Michael Mosley’s wife says ‘awkward’ phrase is hard to say in heartbreaking update

Dr Clare Bailey Mosley is still grieving her husband, TV doctor Michael Mosley, who died in June 2024

The wife of beloved TV doctor Michael Mosley admits she still feels “awkward” when describing herself as a widow nearly 18 months after his tragic passing.

Michael and Dr Clare Bailey Mosley were enjoying a break on the Greek island of Symi in June 2024 when the 67-year-old physician and television presenter chose to embark on a two-mile trek to a neighbouring town.

His remains were discovered four days later on a rocky stretch of terrain near a private resort called Agia Marina.

A post-mortem examination failed to establish any clear reason for his demise, which appeared to have occurred during the late afternoon hours of his disappearance.

An inquest concluded that the cause of his death was “unascertainable” and that his passing was “most likely attributable either to heat stroke or non-identified pathological cause.”

Clare is still contemplating counselling to assist her in managing her unexpected bereavement: “I feel I need to have time to do it,” she revealed to the Telegraph.

“It’s next on my list. I’m not going just because everyone tells me I should.”

She revealed that she has created an informal grief support network of her own: “I do have friends I see. There are two other [widowed] women nearby so we often meet up.”

Clare continued: “We call ourselves ‘the three merry widows’. Although I don’t use the word ‘widow’ unless I have to. I feel a bit awkward about the word itself. It just reminds me of what I’ve lost.”

Clare and Michael’s son Jack – who is also a doctor – have resolved to carry on his work.

They have written three books on healthy eating – Food Noise, Eating Together, and The Fast 800 Favourites.

“Michael would have been so proud of Jack,” Clare told Good Housekeeping Live.

“And I’m incredibly proud of how the family came together after we lost him, because it was a really traumatic experience. But we all pulled together.”

She remembered how even Michael, who was a respected authority on healthy eating, wasn’t immune to the temptations of a treat now and then: “He used to ask me to hide chocolate quite regularly,” she recalled.

“I still find chocolate in the broom cupboard!'”

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Jack added that – chocolate addiction aside – his dad practised what he preached: “Dad had put on a few kilos every year as he approached his early 50s, and by 2012 he had become type two diabetic,” he said.

Timothee Chalamet looks unrecognisable with new hair after ‘dumping’ Kylie Jenner

If Timothée Chalamet has split from girlfriend of two years Kylie Jenner it didn’t show as he was spotted on a night out in Hollywood on Friday

Timothée Chalamet has shown off a bold new look as he was spotted on a guy’s night out after reportedly ‘dumping’ Kylie Jenner.

The 29-year-old actor ditched his trademark curls as he rocked a newly shaved head – for his role in the upcoming film Marty Supreme – in the snaps. He appeared carefree as he had drinks with friends on Friday night and was photographed at a low-key Hollywood bar with pals, leaving the establishment at around 1am.

Rumours of a split with girlfriend of two years Kylie, 28, began swirling when the Dune and Wonka star was notably absent from her mum Kris Jenner’s star-studded 70th birthday bash last week.

It comes as makeup mogul Kylie took to Instagram to post a series of sultry pics in what was perhaps a bid to make Timothée realise what he is missing. One snap even showed her with a Timothée Chalamet lookalike. In the photo, Kylie is seen holding up her middle finger to the camera as she sits in a restaurant in a bra and skirt.

The mystery man is sitting next to her, giving a cheeky smile as he holds his tattooed hand up to his chin.

It’s reported that the pair have split before. But last time mum-of-two Kylie, who shares daughter Stormi, seven, and son Aire, three, with rapper ex Travis Scott, is said to have talked him into giving the relationship another go.

A source told the Daily Mail: “This has happened before – but she talked him into getting back together. She is crazy about him, so that could well happen again.”

Another source claimed: “There is trouble in paradise, but they aren’t completely over. He is filming quite a bit, and she feels that she has to chase him. She is putting in the work more than him.”

It comes after Timothée appeared to take a swipe at Kylie during a Vogue cover shoot where he said he didn’t talk about his relationship as there wasn’t ‘anything to say’.

He told the publication he didn’t want to discuss his love life and said: “I don’t say that with any fear, I just don’t have anything to say.”

