Archive September 12, 2025

Peter Crouch steps up ‘new love’ as Abbey Clancy jokes ‘don’t come home’

Former England striker Peter Crouch has recently developed a new hobby that wife Abbey Clancy says leaves him slinking off in the morning, with the former footballer saying he’s ‘caught the bug’

Abbey Clancy told Peter Crouch not to ‘come home’ if he does one thing(Image: Dave Benett, Dave Benett/Getty Images for Sassan Behnam-Bakhtiar)

Abbey Clancy has playfully warned her husband Peter Crouch not to “come home” as he nurtures his newfound passion. The model recently disclosed that the former Premier League footballer has been sneaking out early in the morning to pursue a new hobby.

The 39-year-old model woke up on holiday to discover her husband was “nowhere to be seen” after he took up another sport. Peter later revealed that he had started tennis lessons after being inspired by their teenage daughter Sophia.

The ex-England international, who has previously expressed his love for golf and padel on their podcast, The Therapy Crouch, is now eager to participate in tennis tournaments.

On The Therapy Crouch, Peter shared: “Genuinely, I feel like I want to start competing because I had a couple of lessons and I felt good and I wanted to see how far I can get with it.”

Peter later expressed his enthusiasm for entering a tennis tournament, following accusations from the show’s producer Ross that he was “chickening out”, reports Wales Online.

Peter Crouch and Abbey Clancy
Abbey says Peter has a ‘new love’(Image: Getty Images Europe)

Abbey retorted: “I don’t like men who chicken out. You are so confident.”

Peter reassured his wife that he “wants to compete”. She responded: “Good, make sure you win, or don’t come home.”

Peter “caught the bug” for tennis when he decided to enroll in lessons after taking 14-year-old Sophia to her coaching. It came just weeks after he was spotted at Wimbledon with Abbey and Sophia.

In a previous podcast episode, Abbey revealed: “Pete’s found a new love. So everyday on holiday, I’d wake up, Pete nowhere to be seen. I’d be like, ‘Where the f**k has he been going?'”.

Abbey Clancy and Peter Crouch attend day four of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships.
Peter Crouch was forced to undergo a forfeit after finishing bottom of the Fantasy Premier League(Image: Karwai Tang/WireImage)

“He’d been booking himself tennis lessons. Tennis lessons, taking Sophia, who is doing the lessons anyway with her coach and Pete’s booked himself in. And he’s also joined a tennis club here, at home, and he’s in a tennis competition and a tennis team.”

Peter responded by saying: “You know what’s happened? I’ve got the bug massively. I was taking Sophia and said, ‘Do you know what, I’m going to start taking lessons.’ I got a lesson and then got the bug, and saw myself getting better.”

He went on to explain that he “could play” tennis as a youngster but chose a career as a professional footballer instead. He fondly recalled his childhood summers, filled with “football, tennis, football, tennis”.

Peter Crouch, former professional footballer in action during the Alfred Dunhill Padel Classic at The Hurlingham Club
Peter recently took up padel(Image: Luke Walker/Getty Images for Laureus)

He elaborated: “I could play when I was a kid but I didn’t pick up a racquet for 20 years. But my summers consisted of a ball and tennis racquet and when we got slightly tired of football we’d go and play tennis.

“For six weeks, football, tennis, football, tennis, and by the end of that you get alright. So I was decent as a kid.”

Abbey, however, suggested Peter was “playing down” his abilities on court and mentioned he had to make a “crucial decision” between the two sports. Peter added: “It was something that I never revisited so I’m trying to get back on the horse.”

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Retailer slashes price of iPhone 16 ahead of newest model pre-orders opening

Shoppers eager to bag a new iPhone without paying the hefty price of the brand new model won’t want to snooze on this retailer’s limited-time offer that’s seen the iPhone 16 drop in price

Retailer slashes price of iPhone 16 ahead of newest model pre-orders opening(Image: Getty)

Apple’s newest iPhone has dropped to its lowest price ever as the tech giant gears up to open pre-orders for a fresh addition to its mobile phone range. Amazon is behind this bargain, offering the iPhone 16e for £544 in the run-up to the iPhone 17 being available to purchase.

Apple has finally unveiled its latest iPhone range. The tech giant held its annual showcase live from its California headquarters on Tuesday (September 9), where it launched the iPhone 17, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max and iPhone Air.

