
James Martin devastates fans as he apologises and pulls out of huge commitment
James Martin fans have been left disappointed after he announced he will no longer appear at the Yorkshire Dales Food & Drink Festival just days before the event.
The 53-year-old ITV star shared the disappointing news in a statement posted on his Instagram account, where he has 761,000 followers. James wrote: "I'm so sorry but unfortunately, due to circumstances outside of my control, I will no longer be appearing at the Yorkshire Dales Food & Drink Festival."
He added: "Please contact the organisers if you have any questions." The comments section on his post was quickly flooded with messages from fans who had been eager to see him in person. However, comments have since been switched off.
James had been one of the headline names expected at the festival, which is set to take place from July 18 to 20 at Aireville Park in Skipton. The popular event was launched in 2016 but didn't run last year, so attendees have been looking forward to this summer's comeback featuring music acts such as The Feeling and Go West.
After James's announcement, Jon Arrowsmith, the managing director of The Yorkshire Dales Food & Drink Festival, shared a statement with the Yorkshire Post.
He said: "We're absolutely gutted that James has decided not to join us this year, we know how popular he is and understandably his fans will be disappointed by his decision.
"Running festivals is not for the faint-hearted and it certainly has its ups and downs. We've worked hard to rebuild the festival after it collapsed and we knew it would come with its challenges – maybe not as many as we're facing – but we're working through them.
"Please bear with us as we finalise our line-up and hire a replacement chef. But let me reassure everyone, we remain as committed as ever in our promise to deliver a festival Yorkshire will be proud of and one everyone will enjoy."
James has been a staple of British television for years, and built up a fanbase via shows like Saturday Kitchen, Home Comforts, James Martin's Great British Adventure, Islands to Highlands and James Martin's French Adventure. He has also written more than 20 bestselling cookbooks.
The news that James has cancelled his appearance at the Yorkshire Food & Drink Festival comes after a challenging time in his private life. He previously revealed that he was diagnosed with facial cancer in 2018, which he kept to himself for years.
In November 2023, James admitted: "I was diagnosed with cancer on my face, and I had to have surgery, which I couldn't do until two days before Christmas when we had finished filming. Since then, it has returned on several occasions, and I have to have regular treatments."
Despite his health struggles, James has continued to work in television and remains one of Britain's most beloved chefs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economist
27 minutes ago
- Economist
Stop crying your heart out—for Oasis have returned to the stage
|5 min read IT IS THE moment rock fans thought would never happen. On July 4th Oasis, the greatest British band of their generation, will go on stage for the first time in 16 years. Such a thing seemed impossible given the group's spectacular combustion in 2009, after a fight between Liam Gallagher, the lead singer, and his brother, Noel, the main songwriter. In the intervening years the siblings fired shots at each other in the press and on social media. (Noel famously described Liam as 'the angriest man you'll ever meet. He's like a man with a fork in a world of soup.') But now, they claim, 'The guns have fallen silent.' From the July 5th 2025 edition Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents ⇒Explore the edition


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
I'm an ex-influencer - this is what happened when I stopped posting content for cash
From the outside, the life of a social media influencer looks glamorous, filled with free products, VIP invites to lavish parties and all-inclusive trips to some of the most beautiful locations in the world. But one former influencer has lifted the lid on what it's really like to work as one, branding the influencer marketing industry a 'shinier, cooler cousin of an MLM (multi-level marketing) scheme', and revealed why she chose to quit. Hannah Rose Keys, a 38-year-old digital marketer and mother-of-two, shared insights into what her life looked like at the peak of her social media influencing career, and what it looks like three months after she decided to stop. In a lengthy Instagram carousel post, she said she chose to go '#NOPROMO' on her social media accounts after feeling like her creativity was being stifled by brands expecting her to promote their products. Hannah, who has over 40.3k followers on Instagram, recalled how her account 'exploded' in popularity around a year ago, six years after she began posting about her life on it. 