her hugely successful I'm A Celeb stint, Disney announced last month a new premium access series titled The Rooneys focusing on her and Wayne's life. Thanks to her ventures, new figures for her firm, CWR 2021, up to September 2024 show the booming business already had £580,000 banked - and that was before I'm A Celeb and her Disney deal. Meanwhile former manager of Plymouth Arsenal Wayne was reportedly making £500,000, before leaving the club in December. A financial expert told The Sun: 'These earnings show that, even before Coleen signed up for I'm A Celeb, she was already bringing in more money than Wayne. 'On the back of her jungle stint, where she was incredibly popular with the viewing public, she's now likely to see her earnings soar even further - and the increased interest in Coleen after she did so well on the show is also likely to have sealed the deal on the Disney contract. 'Getting big bucks from a global streamer, plus her pay cheque from ITV, will no doubt swell the Rooneys coffers even further.' MailOnline contacted Coleen's representatives for comment at the time. Disney announced last month that a new premium access series titled The Rooneys is set to air, and filming is already underway. The ten part doc-series will delve into the footballer and WAG's lives 'like we've never seen them before'. It is set to see Coleen tackle 'new entrepreneurial endeavours' and Wayne stepping away from the football pitch to do school runs. The new show has 'unprecedented access' into their world and dives into their everyday life, including highs like holidays and celebrations as well as the lows. The 'at-home-with' format is expected to see former England footballer Wayne appear alongside his wife and their four sons.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
I can't wait to get my arms out this summer
Have you ever shapeshifted, wardrobe-wise? Transformed from one type of dresser into another? Perhaps without even realising it? It's suddenly become clear to me that I have and I honestly had no idea. I have been packing for the kind of villa holiday I haven't gone on in years, a relaxed, doing-nothing affair. In doing so — creating neat(ish) piles of options on my spare bed — I have come face to face with the fact that something has changed in the way I dress come summer. Suddenly it's all about my arms — arms that, thanks to the cumulative impact of years of pretty full-throttle yoga and very full-throttle handstand training, look different to how they used to. First I got biceps. Then I got triceps. Now, as of a few months ago, I have deltoids, by which I mean the sort that stick out in front like the fender flares on a car. I didn't plan for this but I can't pretend I am not happy about it. So behold a line-up of frocks and tops that have straps rather than sleeves, including a silk slip Serena Bute dress from a couple of summers back, which was about the time when I (for which read: my arms) really went up a notch. (The latest gathered neck iteration, in bright blue, pink or red is £295, And there's also a dress with just the one strap, Mondo Corsini's raspberry linen midi (£365, • Read more fashion advice and style inspiration from our experts I also love Jigsaw's chocolate cotton with distinctive flower appliqué (£165, while Mint Velvet's burgundy floral slip dress is another stunner (£130, and Mango's black or camel with a white-edged zigzag hem is very stealth wealth (£59.99, New Look's black gingham bodice number scores pretty points (£34.99, Sézane's button-through cream Fabiola siren points (£115, Although what I probably need to add to my arsenal now is one with no straps, such as Nobody's Child's brown Gayle (£79, This is quite the move-on for a woman who used to dress for summer as if she were in The Flame Trees of Thika, who didn't knowingly flash any flesh at all away from a pool or beach for, er, the first 45 years of her life. But I am not going to hide these deltoids under a bushel. There may still be a couple of Tilly Grant-appropriate numbers in pile No 3 on my bed but I am not sure any more whether that pile is going to make it into my suitcase. Did I mention my deltoids already? So my sartorial shapeshifting has come about as a result of an actual shift in body shape. How very humdrum of me. Turns out if you work hard enough and long enough you can get yourself good arms whatever your age, as evidenced by my yoga friends in their fifties and sixties (I am 53), not to mention a particularly impressive seventysomething I met recently who had flown in from Vienna for a weekend of yoga to techno music, as you do. She was nonchalantly knocking out handstands despite having had a hip replacement. Who needs a mere It bag when you can