Loose Women star ‘suffering constant pain’ as she cares for mum with Alzheimer’s

Jane Moore claims that her mother has been the center of her mother’s care and that dealing with her divorce has given her a “push on attitude” as she navigates her soviet years.

Jane Moore says she was ‘in pain’(Image: ITV)

Loose Women star Jane Moore is “suffering constant pain” as she cares for her mother. It comes as Jane’s 94-year-old mum is living with Alzheimer’s disease.

Jane, 63, says her being the power of attorney for her mother and her divorce from ex-husband Gary Farrow has given her a “push on through” attitude as she approaches the “third age”. But she has also felt the physical struggles from the stresses.

After decades of being able to nod off at the drop of a hat, she wrote in Platinum: “To put it mildly, it was a lot and I found myself suffering from constant abdominal pain (probably stress related) and having trouble falling asleep.

Jane says her struggles meant she was low on energy and had a general feeling of fatigue. It meant when she was given the chance to join I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here!, she saw the chance for an “all-expenses paid reset”.

While she admits the decision could have been seen as a touch “selfish,” Jane admits the idea of a month away felt “appealing”. The Loose Women star was the first eliminated in last year’s series.

Gary Farrow and Jane Moore
Jane says her divorce gave her a ‘push on through’ attitude(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images)

And while some of the campmates around Jane had trouble adapting to the jungle, she admits to enjoying it. She continued, “It felt more like a spa break for me.”

Jane says she enjoyed working on her chores, putting up with the fire, and sitting on a log while people were telling their stories. Jane claims that the jungle had “zero stress,” which meant she “loved” her time on the show.

She claims she left feeling “refreshed” fifteen days after entering the I’m A Celeb camp. Additionally, it taught Jane that leaving her mother with her adult children was acceptable.

It was during her time away from home that Jane realized how important it is to “take time for yourself.” She suggests going for a long walk, chilling out with friends, or just sitting in your garden.

Jane Moore hosts Loose Women
In 1999, Jane made her first appearance on Loose Women.

Beginning her professional career as a journalist, Jane rose up the ranks to become the Sunday Sport’s news editor. Three years after she started appearing on Loose Women, she left.

However, she made a 2013 return and hasn’t stopped doing so. She has anchored the program regularly since 2018 and continues to do so.

During her time away from the show she regularly appeared on a host of BBC programmes such as Question Time, The Andrew Marr Show and This Week. She announced her split from ex Gary on Loose Women in 2022.

She disclosed that she was taking care of him while he fell. She joked as she talked about her broken marriage and said, “I didn’t push him.”

Continue reading the article.

Swiatek becomes latest seed to fall at Canadian Open

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Iga Swiatek, the reigning champion at Wimbledon, was knocked out by Clara Tauson in the fourth round, making her the latest seed to lose at the Canadian Open.

With a 7-6 (7-1) 6-3 victory over the second seed in Montreal, Denmark’s 19th-ranked Tauson made up for her fourth-round defeat to Swiatek at Wimbledon last month.

The top seed Coco Gauff, two-time defending champion Jessica Pegula, and fourth seed Mirra Andreeva were all knocked out by Swiatek’s exit.

Tauson, who won her third WTA title in January, her first since 2021, said, “Obviously it’s really great and it shows all the work I’ve been doing is the right thing.”

I’m feeling a little more self-assured and like I belong here more, according to the author. In the crucial areas, I believe, that has really helped me today.

Madison Keys, the reigning Australian Open champion, will face Tauson in the quarter-finals after the American saved two match points to defeat Czech Karolina Muchova, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5.

Naomi Osaka, the four-time major champion, defeated Latvia’s Anastasija Sevastova 6-1, 6 0 6-0 to claim the victory.

Osaka, a Japanese Open champion who has won both the US and Australian Opens, is aiming for her first title since taking maternity leave in early 2024.

After less than a year, the 27-year-old left his job with Swiatek’s former coach Tomasz Wiktorowski and is now working with Polish coach Tomasz Wiktorowski.

Naomi Osaka hits a ball in MontrealReuters

Australian seventh seed Frances Tiafoe defeated Australian Alex de Minaur 6-2, 4 and 6 to advance to the quarter-finals in Toronto.

De Minaur, who won the Washington Open a week ago, is hoping to do better than he did in 2023.

