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Archive May 16, 2025

Made in Chelsea star Oliver Proudlock becomes a dad to son as wife gives birth

Former Made in Chelsea star Oliver Proudlock has announced the special news which he says has completed his family of four

The pair have welcomed a son(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images)

Made in Chelsea star Oliver Proudlock has become a dad for a second time to a son as his wife gives birth. The TV celeb took to his social media page to announce the special news which he said has completed their family of four.

Emma Louise Connolly and Proudlock shared the announcement to their Instagram pages on Thursday evening. They posted a black and white photo of themselves alongside their newborn baby while still in hospital.

The caption revealed the sweet name for their new son – Levi Fox Proudlock. They also said that the new addition to their family “[completed] our family of four”.

READ MORE: Amanda Holden buys ‘magic’ Elizabeth Arden cream on repeat and it’s half price

Emma and Oliver has two children
Emma and Oliver has two children(Image: emmalouiseconnolly/Instagram)

Alongside the snap, the couple wrote: “He’s here. Our hearts are fuller, our home louder, and our arms forever occupied. Levi Fox Proudlock, the perfect piece to complete our family of four.” Friends and fans of the couple took to the comments sections to give their congratulations messages.

Love Island star Tasha Ghouri simply said: “Congratulations,” while Rachel Stevens wrote: “Awww guys huge congratulations!!!” Meanwhile, Giovanna Fletcher wrote: “Oh my loves!!! Huge congratulations!!! Xxxx”

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Rochelle Humes commented: “Oh congratulations guys,” as Jamie Laing and his wife Sophie Habboo also left a string of love heart emojis. Married couple Emma and Oliver were already parents to their two-year-old daughter Bonnie before announcing that their family was growing on New Year’s Eve.

Their new son is called Levi
Their new son is called Levi(Image: emmalouiseconnolly/Instagram)

In a post to Instagram, Emma showed off her bump in a clip alongside daughter Bonnie. Captioning the announcement, Emma wrote: “2024, thank you for the greatest gift ever! Our hearts and hands are gonna be fuller than ever in 2025, and we couldn’t be more excited! Sending love and wishing you all the happiest of New Years. Yeah Baby!”

Emma and Oliver finally met in person back in 2014 after four years of messaging each other first. They then went on to welcome their first child, daughter Bonnie Lou, in May 2022.

They announced that they were engaged in August 2018 after Oliver got down on one knee during a romantic trip to Gothenburg, Sweden. They then went on to tie the knot in secret during in a small church ceremony in Fulham, London, on December 15 2020.

The pair married at St Albans Church after previously having to cancel three wedding dates due to the coronavirus pandemic in accordance with government restrictions. Oliver and Emma were initially meant to have 200 guests at Cowdray Park, West Sussex in a wedding in April 2020 but they had to reduce their plans to just 15 people.

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After four attempts to get married, the couple managed to pull together a last minute wedding as they finally got married in April last year. They then jetted off to St Lucia for their honeymoon.

Shepherd & Rutherford to miss England tour for IPL

Getty Images

West Indies batter Sherfane Rutherford and all-rounder Romario Shepherd will miss the upcoming tour of England and Ireland to remain at the Indian Premier League.

The IPL, the world’s richest T20 franchise league, restarts on Saturday but its’ postponement means the play-offs now begin on 29 May and clash with the Windies’ one-day and T20 tour of England.

England – with a richer national board – picked five IPL players in their one-day international squad but those players are expected to return.

“We acknowledge that players have their individual contractual arrangements which they would want to honour as it relates to their continued participation,” Cricket West Indies said.

Shepherd, who has played 37 ODIs and 53 T20s, will be replaced in the squad by left-arm seamer Jediah Blades.

He has played four matches for Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the IPL, including a 14-ball 53 not out in his most recent innings.

Rutherford has played in nine matches for current IPL leaders Gujarat Titans this season.

He will be replaced by top-order batter John Campbell for the Ireland leg of the tour while Shimron Hetmyer will take his place for the matches against England.

Hetmyer is another West Indies player at the IPL but his Rajasthan Royals side are already eliminated. He was originally left out of the Windies ODI squad after a poor run of form.

Seamer Shamar Joseph is at the IPL but has not featured for his side Lucknow Super Giants and remains in the West Indies squad.

The Windies play three ODIs in Ireland from 21 May before a three-match series in England from 29 May.