This Amazon deal comes as pre-orders for each 17-model will go live at 1 p.m. on Friday, September 12, with availability starting from Friday, September 19. Retailers including Sky Mobile, EE, Mobiles.co.uk, Vodafone, and Three have all confirmed they’ll be stocking the device, with prices to be confirmed.

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iPhone 16e
Amazon has slashed the iPhone 16e to £544 down from £599(Image: Amazon)

Whilst technology enthusiasts eagerly anticipate their initial look at Apple’s new handsets, Amazon’s current offer makes the existing model more budget-friendly than buying the most up-to-date model. The iPhone 16e was formerly available for £599, and though the price tag of £544 may still seem steep, it’s saving shoppers £45.

Apple launched the iPhone 16e in February, designed as a more affordable model of the standard iPhone 16. Despite its cheaper price, it’s said to offer ‘powerful capabilities’ thanks to Apple’s latest-generation A18 chip.

The handset boasts a 6.1″ Super Retina XDR display and is packed with AI features via Apple Intelligence. Standout abilities include removing objects from images and using ChatGPT writing tools. The iPhone 16e also boasts a 48MP Fusion camera, 4K video capture with Dolby Vision, and safety features such as Emergency SOS and Roadside Assistance.

This model is available with 128 GB or 256 GB of storage, though the larger capacity will affect the price tag. The mobile is available in black or white.

The Mirror’s Technology Editor Dave Snelling tried the iPhone 16e earlier this year and said, “There’s no question it’s a very nice device. It gets a premium design covered in toughened Ceramic Shield glass and surrounded by aero-space-grade aluminium.”

“There’s a soft matte finish on the rear case that looks stylish and stops those mucky fingerprints from ruining the look. Spin the iPhone 16e around and you’ll be treated to a 6.1-inch Super Retina XDR screen, which is perfect for a boxset binge, sending texts, or doomscrolling on TikTok.”

However, Dave also noted a downside of the iPhone 16e, adding: “Under the hood is a supremely powerful A18 processor, which is not only blisteringly fast but also offers access to Apple Intelligence. It’s worth noting that the 16e now beats the standard iPhone 15 and iPhone 14, as those older call makers will never get access to Apple Intelligence, as they simply aren’t powerful enough.

Nevertheless, Dave also highlighted a drawback of the iPhone 16e, stating: “It’s a good phone but it does lack upgrades such as Apple’s clever Dynamic Island notch which transforms to show information as you use different apps and services, there’s no MagSafe charging and the Ceramic Shield glass isn’t the latest version found on Apple’s more expensive models.”

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If those extras don’t bother you, the iPhone 16e is worth considering, especially considering the deals available right now. If you don’t fancy Amazon’s offer, Sky is giving shoppers the chance to get the iPhone 16e for £18, when payment is spread out. Elsewhere, you can find this SIM Free iPhone 16e 5G 128GB AI Mobile Phone in Black at Argos for £549.

Gaza’s worst fear is no longer bombs but ‘humanitarian cities’

We thought returning home would end the nightmare.

After months of fleeing bombardment, sleeping in tents, schools, or under makeshift nylon sheets, many families finally walked back to their homes in northern Gaza during the fragile ceasefire in January 2025. The roads were lined with rubble. Our houses were broken shells, neighbourhoods unrecognisable. Yet we carried a fragile hope: that by stepping back onto our land, even among ruins, we were reclaiming our lives.

But as soon as we returned, the headlines followed us. Terms like “mass relocations”, “humanitarian cities,” and “population transfers” began to appear, suggesting that even after everything we had endured, our next destination might not be what remains of our homes, but military-controlled camps in the far south of Gaza, where the army had swept through and wiped out entire residential neighbourhoods, turning them into barren, flattened deserts.

For many outside Gaza, such reports read as distant political debates. For us, they land like threats. Each new statement feels like a draft of our next exile. The idea that the Israeli military might herd hundreds of thousands of us is terrifying precisely because we know what those “cities” would really be: overcrowded compounds, controlled checkpoints, food and water distribution under armed watch — if we are lucky enough to receive them — no freedom of movement, no guarantee of ever leaving.

Families who have just swept dust from their broken floors now whisper about whether they should keep bags half-packed, ready to flee once again. Children, who have barely adjusted to sleeping in their own beds after months away, overhear the word “relocation” and start crying. We all know what it means: another round of humiliation, another erasure of what little normal life we are trying to piece together.