get yourself It arms? So much more impressive to, ahem, engender something yourself than merely to buy it, surely? That designer tote might be fake but good arms are, perforce, the real and usually hard-won deal. Even weight-loss jabs won't help you with this one. Indeed, maybe muscle definition will become yet more coveted now that skinniness is available on subscription. Great arms have become, for a woman of a certain age, the ultimate status symbol. They powered the rise of the sleeveless office-targeted sheath dress in the Nineties and have now moved out of the boardroom into, well, everywhere. Among the celebrity upper arms recently out on manoeuvres have been those of Heidi Klum (52), Jennifer Aniston (56) and — naturellement — Gwyneth Paltrow (also 52). Somehow, getting your arms out — if you have the right arms — rarely looks muttony in the way that getting your legs out can at a certain point. It looks cool, not try-hard. It semaphores youthfulness and also power, very much including the literal variety. Is this another example of a subconscious desire on the part of the modern woman to ape the physicality of her male counterpart, the better to compete in what is still, for the moment, a man's world? Another sartorial phenomenon to put in the same category as trouser suits and shoulder pads? These arms — or, to be more precise, my arms — are the kind that only men used to have. Is it also, to proffer some more analysis, one more example of our collective resistance to ageing? To this I would answer, yes, definitely, and also that — like so much else related to the topic of ageing — there is a healthy level of resistance and one that equates not just to denial but to delusion. I have yoga friends who are ageing brilliantly, arms and all, and others who are definitely overcooking things and looking a bit like Ryvita. Back to my togs. Added into my suitcase are an array of vests, the newest and the quirkiest by some margin an iteration with eyes from the Uniqlo x Anya Hindmarch collaboration (£7.90, reduced from £14.90, Though such is the potency of designer arms that designer vests — very expensive designer vests — have become a phenomenon too, as per the Prada number I am wearing in this photo. (That will be £720, thank you very much.) • How to do summer like a French woman What I won't be emulating is a second vest-related flex that definitely isn't in my, er, wheelhouse, which is to wear said vest without a bra. I am leaving that to the twentysomething daughter of a friend, with whose nipple profile I feel myself to have become far too well acquainted in the past couple of months. Nope, no amount of handstands is going to help me with the — how best to put this? — suspension requirements of braless vest-wearing. So thank goodness, as always, for Selfridges's bra whisperer, Clare Basche, and her recommendation of Chantelle's strapless smooth Norah in golden beige for its comfort and minimal visibility under cotton jersey (£59, For an option with a lower centre bridge that would work under a V-neck dress or top, she rates Simone Pérèle's Essentiel strapless (£75, I love a feminine top too, such as Boden's linen Sophie, in a range of brights and prints (£65, Mabe's blue and white boho Viti (£87.50, reduced from £125, and Mint Velvet's more minimalist ivory satin style (£99, A waistcoat — such as Nobody's Child's in black, or in black or brown gingham — is one final way to go (£79, That's quite enough of that. I may have earned the right to bare arms but not to bore on about them. @annagmurphy


The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
200,000 eggs cracked and counting - the Guardian celebrates one year of the Feast app
To celebrate one year of the Feast app, the Guardian has compiled some of the best stats that reveal how users have been cooking their way through its delicious recipe collection. Over the last year alone, Feast app users have rustled up recipes with almost 200,000 eggs, 43,000 aubergines (eggplants), and an incredible 12 tonnes of flour, as they set about exploring the 6,000 plus carefully curated recipes now available in the app from 150 chefs (with those stats growing every day). Built on decades of the Guardian's well-loved food journalism, there's a fresh collection of seasonal and trending dishes to discover each day, tailored to suit all moods and occasions. It features both brand new recipes, as well as favourites from the Guardian's rich 30,000 archive. Loved worldwide, the top cooked recipe per country includes: UK and Australia: Tomato and aubergine one-pot baked pasta Germany: Perfect pasta primavera Greece: Perfect chicken pie Mexico: Peanut butter ramen Netherlands: Lebanese moussaka with five-garlic-clove sauce