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Loni Anderson dead: Burt Reynolds’ ex-wife and WKRP in Cincinnati star dies at 79

On the beloved TV comedy WKRP in Cincinnati, Loni Anderson portrayed the empowered receptionist of a struggling radio station, but she passed away just before her 80th birthday. According to her long-time publicist, Cheryl J. Kagan, Anderson passed away in a Los Angeles hospital after a “prolonged” illness.

The family of Anderson said in a statement, “We are heartbroken to learn of the passing of our dear wife, mother, and grandmother.” Prior to joining CBS, Anderson was married to actor Burt Reynolds.

Jennifer was a star on the CBS sitcom WKRP in Cincinnati, which Anderson starred in from 1978 to 1982. The program, which was based on an Ohio radio station that switched from rock ‘n’ roll to easy listening, gained notoriety as a result of Anderson’s unmatched performance.

Loni Anderson
Loni Anderson starred in Cincinnati’s WKRP.

According to the Mirror US, Gary Sandy, Howard Hesseman, Tim Reid, Frank Bonner, and Jan Smithers made up the ensemble. With her two Emmy nominations and three Golden Globe nominations, Anderson became a late 1970s and early 1980s icon of pop culture.

Barbara Eden, a co-star actress, was one of those who paid tribute to the actor. The I Dream of Jeannie star wrote in an emotional post on Twitter/X, saying, “I am heartbroken and completely stunned.” News like this is never easy to hear or accept because our friendship spans many years.

She continued, “She had a real talent, razor-smart wit and a brilliant sense of humor, but she had an impeccable work ethic.” Beyond that, Loni was a wonderful woman and genuinely kind person. I have no words now.

And she ended, saying, “Loni, you were one in a trillion, my friend, and even a trillion more. -Barbara”.

Morgan Fairchild, who played Anderson’s co-star in the 2023 Lifetime movie Ladies of the 80s: A Divas Christmas, wrote: “#OnMyWalking memories of one of the genuinely nicest ladies I’ve ever worked with, on set of our Christmas movie with Donna Mills. This was a lot of fun for us! She will be greatly missed”!

After getting married to Burt Reynolds in 1988, Anderson quickly gained notoriety in the media. In the 1983 racing comedy Stroker Ace, the pair first met, but it was their real-life romance that kept her in the media eye.

Loni Anderson
Jennifer Marlowe was played by Loni Anderson as the show’s receptionist.

She wrote the autobiography My Life in High Heels in 1995, which she characterized as a tenacity tale. She told The Associated Press at the time, “It’s about the growth of a woman, a woman who survives.”

It’s about my childhood, my parents’ deaths, my career, my divorces, and my children. The trauma of my marriage to Burt follows, of course.

She continued, “I believe you have to write about yourself, warts and all.” Because you’re telling the truth, you might not even mention the nicest things about yourself.

She and her husband Bob Flick, daughter Deidra, son Charlie Hoffman, son Quinton Anderson Reynolds, and grandchildren Megan and McKenzie.

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Why Guardiola’s new number two could be Man City’s biggest summer signing

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  • 781 Comments

Manchester City signed five new players this summer for less than £150m, but Pep Guardiola’s biggest signing did not cost any of that, and he won’t play any football either.

The second-most significant coach of Jurgen Klopp’s time, Liverpool, became Guardiola’s right-hand man at Manchester City in early June.

Really, it should have been a bigger story because Guardiola is considering undergoing a significant tactical overhaul with the addition of Pep Lijnders, who is credited with providing the majority of Klopp’s day-to-day training and a significant portion of the German’s tactical evolution post-Borussia Dortmund.

What’s even more impressive is that those tactical adjustments were made with the significant input of a coach who collaborated with Klopp on concepts like counter-pressing and attacking in vertical lines and on ideas that served as Guardiola’s renowned positional play.

Mind, that contrast is frequently overstated. Both Guardiola and Klopp borrowed from one another, and their combined victories at Liverpool and Man City almost seem to converge into one perfect fusion of Guardiola’s dynamism and control.

Guardiola used Klopp’s ideas to adapt to the rough-and-tumble of Premier League life, while Klopp’s “heavy metal” football was tempered by an appreciation of territorial dominance.

Lijnders, like Klopp, is much more concerned with the opportunities that arise when the ball changes hands and the aggressive, high-voltage attacking football than Guardiola.