Related topics

  • England Men’s Cricket Team
  • Ireland
  • West Indies
  • Franchise Cricket
  • Cricket

Daughter of TV legend Esther Rantzen makes desperate final plea before she dies

Dame Esther Rantzen has been at the forefront of the assisted dying debate since revealing her own terminal cancer diagnosis in 2023

Rebecca Wilcox with mum Dame Esther Rantzen, who shared her terminal cancer diagnosis in 2023(Image: Getty Images )

Dame Esther Rantzen’s daughter has begged MPs to give her dying mother ‘peace of mind’ as they prepare to vote on the assisted dying bill later today. Rebecca Wilcox, 45, said her 84-year-old mother, who has stage four lung cancer, will be watching and is ‘hopeful’ the new law will be passed.

MPs will debate the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill – spearheaded by Labour’s Kim Leadbeater – for the first time since November’s yes vote. If it becomes law, it will allow terminally ill adults in England and Wales – with fewer than six months left to live – to apply for an assisted death.

In late 2023, Dame Esther revealed her terminal cancer diagnosis and expressed her wish to end her own life at Swiss assisted dying clinic Dignitas – where the practice is legal – if things got too much. A message reportedly sent to MPs by Dame Esther ahead of today’s debate said that changing the law would allow terminally ill people like her “not to shorten their lives, but shorten their deaths”.

She has since been taking what her family described as a ‘wonder drug’. But her daughter shared the drug has now appeared to have stopped working and Dame Esther is too unwell to travel. Though the law will be passed ‘too late’ for her own mum to end her life legally should she want to, her family are hopeful ‘she may have enabled it to happen for other people’.

READ MORE: Esther Rantzen’s husband whispered final two-word statement to her before dying

Rebecca Wilcox
Rebecca and her family have been campaigning for assisted dying to be legalised(Image: Jonathan Buckmaster)

Rebecca told the Express: “She’s going to be watching the debate and is very interested to see how it turns out, and hopeful. Mum has been indomitable her whole life, this shouldn’t have to be her campaign. She should have peace of mind, she should know that whatever happens, she has a choice at the end of her life. That is not going to happen for her. The only bright spot in that for us is that she may have enabled it to happen for other people. And I’m going to keep going for as long as it takes.”

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The TV host, who is a broadcaster like her mother and regularly appears on shows like Watchdog, admitted she was ‘living in a place of absolute denial’ about her mother’s illness, but said she found comfort that ‘something good’ could still come from all of their campaigning.

Praising her mother’s previous work with various charities and setting up children’s helpline Childline, Rebecca said her mum’s legacy was ‘already clad in platinum’, but helping to legalise assisted dying would be ‘another diamond on top of it.’

She added: “She has never stopped working for people she feels need to be listened to and voices that need to be heard. This is a brilliant campaign. I can’t describe the bravery and strength, power and beauty of the people that I have met, who have lost loved ones or who are facing a terminal diagnosis themselves. Their strength and courage — if we can bring a voice to that then we have done our job.”

As the historic vote takes place today, campaigners for and against assisted dying are expected to be watching the debate from the public gallery of the House of Commons. Among them will be Louise Shackleton, who took her husband Anthony, 59, who had motor neurone disease, to Diginitas in Switzerland to die in December. Louise, 58, from North Yorkshire, is now being investigated by the police.

Explaining her stance on it, told The Mirror: “We as human beings need to treat humans as well as we treat animals. If I was to have kept a dog the way that I was going to be expected to keep my husband, I would have been arrested, I would be prosecuted, I would be put in prison and I would be banned from keeping an animal again. But yet my husband was expected to suffer more than any other animal.”

Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who voted in favour of assisted dying during the first Commons vote last year, signalled he still backed a change in the law. It is thought he will vote that way again after he said: “From my own experience in this field – I dealt with it when I was the chief prosecutor – is that I do understand there are different views, strongly held views on both sides that have to be respected. My views have been consistent throughout.”

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Intrigue on and off pitch as Livingston meet Partick Thistle – live on BBC

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Scottish Premiership play-off semi-final second leg: Livingston v Partick Thistle (agg 2-0)

Venue: Almondvale, Livingston Date: Friday, 16 May Time: 19:45 BST

As the Partick Thistle people travel east along the M8 towards Livingston on Friday afternoon, they will have plenty to ponder.

Not least how they turn a threadbare squad into an irresistible force capable of dislodging the Livingston-shaped immovable object that beat them in Tuesday night’s Scottish Premiership Play-off semi-final.

Two-nil down is a sizeable hurdle in a second leg. Especially when you are running on fumes.

But it would be silly to write Thistle off. The miracle of Somerset Park was just a week ago. Brian Graham ‘100 not out’ and all that.