Singapore: Sausage ragu lasagne South Africa: Adas bil hamoud (sour lentil soup) Taiwan: Banana upside down bread USA: Spiced roast carrots with feta, dates, bulgur and beans Top recipes being cooked in the UK this summer All-time favourite chopped salad with honey dressing No-cook salad with tomatoes, chickpeas and rose harissa Courgette pappardelle with feta and lemon Dahi murg – yoghurt chicken curry Baked salmon with miso and lime Global cuisines Top searched ingredients searched worldwide include chicken, cauliflower, aubergine, salmon and courgette And the most popular cuisines that users enjoy cooking are Italian, Indian, British, Middle-Eastern and Spanish. The ultimate kitchen companion With around 100 new recipes added each month, it's no surprise that 76% of Feast users turn to the app for cooking inspiration and to explore new cuisines For busy weeknights, 38% rely on Feast to help plan simple, quick and healthy weeknight meals including one-pot dishes and tray bakes. A subscriber only product, Feast is a key part of the Guardian's strategy to increase its digital and global presence. Rated highly in the Apple and Android app stores, Feast's first year has been a hit, earning praise for the broad range of recipes available, acting as a source of inspiration and its ease of use. Coming soon As Feast enters its second year, some exciting new features will further enhance the way people cook and plan meals. One of the most requested features, personalised collections, will soon allow users to organise their favourite recipes within the 'My Feast' tab by theme, cuisine and occasion. Another new feature will help with shopping lists, making life easier by gathering ingredients from multiple recipes into one single digital list for either in-store or online shopping. Tim Lusher, head of food, Guardian News & Media, says: 'I have loved learning how people have been using Feast over the last year. Everyday we are adding new dishes to the app to suit every taste. Whether it's discovering new global cuisines, planning easy weeknight dishes or revisiting Guardian recipe favourites, our aim has always been to inspire confidence and creativity at home and we're just getting started.' Liz Wynn, chief supporter officer, Guardian Media Group, says: 'A truly global product, Feast is a celebration of everything our readers love about the Guardian's food journalism - creativity, diversity and a real passion for cooking. I'm pleased to see that in just one year, the app has become a trusted companion in kitchens around the world. It's a powerful reminder of the impact great content can have, and we're excited to keep evolving the experience for our global community of home cooks.' In the UK alone, the Guardian reaches almost 9m (41%) foodies a month, more than any other quality newsbrand (source: PAMCo H2 2024/ TGI Sept 2024 Multibasing). The Feast app extends from the Guardian's award-winning and influential weekly 24-page Feast magazine. Found in the Guardian print edition every Saturday, each issue is packed with beautiful photography and diverse, delicious recipes. In addition to the Feast app, the Guardian's food-loving audience can also enjoy: Recipes continue to be regularly published on Subscribers to the Feast app will receive a more premium user experience as it's much easier to search, filter, save and customise recipes, alongside new and unique features. Comfort Eating with Grace Dent: a huge success for the Guardian, the hit interview show is now in its tenth series. So far, celebrity guests, including Lulu, Nadiya Hussain, Katie Price and David Baddiel have opened their cupboard doors to reveal their favourite foods. The Guardian's Feast newsletter: foodies can sign-up for a weekly email curated by expert chefs like Itamar Srulovich, Felicity Cloake, Georgina Hayden and Rachel Roddy, featuring the latest recipes and seasonal eating ideas. Interviews to discuss the Feast app are available with Liz Wynn, chief supporter officer. Please contact [ENDS] About Guardian Media Group Guardian Media Group is amongst the world's leading media organisations. Its core business is Guardian News & Media (GNM), publisher of one of the largest English-speaking quality news websites in the world. In the UK, Guardian Media Group publishes the Guardian newspaper six days a week, first published in 1821. Since launching its US and Australian digital editions in 2011 and 2013, respectively, traffic from outside of the UK now represents around two-thirds of the Guardian's total digital audience. The Guardian also has an international digital edition and a new European edition that launched in 2023, with an expanded network of more than 20 European correspondents, editors and reporters.