Even though Kylie says privacy is of the utmost importance to her, Timothée’s reluctance to publicly speak about their romance is reportedly a bone of contention between the pair, who first began dating in 2023.

And Kylie is said to have been ‘blindsided’ by her boyfriend’s decision to shut down talk of their relationship.

A friend close to the Kardashians’ star told Radar Online: “Kylie was really upset by how casually Timothée dismissed the question. She honestly believed they were past the point of hiding things and that he’d want to celebrate their relationship, not act like it doesn’t exist.

“She’s raging, shocked and heartbroken at the same time, but, as usual, is trying to put a brave face on things by keeping posting ‘happy’ social media snaps.”

The strain of Timothée working away filming all the time as his career rises was also taking a toll – with Kylie reportedly feeling like she’s the one making the effort all the time.

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One source said: “They’ve been on completely different schedules for months, and it’s really strained things. Kylie’s been the one reaching out, calling, visiting – but she’s beginning to feel like she’s putting in all the effort.

Another added to the publication: “Kylie’s always been the one showing up for himShe’s traveled everywhere to support Timothée, but he rarely returns the favour. It’s starting to really bother her.”

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What’s Grokipedia, Musk’s AI-powered rival to Wikipedia?

Last month, tech billionaire Elon Musk launched Grokipedia, an AI-powered platform, to rival online encyclopedia Wikipedia.

“Grokipedia will exceed Wikipedia by several orders of magnitude in breadth, depth and accuracy,” Musk posted on X the day after his site went live on October 27.

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In the age of generative artificial intelligence and AI-assisted search engines, Wikipedia remains an information repository authored by humans.

Yet PolitiFact found Grokipedia’s articles are often almost entirely lifted from Wikipedia. And when the entries differ, Grokipedia’s information quality and sourcing are problematic and error-prone, making it a less reliable research tool.

Musk said on an October 31 episode of the “All-In” tech and business podcast that his team instructed his company’s chatbot, Grok, to go through the top 1 million Wikipedia articles and then “add, modify and delete”.

“So that means research the rest of the internet, whatever is publicly available, and correct the Wikipedia articles, fix mistakes, but also add a lot more context,” he said on the podcast.

Grokipedia articles often contain the text “Fact-checked by Grok“.

PolitiFact reviewed Grokipedia articles and found that when they include language that’s different from what appeared on Wikipedia, the new content:

  • Is not supported by citations;
  • Does not provide references; or
  • Introduces misleading or opinionated claims.

Grokipedia often also removes context from its articles.

A sample of Grokipedia’s 885,279 articles reveals they are subject to a similar AI-related phenomenon we first saw in May, prior to the tool’s unveiling. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr then released a Make America Healthy Again report that contained several erroneous citations, including crediting sources that did not exist.

Joseph Reagle, Northeastern University associate professor of communication studies, said Grokipedia misunderstands Wikipedia’s and AI’s strengths.

“Wikipedia’s merits are that it is the result of a community of thousands of people diligently working to create high-quality content,” Reagle said, while AI is useful when it’s interactive and accepts pushback.

Hundreds of thousands of volunteers worldwide contribute content to Wikipedia, guided by the platform’s editorial policies and guidelines.

The Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that operates Wikipedia, is aware of Grokipedia’s copying problem.

“Even Grokipedia needs Wikipedia to exist,” said Selena Decklemann, chief product and technology officer at the Wikimedia Foundation, in a statement to PolitiFact. “Wikipedia’s content is open source by design; we expect it will be used in good faith to educate. This issue is especially urgent as platforms like Grokipedia increasingly draw on our articles, selectively extracting content – written by thousands of volunteers – and filtering it through opaque and unaccountable algorithms.”

Entries are nearly identical, except for wrong or missing references

We looked at Grokipedia articles covering various topics including science, music and economics. In many articles we reviewed, Grokipedia links to Wikipedia articles with this statement: “The content is adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.”

That means Wikipedia’s licensing allows Grokipedia to copy, redistribute and adapt the content with an attribution. It also requires Grokipedia to give the same permissions for its adapted content. (There are some articles that don’t copy from Wikipedia and don’t feature this statement, such as the article for Joseph Stalin.)

Grokipedia’s article structure is similar to Wikipedia’s, which features reference lists at the bottom. But in some instances, Grokipedia copies Wikipedia articles while omitting their citations and reference lists.

