Tracy Beaker star gives birth to son and says she’s ‘still in shock’ after birth

One of the stars of The Story of Tracy Beaker has just announced the birth of her son and shared what life has been like since his “early and very speedy arrival”

A Tracy Beaker star has welcomed a baby boy and opened up about life since his “early and very speedy arrival”. According to the new mum, she is “still in shock” following the birth.

Over twenty years ago, Chelsie George – then Chelsie Padley – had a starring role in The Story of Tracy Beaker, the franchise’s first show. From 2002 to 2004, she played Louise Govern, Tracy’s best friend.

Sharing the news on Instagram, Chelsie announced the birth of her son Dusty Leigh George. She captioned a video of Dusty in an oversized jumper with: “5.10.25. 5lbs 14oz 35+4 (had to beat his sis). Introducing our impatient little man.”

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Chelsie already has a daughter, Goldie Raynor George. She continued the caption: “We are all head over heels and Goldie is just besotted. Can’t wait to tell you all more about his early and very speedy arrival (still in shock I think) but we are soaking up this absolutely precious time along with a little side of jaundice, very little sleep and LOTS of milk!

“P.s. excuse the colostrum stain… Dusty said hell no to the perfect post, we are in real life baby. P.p.s. he also said… mum, get me some clothes that fit!”

Tracy Beaker herself, Dani Harmer, commented: “Ahhhhh congratulations lovely!!!!!!” Dani came back to the franchise for Tracy Beaker Returns and My Mum Tracy Beaker, as did Montana Thompson, who played Justine Littlewood, Tracy’s nemesis. But Chelsie did not.

Since appearing in The Story of Tracy Beaker, Chelsie was in one episode of children’s TV show Tati’s Hotel and had a cameo in the music video for Someday by Keisha White, which was the theme song for Tracy Beaker. Other than that, she seems to have stepped away from acting.

For the past two years, Chelsie has largely been an influencer, posting content to her social media about being a mother. Her Instagram, @mamaspeachylife, shares snippets of her life with her children and home workouts you can do whilst looking after a baby.

She also posted a pic of her and the new baby to her stories, with the words: “Happy as a pig in poo. Lots of feeds with little sleeps in between. Nothing better than your own bed.”

Shortly after, she shared her fears about looking after a newborn again, saying there was a “constant worry”. “One thing I forgot about the newborn days is the constant worry with their temperature.

“Is it too hot? No, I feel a nip in the air. They need one more layer than us but then do [premature babies] need more? Ahhh don’t let them overheat. Hat? No hat? Feel the back of the neck. Feel the tummy.”

Chelsie also posted a picture after heading back to the hospital but promised her followers that everything was okay. “Nothing to overly worry about, little man just came out all early and bolshy and now is a sleepy jaundice little kind so we’ve headed back to hospital for a holiday on the sunbed.”

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‘Chronic Scotland prevail in Hampden head-wrecker’

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In the worlds of physics and astronomy, biology and mathematics, technology and medicine, there are myriad topics that are fiendishly difficult to explain.

The meaning of life, the laws of general relativity, quantum mechanics, Fermat’s last theorem. Head-scratchers all.

Here’s another one – and without question it’s the biggest head-wrecker of the lot. Arguably the most confusing conundrum Hampden has ever thrown up. Arguably.

After getting outclassed for an hour and trailing 1-0 when by rights it should have been two or three, how did Scotland win this monumentally befuddling World Cup qualifier 3-1?

How did they go from a team that was getting passed close to death by a slick Greece turn it around? What weird cosmic force was at work here?

“Football, bloody hell” doesn’t cover it, not even close.

    • 1 hour ago

In cataloguing Greece’s dominance, we note the absolute sitter passed up by Vangelis Pavlidis early on. Then the Pavlidis shot saved by Angus Gunn. Then the Pavlidis header over Gunn’s crossbar.

Then there was the long overdue goal, a gorgeous thing that reflected all of Greece’s coolness and class, their speed of thought and movement. A thing of beauty and to all the world a knockout blow.

Scotland hadn’t existed in the game. The hope, the optimism, the feelgood swirling around Hampden in the preamble was gone.

Smiles on kids’ faces, knowing looks from folk beforehand as the Greece team emerged without the names of Konstantinos Karetsas and Giannis Konstantelias, the twin assassins of March when they came to Hampden and won 3-0.