'The visibility turned me into something valuable: I had reached 'influencer' status. Brands saw me as a vessel to peddle their wares through, and the emails and DMs started flooding in,' she wrote. 'I don't know if it's because I've worked in the media and influencer marketing before, or if it's because being a cog in the consumerism machine makes me uncomfy, but this 'dream' scenario didn't feel all that dreamy.' Hannah described influencer marketing as 'an odd little ecosystem' in which brands and agencies are 'all coming after little ol' you'. 'Sure, you may have an audience the size of a traditional media outlet, but you're just one person, and the rules don't apply here,' she said. 'Whether you're macro, micro or mega, being an influencer means time and energy, giving so much of yourself; your life, even your family, to the dream of being paid to be online. The problem is, the power dynamic is all off. And let me tell you; I could feel it.' Hannah, who runs her own digital marketing agency, admitted that she was 'making thousands each month working with local brands', but the more offers that arrived at her doorstep, the more she felt a 'creeping discomfort'. Brands would send her products and say there were no expectations attached, but Hannah said she felt 'beholden' to them. Other times, she would be 'constantly low-balled by big budget brands' or be offered just 'a couple of dollars worth of product with deliverables for days'. Some brands would also pay her late after promoting their product, Hannah claimed. 'They were taking over my space, my time, and honestly, I didn't like the person I was becoming in the process,' she admitted. 'Was this really the life I wanted for myself?' At the end of March, Hannah said she decided to stop promoting brands, ending all but one existing partnership she was 'contractually obligated' to keep. Since then, she said her life has improved in eight ways, despite not getting free products anymore. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Hannah Rose (@hannahrosekeys) 'At my influencer peak, I was getting packages multiple times a week… It was like a mini Christmas every other day, and it became too much for me so quickly,' she said. 'I don't shop online and keep my consumption to a minimum, so to suddenly have this relentless stream of new stuff in the house… it was overwhelming.' She said she felt 'instant relief' once she started saying no to brands wanting to send her free products, because 'none of it was really ever free'. 'The second it arrived in my house - even when there was a 'no pressure' attached to the offer - the follow-up emails began,' Hannah continued. 'Maybe it's the people pleaser in me, but the weight of all those packages was suffocating.' And while she now spends money rather than getting things for free, Hannah said 'life is so much more peaceful' because she buys what she wants, rather than having things be chosen for her by brands wanting a promotion. 'All the obligations have slipped away and now I get to choose and own the things I want and like, without just accepting whatever I get offered. 'My son once said to me, 'You're so lucky you get free stuff all the time, that's so cool'. I set him straight: 'Getting free stuff is kinda cool, but being able to buy the stuff you want is even cooler'.' One of the drawbacks to stepping away from the influencer world was that Hannah found herself losing out on 'thousands of dollars a month' while spending more money. However, she said the loss of income has been worthwhile because working as an influencer meant it was 'scattered, unsustainable and demanding' anyway. 'It never felt like 'free' money - it felt like managing multiple stakeholders, reshoots, approvals, and tripping over commercial lighting setups in my living room. Mo' money = mo' problems when it's influencer money - at least in my case,' she said. Hannah added that she is now trying to find a way to make her platform work on her own terms, but that she needs 'a minute on that one'. Quitting the influencer career track has given her her 'freedom' back, Hannah wrote, adding: 'Without brands and agencies watching my every move, I get to post what I want, when I want. No approvals. No structure. Just creative freedom to go wherever my heart takes me.' She has also stopped worrying about how many followers she has. 'For a minute there, I was obsessive over my follower data - it was the key to getting the big deals; my only cold, hard negotiation tool. Now, I'm just happy if you guys enjoy what I do.' Additionally, Hannah said her content now feels 'more meaningful' as she is 'posting for realsies now'. 'It's just honest and it's coming from a genuine place and I'm not shoehorning my life experience into a post to sell you something,' she wrote. 'Conversations are happening and you're sharing and commenting and it all just feels very social and cool and I like it here. 