Manchester City assistant coach Pep Lijnders talks to the club's playersImages courtesy of Getty

Guardiola’s territorial suffocation used to sever inferior opponents, but as middle-class teams improved, those who were brave enough to press hard and disrupt the build-up play began to reap rewards.

They literally pushed back until the division was flooded with transitions made in the most effective way, and Guardiola struggled to keep things in check with their slow passing and rigid positioning.

Pep Guardiola once told TNT Sports, “Today, modern football is the way Bournemouth, Newcastle, Brighton, and Liverpool play.” Football in the modern era is not positional. You must follow the rhythm.

That’s a big statement from a man whose tactical philosophy of “positional play” has pretty much defined the sport’s past 15 years, but it’s accurate.

Guardiola was already beginning to experiment with a subtly more direct style of play when he made those remarks about contemporary football.

When City’s possession rate was compared to that of their 2023-24 and 24-25 campaigns, the total number of fast breaks increased by 36%, while City’s possession share decreased from 65.5% to 61.3%.

More notable was Ederson’s use of long balls to obstruct the opposition’s high press and the January signing of Omar Marmoush’s direct dribbling through the lines.

According to what people, Marmoush was Man City 2.0’s first signing, the rebuild that will move Guardiola, Lijnders, and City in a more Klopp-like direction. Since then, more players have followed that type.

Both signings, like Marmoush, point to more passing triangles and more neatly choreographed passing triangles due to the arrivals of Rayan Cherki and Tijjani Reijnders from Lyon and AC Milan, respectively.

To put it another way, Cherki, Reijnders, and Marmoush are the players who like to ride the rhythm.

Because Guardiola has largely deployed central midfielders or centre-backs in the full-back positions over the past two seasons, an obvious nod to control, order, and discipline, the signing of Rayan Ait-Nouri also makes an allusion to Klopp-esque or Lijnders-esque football.

One of Europe’s most vicious fullbacks is Ait-Nouri. He placed second in the Premier League last season (63) and sixth in full-backs for progressive carries (89), which is comparable to the other three 2025 signings we have discussed.

He also placed among the top three defenders in terms of touches in the opposition box (96) and expected assists (5.5%), which was even more impressive.

Ait-Nouri’s arrival indicates that Guardiola has given up on bringing midfielders into the team and is allowing for more urgent, vertical football.

Manchester City fans can stop worrying about their team’s slow, passive football in favor of a dynamic attacking pair like Ait-Nouri and Jeremy Doku working together on the left or how Marmoush and Cherki will fit into the same attacking midfield space.

Before the 2025-26 Premier League campaign kicks off, they will undoubtedly have more questions than answers because the majority of their newcomers, both on and off the pitch, don’t typically fit the Pep mold.

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Pep talks – how Klopp’s ex-assistant is shaping Man City

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  • 151 Comments

Manchester City signed five new players this summer for less than £150m, but Pep Guardiola’s biggest signing did not cost any of that, and he won’t play any football either.

The second-most significant player from Jurgen Klopp’s time, Liverpool, became Guardiola’s right-hand man at Manchester City in early June.

Really, it should have been a bigger story because Guardiola is considering undergoing a significant tactical overhaul with the addition of Pep Lijnders, who is credited with providing the majority of Klopp’s day-to-day training and a significant portion of the German’s tactical evolution post-Borussia Dortmund.

What’s even more impressive is that those tactical adjustments were made with the significant input of a coach who collaborated with Klopp on concepts like counter-pressing and attacking in vertical lines and on ideas that served as Guardiola’s renowned positional play.

Mind, that contrast is frequently overstated. Both Guardiola and Klopp borrowed from one another, and their combined victories at Liverpool and Man City almost seem to converge into one perfect fusion of Guardiola’s dynamism and control.

Guardiola used Klopp’s ideas to adapt to the rough-and-tumble of Premier League life, while Klopp’s “heavy metal” football was tempered by an appreciation of territorial dominance.

Lijnders, like Klopp, is much more concerned with the opportunities that arise when the ball changes hands and the aggressive, high-voltage attacking football than Guardiola.

Manchester City assistant coach Pep Lijnders talks to the club's playersImages courtesy of Getty

Guardiola’s territorial suffocation used to sever inferior opponents, but as middle-class teams improved, those who were brave enough to press hard and disrupt the build-up play began to reap rewards.