Two of Greece’s most creative attackers on the bench. Two of Scotland’s best – Aaron Hickey and Ben Gannon-Doak – restored having missed the March mauling.

The omens were good. In the early minutes, Scotland went to Gannon-Doak time after time, and time after time Giorgos Vagiannidis took care of him.

Gannon-Doak is Scotland’s flying machine, the man-child who was supposed to scare the wits out of the Greeks with his speed and his daring, and electrify Hampden with his personality.

Luck trumps class as Scotland roll on

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We wondered which version of Greece would turn up in Glasgow – the side that hammered Scotland 3-0 or the one that got hammered 3-0 by Denmark last time out. Emphatically, it was the former, but football is about results.

At the break, it was 0-0, a mercy for the Scots given that Greece had confused the life out of them with their movement. Scotland didn’t know whether to press or not, such was Greece’s ability to pop it about.

Steve Clarke’s side looked like a disorganised rabble just waiting to be put out of their misery.

They had no attempt on target for an hour. Three Scots touched the ball in the Greek box in the first 45 minutes. Centre-forward Che Adams had an average field position in that time on the centre circle. Scott McTominay was deeper than that.

John McGinn? Lord knows where he was. On the pitch, yes, but rarely spotted.

The uncertainty and confusion in the Scottish ranks was not just alarming, it looked like it was going to be fatal to their World Cup dream. You’d have bet the house on Greece at 1-0. You’d have thrown in the car on them making it a couple more.

‘Scotland so jammy, but it’s looking great and we’re taking it’

Listen on Sounds

On the touchline, Clarke had words with his assistant Steven Naismith.

“How are we level, Naisy?” asked Clarke.

“No idea, gaffer,” replied Naismith.

“It’s a miracle, Naisy,” said the manager,

“Give us six numbers for the lotto, boss,” said Naismith.

That exchange didn’t happen, of course, because when the two men came side-by-side, the pair of them seemed lost for words as Hampden convulsed all around them. A draw? “We’ll take it and do the arithmetic later.”

There was more to come, naturally. Karetsas and Konstantelios appeared and acres of space appeared down Scotland’s right.

Greece started to gather themselves and look dangerous again. And that’s when Scotland made it two. A free-kick, a scramble, a Lewis Ferguson poke, and the lead.

This was football as fiction. No, science fiction.

Into added time we went. Karetsas forced a brilliant save from Gunn in the 91st minute. Have you ever seen 45,000 people roar with happiness while simultaneously calling for oxygen masks?

And have you ever seen anything as ludicrous, as preposterous, as jaw-droppingly hilarious as a third Scottish goal going in at the end? A present. Big Lyndon Dykes ripped off the gift-wrapping and launched his shot into the roof of the Greek net.

Scotland drive on, somehow. They have Belarus on Sunday, a game they are hot favourites to win. Belarus got annihilated by Denmark on Thursday.

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Related topics

  • Football
  • Scotland Men’s Football Team

‘Chronic Scotland prevail in Hampden head-wrecker’

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

In the worlds of physics and astronomy, biology and mathematics, technology and medicine, there are myriad topics that are fiendishly difficult to explain.

The meaning of life, the laws of general relativity, quantum mechanics, Fermat’s last theorem. Head-scratchers all.

Here’s another one – and without question it’s the biggest head-wrecker of the lot. Arguably the most confusing conundrum Hampden has ever thrown up. Arguably.

After getting outclassed for an hour and trailing 1-0 when by rights it should have been two or three, how did Scotland win this monumentally befuddling World Cup qualifier 3-1?

How did they go from a team that was getting passed close to death by a slick Greece turn it around? What weird cosmic force was at work here?

“Football, bloody hell” doesn’t cover it, not even close.

    • 1 hour ago

In cataloguing Greece’s dominance, we note the absolute sitter passed up by Vangelis Pavlidis early on. Then the Pavlidis shot saved by Angus Gunn. Then the Pavlidis header over Gunn’s crossbar.

Then there was the long overdue goal, a gorgeous thing that reflected all of Greece’s coolness and class, their speed of thought and movement. A thing of beauty and to all the world a knockout blow.

Scotland hadn’t existed in the game. The hope, the optimism, the feelgood swirling around Hampden in the preamble was gone.