Grokipedia’s article for “Monday,” for example, includes information about the day of the week’s etymology, related religious observances and cultural references. But it contains no citations other than to say it was adapted from Wikipedia.

The Grokipedia article was a 96 percent match of Wikipedia’s “Monday” article, according to Copyscape, a plagiarism checker. The Wikipedia article, however, listed 22 references.

Sometimes Grokipedia botches citations. In the entry for “culminating point,” Grokipedia cited the wrong book chapter in which military theorist Carl von Clausewitz introduced the concept. The rest of the article text is copied from Wikipedia.

One article that differs significantly from its Wikipedia counterpart is the entry for “Hello”, a song by British singer Adele. Multiple items in the Grokipedia reference list are Instagram reels that provide secondhand, unattributed information and commentary. Wikipedia’s standards say such user-generated content is “generally unacceptable as sources”.

In the entry for the Canadian singer Feist, Grokipedia copied from Wikipedia but added a line saying her father died in May 2021. The citation led to Vice’s 2017 ranking of the 60 best Canadian indie rock songs, an article that doesn’t mention the death of Feist’s father, who was still alive that year.

Grokipedia lacks transparency on correcting errors

PolitiFact found at least one instance when Grokipedia introduced misleading information.

The Grokipedia and Wikipedia articles for “Nobel Prize in Physics” are largely the same, but one sentence Grokipedia added said, “Physics is traditionally the first award presented in the Nobel Prize ceremony.” It did not provide a citation, and it appears to be wrong: In at least the past few years, the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine was awarded first.

“Unlike Grokipedia, which relies on rapid AI-generated content with limited transparency and oversight, Wikipedia’s processes are open to public review and rigorously document the sources behind every article,” Decklemann said.

Wikipedia allows anyone to contribute and edit articles, and ensures transparency by making the history of an article viewable. Some volunteers have advanced permissions and are equipped to address negative behaviour on the platform.

However, Wikipedia has come under scrutiny after an editor blocked changes to an article on the Gaza genocide page.

On Grokipedia, registered users can suggest edits to published articles. But Grokipedia has no feature allowing readers to view what edits have been made. It is unclear what happens when there are errors – whether a human or Grok corrects them, how those changes are deliberated, and how long it takes to update pages.

Chile votes for new president in communist vs far-right contest

Chileans are voting to pick a new president and Congress as more than 15 million registered voters will decide whether the country stays on its current centre-left course or, like its neighbour Argentina, makes a sharp turn to the right.

Polls opened at 8am (11:00 GMT) on Sunday and are expected to close at 6pm (21:00 GMT) as one of the Latin American country’s most divisive elections in recent times got under way.

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A change from the previous elections is mandatory voting for registered voters.

The starkly divided frontrunners are Jeannette Jara, the 51-year-old governing coalition candidate from the Communist Party, and Jose Antonio Kast, 59, of the Republican Party who promises “drastic measures” to fight rising gang violence and deport undocumented immigrants.

Polls suggest that none of the eight candidates on the ballot will secure the majority of votes needed to avoid a run-off on December 14.

Left-wing President Gabriel Boric is constitutionally barred from seeking a second consecutive term.

Security high on agenda

The election campaign was dominated by rising crime and immigration, leading to calls for an “iron fist” and United States President Donald Trump-style threats of mass deportations.

A sharp increase in murders, kidnappings and extortion over the past decade has awakened large security concerns in one of Latin America’s safest nations, a far cry from the wave of left-wing optimism and hopes of drafting a new constitution that brought Boric to power.

Boric has made some strides in fighting crime. Under his watch, the homicide rate has fallen 10 percent since 2022 to six per 100,000 people, slightly above that of the US.

But Chileans remain transfixed by the growing violence of criminals, which they blame on the arrival of gangs from Venezuela and other Latin American countries.

Kast, called “Chile’s Trump”, has promised to end undocumented immigration by building walls, fences and trenches along Chile’s desert border with Bolivia, the main crossing point for arrivals from poorer countries.

Before the elections, he issued 337,000 undocumented immigrants with an ultimatum to sell up and self-deport or be thrown out and lose everything if he wins power.

The previous elections saw an abstention rate of 53 percent in the first-round voting, and the large amount of apathetic or undecided residents set to cast ballots this time adds a wild card to the race.