The 37-year-old captain, co-interim manager and all the other job titles must have a new fire burning in his belly after missing a late chance on Tuesday at Firhill that sailed over the bar.

How interim are Thistle duo?

SNS

But back to the bigger picture.

Beyond this semi-final second leg, there is uncertainty, for both clubs.

Will Brian Graham and fellow co-manager Mark Wilson even be in charge at Thistle after Friday?

What exactly must they do to lose the ‘interim’ tag? Have they already done enough?

Thistle have a new sporting director in former Motherwell and Northern Ireland boss Ian Baraclough. The new manager or management team will report to him.

“It is a difficult job having to come from the playing side of it, still playing and still make big decisions,” he said of Wilson and Graham when asked about the situation on Tuesday night.

“That is where I think Mark [Wilson] has dovetailed really well with Brian. I think they have coped with it well. I think there has been a bounce from that as well.

“But it is my job to assess and help the board to make the right decision come the end of the season and do it as quickly as possible so the new man has got a chance to prepare for what will be a big season next year – might still be in the Premiership.

“I said to the guys on day one when I first came in, ‘you are in no better position. The audition is there. You are doing it live’.

“I have had to speak to plenty of people, will continue to do that. But, at the moment, the way they have looked after the players, looked after the staff, the whole ethos around the club it has been driven by them at the moment.

Martindale no clearer on future

There are plenty of other names who know the division that you could throw into the mix for the Thistle job. Stuart Kettlewell, Callum Davidson, Ian Murray are all on the available list.

Dougie Imrie has impressed with Greenock Morton. Would any of the current interim Rangers management team fancy it if they don’t get the gig full-time at Ibrox? And what about David Martindale?

Nobody was really touting his Livingston side as major promotion hopefuls when the season started, let alone potential champions.

However, Martindale and Livingston were unwilling to slip quietly into the night. Instead, Livi have rallied and roared with renewed vigour.

However, their manager admits himself his own future is far from clear with potential fresh investment on the horizon for the West Lothian club.

In his straight talking way, Martindale is not a man who wastes time talking up trivialities.

“I know they’re speaking to a couple of groups just now,” he says.

“At this point, I’m out of contract at end of May, so there’s nothing really progressed. We’re not looking to progress. I am not looking to sign a new contract, club’s not looking to talk to me about a new contract. I think, for me, I’m fairly irrelevant in all this.

“That’s a future without me. I’d be more than happy to shake their hand if it’s going to safeguard the future of the club. And then I’ll go and look at what’s next for me.

“But somebody comes in, they want to have a conversation with me and they’d like to keep me about, I’m open to having that conversation.

“But, for me, I’m really just focused on, in all honesty, the next game, the next game, and the next game. And I’ll maybe look at me once we come to the end of that fixture list – whatever that’s going to be, one game or three games.

“I think I’ve tried to come into Livingston every day and put Livingston first and today’s no different, tomorrow’s no different. So I’m quite happy. Whatever the near future is for me, I’m comfortable with that.”

Related topics

  • Livingston
  • Scottish Premiership
  • Scottish Championship
  • Partick Thistle
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

Intrigue on and off pitch as Livingston meet Partick – watch on BBC

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Scottish Premiership play-off semi-final second leg: Livingston v Partick Thistle (agg 2-0)

Venue: Almondvale, Livingston Date: Friday, 16 May Time: 19:45 BST

As the Partick Thistle people travel east along the M8 towards Livingston on Friday afternoon, they will have plenty to ponder.

Not least how they turn a threadbare squad into an irresistible force capable of dislodging the Livingston-shaped immovable object that beat them in Tuesday night’s Scottish Premiership Play-off semi-final.

Two-nil down is a sizeable hurdle in a second leg. Especially when you are running on fumes.

But it would be silly to write Thistle off. The miracle of Somerset Park was just a week ago. Brian Graham ‘100 not out’ and all that.

The 37-year-old captain, co-interim manager and all the other job titles must have a new fire burning in his belly after missing a late chance on Tuesday at Firhill that sailed over the bar.

How interim are Thistle duo?

SNS

But back to the bigger picture.

Beyond this semi-final second leg, there is uncertainty, for both clubs.

Will Brian Graham and fellow co-manager Mark Wilson even be in charge at Thistle after Friday?

What exactly must they do to lose the ‘interim’ tag? Have they already done enough?

Thistle have a new sporting director in former Motherwell and Northern Ireland boss Ian Baraclough. The new manager or management team will report to him.

“It is a difficult job having to come from the playing side of it, still playing and still make big decisions,” he said of Wilson and Graham when asked about the situation on Tuesday night.