Meanwhile, life in northern Gaza is already unbearably hard. Water and electricity are scarce. Food is overpriced and often unavailable. Families live among rubble, patching holes with nylon sheets. Yet even in these conditions, people cling to the dignity of being on their own land.

But that fragile dignity is overshadowed by the possibility that it could all vanish. Every attempt to rebuild — a repaired roof, a replanted garden, a reopened shop — feels provisional. Parents ask themselves: Should we invest in repairing the house if we may be forced out again? Students sit with books by candlelight yet wonder: What school will I graduate from if we are moved tomorrow? Every moment of normality feels as though it could be interrupted by soldiers demanding we leave.

What would it mean to live in these camps? The very thought keeps us awake at night.

We picture long queues for food, dependent on ration cards for every meal. We imagine tents lined in rows, stripped of privacy, where families huddle with strangers and women fear for safety in overcrowded conditions. We imagine soldiers controlling the gates, deciding who enters and who leaves, monitoring our lives with cameras and watchtowers.

For children, it would mean growing up without classrooms they know, without streets that carry their memories. Their “playground” would be a fenced dirt lot. For young men and women, it would mean the end of any chance at education or work; for, inside camps, life shrinks to survival. For the elderly, it would mean dying away from what remains of the houses and trees they planted with their own hands.

These are not abstract fears; they match what has already been documented in displacement zones and what legal experts predict. Analysts writing for JURIST and the Council on Foreign Relations note that once inside such camps, Palestinians would be unable to leave freely, their movements tightly monitored, their lives dependent on aid distribution. The United Nations agencies and NGOs have also warned that further mass relocations under military oversight could constitute forcible transfer.

The danger of these proposals is not only the physical hardship but the permanence they suggest. History has taught us that once people are forced into camps, “temporary” becomes long-term. A tent pitched “for now” becomes a marker of exile for decades.

That is why the fear today feels heavier than even the destruction we have endured. Bombs destroy cities, but forced relocation destroys roots. If we are pushed into these camps, it will not just be the loss of homes; it will be the loss of any claim to return.

Satellite imagery already confirms this danger is not theoretical. In Rafah, Al Jazeera’s Sanad agency documented the destruction of nearly 30,000 buildings between April and July 2025, providing evidence of land-clearing consistent with preparations for such a “humanitarian city”.

What makes this looming threat unbearable is the trajectory of our lives. We have already been pushed from hard to harder: from homes to schools, from schools to tents, from tents back to broken houses. And now, the plan being whispered is the hardest yet — military-run shelters that strip us of autonomy altogether.

What we really fear is not paranoia. It is a recurring project to erase us from our land. Some may wonder why the idea of relocation is more terrifying than the bombs we have survived. The reason is simple: bombs destroy walls, steal lives, but they do not sever us from our land. Forced relocation uproots us forever.

To lose a home is devastating. To lose the possibility of return is annihilating. That is why families whisper about the proposals with trembling voices. Because deep down, we know: once we are herded there, we may never see home again.

The world must see through the language being used. The term “humanitarian” is a mask. What is being proposed is not relief but imprisonment. What is being prepared is not shelter but a system of control designed to make displacement permanent.

If you read those headlines, do not imagine children playing safely in neat new towns. Imagine them staring through barbed wire, asking why they cannot go home. Imagine mothers queueing for a ration of flour under the eyes of soldiers. Imagine fathers pacing at night, unable to protect their families from the indignity of being treated as captives.

For us in Gaza, the worst may still be ahead. We returned home believing the nightmare was beginning to end. Instead, we live in the shadow of a new displacement, one that could erase even the ruins we call ours. This is the horror that defines our present: not only surviving bombardment, but living every day with the dread that the next chapter is already written, that the hardest chapter is still to come.

Victoria Beckham’s touching tribute to David with affordable and dainty white gold bracelet

Victoria Beckham’s Netflix documentary poster features a subtle nod to David, and the dainty piece of jewellery is from a surprisingly affordable British brand

Victoria Beckham gives a sublte nod to David in Netflix documentary poster(Image: Netflix)

This week, Victoria Beckham’s brand new Netflix documentary was announced, and the fashion designer has paid a subtle yet touching tribute to her husband David Beckham with a delicate piece of jewellery.