They literally pushed back until the division was flooded with transitions made in the most effective way, and Guardiola struggled to keep things in check with their slow passing and rigid positioning.

Pep Guardiola once told TNT Sports, “Today, modern football is the way Bournemouth, Newcastle, Brighton, and Liverpool play.” Football in the modern era is not positional. You must follow the rhythm.

That’s a big statement from a man whose tactical philosophy of “positional play” has pretty much defined the sport’s past 15 years, but it’s accurate.

Guardiola was already beginning to experiment with a subtly more direct style of play when he made those remarks about contemporary football.

When City’s possession rate was compared to that of their 2023-24 and 24-25 campaigns, the total number of fast breaks increased by 36%, while City’s possession share decreased from 65.5% to 61.3%.

More notable was Ederson’s use of long balls to obstruct the opposition’s high press and the January signing of Omar Marmoush’s direct dribbling through the lines.

According to what people, Marmoush was Man City 2.0’s first signing, the rebuild that will move Guardiola, Lijnders, and City in a more Klopp-like direction. Since then, more players have followed that type.

Both signings, like Marmoush, point to more passing triangles and more neatly choreographed passing triangles due to the arrivals of Rayan Cherki and Tijjani Reijnders from Lyon and AC Milan, respectively.

To put it another way, Cherki, Reijnders, and Marmoush are the players who like to ride the rhythm.

Because Guardiola has largely deployed central midfielders or centre-backs in the full-back positions over the past two seasons, an obvious nod to control, order, and discipline, the signing of Rayan Ait-Nouri also makes an allusion to Klopp-esque or Lijnders-esque football.

One of Europe’s most vicious fullbacks is Ait-Nouri. He placed second in the Premier League last season (63) and sixth in full-backs for progressive carries (89), which is comparable to the other three 2025 signings we have discussed.

He also placed among the top three defenders in terms of touches in the opposition box (96) and expected assists (5.5%), which was even more impressive.

Ait-Nouri’s arrival indicates that Guardiola has given up on bringing midfielders into the team and is allowing for more urgent, vertical football.

Manchester City fans can stop worrying about their team’s slow, passive football in favor of a dynamic attacking pair like Ait-Nouri and Jeremy Doku working together on the left or how Marmoush and Cherki will fit into the same attacking midfield space.

Before the 2025-26 Premier League campaign kicks off, they will undoubtedly have more questions than answers because the majority of their newcomers, both on and off the pitch, don’t typically fit the Pep mold.

related subjects

  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Football

South Korea dismantles border loudspeakers to ease tensions with N Korea

As the new government under President Lee Jae-myung attempts to ease strained relations with Pyongyang, South Korean authorities have begun removing loudspeakers blaring anti-North Korean broadcasts along the nation’s border, according to Seoul’s Ministry of National Defence.

The military has started removing the loudspeakers, according to Lee Kyung-ho, a spokesman for the South Korean Defense Ministry, who spoke to reporters on Monday.

In order to resume stalled talks with its neighbor, Lee’s administration immediately turned off propaganda broadcasts criticizing the North Korean regime in June.

However, North and South Korea recently rejected the requests and said it had no interest in speaking with South and South Korea.

Because the Korean War of 1950-1953 ended with an armistice rather than a peace treaty, and relations have deteriorated over the years, the two countries continue to be technically at war.

According to the ministry’s statement on Monday, “it is a practical measure aimed at easing tensions with the North, provided that such actions do not compromise the military’s state of readiness.”

By the end of the week, he added, but he did not specify how many would be removed. All loudspeakers set up along the border will be removed.

In a bid to “restore trust,” President Lee, who was recently elected after his predecessor was impeached over an abortive martial law declaration, had ordered the military to stop the broadcasts.

In the wake of Russia’s massive invasion of Ukraine, Seoul had taken a hard line against Pyongyang, which has since become even more close to Moscow. This was at one of their lowest relations in years.

In response to a wave of trash-filled balloons being flown south by Pyongyang, the previous government started the broadcasts last year.

Lee, however, promised to ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula and improve relations with North Korea.

North Korea has turned down pursuing a dialogue with its neighbor despite his diplomatic prowess.

Nothing is a more serious miscalculation than the Korean Republic, Kim Yo Jong, Kim Jong Un’s sister, said last week using the acronym for South Korea’s official name, Republic of Korea. “If the ROK… expected to reverse all the results it had made with a few sentimental words.