“That is where I think Mark [Wilson] has dovetailed really well with Brian. I think they have coped with it well. I think there has been a bounce from that as well.

“But it is my job to assess and help the board to make the right decision come the end of the season and do it as quickly as possible so the new man has got a chance to prepare for what will be a big season next year – might still be in the Premiership.

“I said to the guys on day one when I first came in, ‘you are in no better position. The audition is there. You are doing it live’.

“I have had to speak to plenty of people, will continue to do that. But, at the moment, the way they have looked after the players, looked after the staff, the whole ethos around the club it has been driven by them at the moment.

Martindale no clearer on future

There are plenty of other names who know the division that you could throw into the mix for the Thistle job. Stuart Kettlewell, Callum Davidson, Ian Murray are all on the available list.

Dougie Imrie has impressed with Greenock Morton. Would any of the current interim Rangers management team fancy it if they don’t get the gig full-time at Ibrox? And what about David Martindale?

Nobody was really touting his Livingston side as major promotion hopefuls when the season started, let alone potential champions.

However, Martindale and Livingston were unwilling to slip quietly into the night. Instead, Livi have rallied and roared with renewed vigour.

However, their manager admits himself his own future is far from clear with potential fresh investment on the horizon for the West Lothian club.

In his straight talking way, Martindale is not a man who wastes time talking up trivialities.

“I know they’re speaking to a couple of groups just now,” he says.

“At this point, I’m out of contract at end of May, so there’s nothing really progressed. We’re not looking to progress. I am not looking to sign a new contract, club’s not looking to talk to me about a new contract. I think, for me, I’m fairly irrelevant in all this.

“That’s a future without me. I’d be more than happy to shake their hand if it’s going to safeguard the future of the club. And then I’ll go and look at what’s next for me.

“But somebody comes in, they want to have a conversation with me and they’d like to keep me about, I’m open to having that conversation.

“But, for me, I’m really just focused on, in all honesty, the next game, the next game, and the next game. And I’ll maybe look at me once we come to the end of that fixture list – whatever that’s going to be, one game or three games.

“I think I’ve tried to come into Livingston every day and put Livingston first and today’s no different, tomorrow’s no different. So I’m quite happy. Whatever the near future is for me, I’m comfortable with that.”

Related topics

  • Livingston
  • Scottish Premiership
  • Scottish Championship
  • Partick Thistle
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

Man Utd co-owner Ratcliffe ‘loses quarter of total wealth’

PA Media

Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has seen his wealth fall by £6.473bn – more than a quarter of his fortune – in the last year, according to the latest Sunday Times Rich List.

The 72-year-old’s wealth has declined from £23.519bn to £17.046bn in the past 12 months.

He has slipped from fourth to seventh on the annual list of the UK’s 350 richest people.

Ratcliffe’s Ineos Group bought a 27.7% stake in United in February 2024 in a deal worth about £1.25bn ($1.6bn) that saw Ineos take control of football operations.

The British billionaire’s time at Old Trafford has drawn criticism after United raised ticket prices and made two rounds of redundancies in a bid to improve the club’s finances.

Ratcliffe defended some of United’s financial cost-cutting measures in a wide-ranging BBC interview in March in which he said the club would have “run out of cash by the end of this year” had he not made “unpopular” decisions.

However, in March United unveiled ambitious plans to build an “iconic” new £2bn, 100,000-seater stadium close to Old Trafford.

Ratcliffe has said that financial pressures on British petrochemical firm Ineos would not impact Manchester United.

Ineos walked away early from its sponsorship deal with New Zealand Rugby in February, while it also parted ways with four-time Olympic champion Ben Ainslie earlier this year after backing the Britannia America’s Cup sailing team since 2018.

Ineos blamed “cost-saving measures” across its business, citing the struggling chemicals industry in Europe because of “high energy taxes and extreme carbon taxes”, along with “the deindustrialisation of Europe”.

McIlroy, Joshua, Murray & Kane see fortunes rise

While Ratcliffe has seen his wealth decline, athletes such as Rory McIlroy, Anthony Joshua, Sir Andy Murray and Harry Kane have increased their fortunes.

Golfer McIlroy is the leading athlete in the Sunday Times’ 40 under 40 list, which charts the worth of the 40 richest people under the age of 40.

The Northern Irishman, who completed the career Grand Slam by winning the Masters last month, is 19th on the list after increasing his personal fortune from £225m to £260m.

Boxer Joshua appears 24th on £195m, despite not fighting since his defeat by Daniel Dubois in September, while Murray is 35th on £110m following his retirement from tennis in August.

Related topics

  • Manchester United
  • Football