'It feels like the start of something different, but something really special.' Hannah also said she feels like she is 'back in the driver's seat' of her platform, after 'being taken advantage of' by brands. 'The brand isn't paying for a page in your magazine, it owns a piece of content, your face, your home, your voice, your stuff, your story,' she said. 'They become part of your platform and you become part of theirs.' But since giving up influencing, Hannah said she gets to 'call the shots' and 'build something that's meaningful and aligned with who I am'. 'I might not get paid for my time and effort at this very moment, but it feels like I'm working towards something that I won't have to give up my values (or sell my soul) for.' Finally, Hannah said that quitting the influencing game has given her the chance to open herself up to 'bigger possibilities'. 'I still want to earn from what I create - but on my own terms. I don't want to hand my voice or your attention over to corporations. I want to pitch my ideas, not respond to theirs. I want something bigger than brand deals.' She admitted that, while she never set out to be an influencer, it 'seems like the golden ticket'. However, she has now realised that 'just because everyone else is doing it, and it looks shiny and exciting, it doesn't mean that is the right path for you'. 'Yes, being an influencer seems glamorous, but it made me feel small and ultimately, used,' Hannah continued. 'You're not a media company with a team behind you; you're just one person and you're painfully easy to exploit. 'Maybe I can actually build myself a platform and make a living from it without being a puppet for commercial use. Maybe it's time to take back some of my power. At least, that's the idea.'


Daily Record
32 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Laura Anderson reveals marriage and baby plans with Scots boyfriend Clark Robertson
Laura Anderson and Clark Robertson only went public with their relationship in October last year but they have already discussed their future together Laura Anderson rose to fame as a contestant on Love Island seven years ago and since then the Scottish influencer's love life has played out in the public eye. Making it all the way to the final with her villa lover Paul Knops, the pair split just a few months after leaving the ITV show and Laura went on to date Love Island 2015 winner Max Morley. However, it was not meant to be with the pair and things in Laura's life changed forever when she started dating Hollyoaks actor Gary Lucy after meeting him on Celebs Go Dating. Laura fell pregnant just five months into their relationship and the pair shocked fans when they announced their split, shortly after announcing they were expecting their first child together. The 36-year-old now shares her one-year-old daughter Bonnie with Gary Lucy, although she has taken several public digs at him after claiming she is a "single parent". One of which came on Father's Day last month when she took to her Instagram Stories to write: "Cheers to the single mums who feel sh*t for their kids on Father's Day." However, the Scots star has now moved on and is back in love with her new man - Dundee FC player Clark Robertson. Laura and Clark went public last October and the former Capital Radio host appears to be happier than ever with her new beau, so much so that marriage and kids may even be on the cards. Clark, has his own two kids, eight-year-old son Cole and a five-year-old daughter named Mimi, who he shares with his ex fiancé Karla Ray. Laura has now opened up about the possibility of having more children with the Aberdeen born star and Clark's relationship with Bonnie. Speaking to Closer, Laura said: "Well, it pulls at the ovaries a little bit! But we're not ready to go there just yet. "I didn't meet his kids until we'd been together for about nine months but he met Bonnie quite quickly because she was a baby she didn't know what was going on and she was with me all the time so we couldn't really not. "We waited a little while for me to meet his kids because they're a bit older. It's so nice seeing him with his kids, it makes a man more attractive when you see their caring side. He's a really good dad." While the pair seemed to have planned to have more kids in the future, it doesn't seem this will be happening any time soon. Laura said: "We both said that we wanted to meet somebody who already had kids. When you put your children first you hope that the next person you meet understands that. "We both said on the first date that we wanted more children but not right now. "Bonnie's a lot to handle and we've just started our new life together, so we'll give it a little bit of time before we jump into that – with a ring first!" Hinting that she wants to tie the knot before becoming a mum again, Laura added: "I just want what everybody wants, it would be nice to be married."