On the documentary poster, Victoria can be seen wearing two different bracelets, one of which is a white gold bracelet she welded to her wrist during a visit to Astrid & Miyu with David in 2023.

The pair, along with their daughter Harper, visited the Astrid & Miyu store in London and got matching ‘his and hers’ bracelets. Two years later, the bracelet seems to still be going strong on Victoria’s wrist.

Far from a high-end luxury piece, Victoria’s bracelet is surprisingly affordable. Her exact one is the Marylebone Chain Bracelet in Solid White Gold, priced at a reasonable £160. Worn front and centre on the poster, we love the subtle nod this bracelet gives to David.

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Astrid & Miyu chain
Victoria’s dainty chain is from a surprisingly affordable UK brand (Image: Netflix / Astrid & Miyu)

Originally part of Astrid & Miyu’s viral welded bracelet service (loved by celebs including Holly Willoughby and Molly-Mae), this timeless piece has now been adapted for online shoppers with an added clasp, making it accessible for those who can’t make it to a welding service in-store.

Made from recycled 9k gold, the dainty yet durable chain has been designed to shine year-round, and is one of those pieces that goes with just about everything.

Welded jewellery has become one of the biggest accessory trends over recent years, thanks to its sentimental value. As they are permanently fastened to the wrist, they’re often chosen to mark important milestones, friendships, or relationships. And Astrid & Miyu were one of the first jewellery shops to put these permanent bracelets on the map.

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With celebrity and royal fans ranging from the Princess of Wales herself to Holly Willoughby and Victoria Beckham, Astrid & Miyu has cemented itself as one of the it jewellery brands to get your hands on, so it’s no surprise to see that they are leading such a huge trend.

Maura Higgins shuts down rumours she was turned away from NTAs afterparty

Love Island icon Maura Higgins hit out at rumours she was turned away from the National Television Awards’ afterparty, after reports claimed she was turned away by security

Maura Higgins shuts down rumours she was turned away from NTAs afterparty(Image: Getty Images for the NTA’s)

Maura Higgins has denied claims she was turned away from the National Television Awards’ swanky afterparty. On Wednesday evening, the UK’s biggest stars dressed to the nines as they celebrated the year’s best performances and incredible programmes.

I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! won an award, which then saw Maura and Danny Jones together on stage for the first time since their shock kiss earlier this year. Following the glitzy night, it was reported the Love Island star was turned away from the NTAs bash.

A publication shared TikTok video making the claims, titling the clip: “Maura Higgins left raging as she’s turned away from celeb-packed NTA afterparty.”

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Maura Higgins
The star said she left after the ceremony ended(Image: Getty Images for the NTA’s)
Maura slammed the reports as 'misogyny'
Maura slammed the reports as ‘misogyny’(Image: PA)

Defending Maura, someone wrote: “Security or the person at the door wanting to be mean. Happens a lot. The title should be mismanagement at the NTAs After Party, disrespecting a guest. @Maura Higgins doesn’t matter if she was invited. She was on stage and part of it.” Maura saw the video and wrote: “It’s all lies, I left after the ceremony.”

In an Instagram Stories post, Maura said: “Here we go again!!!! I had a fantastic night, won an award, drank water and left after the ceremony as I had an early call time this morning!! The headline is not only untrue, it’s a prime example of how women are constantly vilified, exaggerated and reduced to clickbait.

“The pictures used of me ‘raging’ were actually taken in my hotel lobby before I left for the red carpet, while I was waiting for my car – which is why my makeup artist and photographer are in the photos with me. I also DID get invited to the afterparty, as did all nominees, but I chose to get n early night ahead of work today.

“Women in the public eye are too often painted as “raging”, “angry”, or “difficult”, while men in the same exact position would never be described this way. This isn’t journalism, it’s misogyny.”

On the night, Maura wowed in a leather and organza maroon dress by Lebanese fashion designer, Elio Abou Fayssal.

Sharing snaps from the special night, Maura wrote on Instagram: “So hugely grateful to have been a part of this special show..it was the best experience of my life!!!

“Thankyou @imacelebrity and everyone working tirelessly behind the cameras, this award is for all of us.”

Her pals were in awe and quickly showered her with compliments in the comment section. Luke Hamnett wrote: “She’s what mother calls, new money.” Francesca Allen posted: “Eeekkkk,” with clapping emojis. Leah Taylor said: “You are everythingtgff.”

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