Most of Congress is up for grabs with the entirety of the 155-member Chamber of Deputies and 23 of the country’s 50 Senate seats up for grabs.

‘I have never seen England on a charge like this’

BBC Sport
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It was a year out from the 2003 Rugby World Cup and I remember being down to Australia at Twickenham.

Following a Wallabies try, Martin Johnson got us all under the posts and was not interested in charging down the kick.

We were behind and all that mattered to him was winning territory in the next five minutes.

He made it clear we had to be more aggressive in defence, stay in Australia’s 22 for as long as possible, and see if they could handle the pressure.

We produced an excellent final 20 minutes and Ben Cohen scored the try to overcome what was a 31-19 deficit.

The reason we then came back in the World Cup final against Australia was because of what had gone by in the years before.

The more difficult it is for this current England squad, the better. Coming from 12-0 down to defeat New Zealand could be the vital touchpoint they use on their journey to the next World Cup.

Maro Itoje, along with 30 other players, will remember what happens in different scenarios.

I watched Itoje walk down the tunnel with the referee at half-time, and he was having a very mature, informative conversation all the way back into the changing room.

Roll back even two or three years and Itoje is not doing that as captain – but there is something different in what he is bringing to the squad.

It is very low-key with him, it is so much easier to follow leaders like that rather than abrasive, more obvious leaders.

Sometimes those guys don’t have the ability to cover all the different characteristics. I can see how Itoje is able to adapt to his players.

When the final whistle went on Saturday, Henry Pollock was bouncing around, jumping on Ben Earl’s back.

Itoje was just shaking hands, cool as you like, and Pollock ran at him and they embraced.

It was like a clash of how you would celebrate a big win, but Itoje is able to adapt to his players.

Leadership in difficult moments does make the difference in the biggest Test matches. It is about nailing those key decisions and moments.

George Ford’s decision to take back-to-back drop-goals right before half-time is your perfect example.

I am buzzing about this England team, as I have never seen England on a charge like this before a World Cup.

I don’t believe any England team has been in this good a position in terms of strength and depth, leadership and the ability for individuals to win games.

Overall, there is now a stark contrast between where England are and where they have been over the past decade.

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‘Lawrence starting to offer more than Tuilagi’

Ollie Lawrence offload against New ZealandGetty Images

Ollie Lawrence is turning into a player who is starting to offer more than Manu Tuilagi.

When fully fit and firing, Tuilagi was so difficult to stop – and I don’t think Lawrence has that capability to the same extent.

But he is showing a much wider skillset, with the soft hands for Fraser Dingwall’s try as he drew the attention of three players.

He has an ability to shift before and after contact. That try was not just a nice set-piece move.

When players like Tuilagi and Jason Robinson attract that much interest, it means there has to be opportunity elsewhere. Lawrence has shown he can be that threat but also a decoy runner.

His comeback is also remarkable – not that long ago, when you did your Achilles, that was a done deal.

Dingwall, in his facilitator role at inside centre, also helped to get the best out of Lawrence.

In those big arenas is where you get to see players like Dingwall, who often go under the radar, shine.

Players like Will Greenwood and Richard Hill – one of England’s greatest – would quietly go about their business but in really important ways.

Dingwall has that ability to read the game superbly.

Things happen even faster against the best teams, and he supplied a couple of nice offloads and carries to buy Ford time.

He also helps provide that direction – he will be supplying a lot of commentary to Ford and that is the stuff no one sees.

If he keeps developing in that role, then England are answering a question we have all been asking since probably the days of Greenwood.

‘Pollock is bringing people on his journey’

Henry Pollock screamingGetty Images

Pollock is bringing people on his journey with his mindset.

Ellis Genge, Will Stuart and Tom Curry are not known for their light-heartedness on the field, but they all had a beaming smile before coming on.

It felt like a “this is our moment” type of vibe.

They are all turning into Pollock – not completely, of course – but adopting elements of his approach.

The bench are bringing all the energy and impact, with Pollock leading the charge, and everyone gets swept up into this vortex that he creates.

It ramps up the intensity, and when you have just been smashed about by England for 60 minutes that is incredibly difficult to compete with.

South Africa do it more like for like and sometimes change roles, whereas England have a rhythm with the types of players who come on at the moment.

Related topics

  • England Rugby Union
  • Rugby Union