Smiles on kids’ faces, knowing looks from folk beforehand as the Greece team emerged without the names of Konstantinos Karetsas and Giannis Konstantelias, the twin assassins of March when they came to Hampden and won 3-0.

Two of Greece’s most creative attackers on the bench. Two of Scotland’s best – Aaron Hickey and Ben Gannon-Doak – restored having missed the March mauling.

The omens were good. In the early minutes, Scotland went to Gannon-Doak time after time, and time after time Giorgos Vagiannidis took care of him.

Gannon-Doak is Scotland’s flying machine, the man-child who was supposed to scare the wits out of the Greeks with his speed and his daring, and electrify Hampden with his personality.

Luck trumps class as Scotland roll on

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

We wondered which version of Greece would turn up in Glasgow – the side that hammered Scotland 3-0 or the one that got hammered 3-0 by Denmark last time out. Emphatically, it was the former, but football is about results.

At the break, it was 0-0, a mercy for the Scots given that Greece had confused the life out of them with their movement. Scotland didn’t know whether to press or not, such was Greece’s ability to pop it about.

Steve Clarke’s side looked like a disorganised rabble just waiting to be put out of their misery.

They had no attempt on target for an hour. Three Scots touched the ball in the Greek box in the first 45 minutes. Centre-forward Che Adams had an average field position in that time on the centre circle. Scott McTominay was deeper than that.

John McGinn? Lord knows where he was. On the pitch, yes, but rarely spotted.

The uncertainty and confusion in the Scottish ranks was not just alarming, it looked like it was going to be fatal to their World Cup dream. You’d have bet the house on Greece at 1-0. You’d have thrown in the car on them making it a couple more.

‘Scotland so jammy, but it’s looking great and we’re taking it’

Listen on Sounds

On the touchline, Clarke had words with his assistant Steven Naismith.

“How are we level, Naisy?” asked Clarke.

“No idea, gaffer,” replied Naismith.

“It’s a miracle, Naisy,” said the manager,

“Give us six numbers for the lotto, boss,” said Naismith.

That exchange didn’t happen, of course, because when the two men came side-by-side, the pair of them seemed lost for words as Hampden convulsed all around them. A draw? “We’ll take it and do the arithmetic later.”

There was more to come, naturally. Karetsas and Konstantelios appeared and acres of space appeared down Scotland’s right.

Greece started to gather themselves and look dangerous again. And that’s when Scotland made it two. A free-kick, a scramble, a Lewis Ferguson poke, and the lead.

This was football as fiction. No, science fiction.

Into added time we went. Karetsas forced a brilliant save from Gunn in the 91st minute. Have you ever seen 45,000 people roar with happiness while simultaneously calling for oxygen masks?

And have you ever seen anything as ludicrous, as preposterous, as jaw-droppingly hilarious as a third Scottish goal going in at the end? A present. Big Lyndon Dykes ripped off the gift-wrapping and launched his shot into the roof of the Greek net.

Scotland drive on, somehow. They have Belarus on Sunday, a game they are hot favourites to win. Belarus got annihilated by Denmark on Thursday.

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

Related topics

  • Football
  • Scotland Men’s Football Team

Millie Bobby Brown shares quick glimpse of adopted baby daughter with Jake Bongiovi

Stranger Things star Millie Bobby Brown and her husband Jake Bongiovi shared a sweet peek at their recently adopted baby daughter in a new post

Millie Bobby Brown snuck in a snap of her baby daughter, who she adopted with husband Jake Bongiovi. Earlier this year, the 21-year-old Stranger Things star and her husband, 23, wrote in a message on social media that they adopted a “sweet baby girl” together.

They wrote in August: “This summer, we welcomed our sweet baby girl through adoption. We are beyond excited to embark on this beautiful next chapter of parenthood in both peace and privacy,” with fans and friends rushing to the comment section to congratulate them on the happy news.

The post, which was accompanied by the Beatles’ Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da, continued by reading: “And then there were 3.” It was then signed off by Millie and her husband Jake, who shared his surname at the end of the message to fans.

READ MORE: Millie Bobby Brown’s new film hailed as ‘Black Mirror romcom’READ MORE: James Norton reveals he got ‘nepo dad’ a part in Netflix hit House of Guinness

Two months later, Millie sneakily placed a glimpse of their daughter in a carousel of snaps shared on her Instagram page. In the snap, Millie and Jake sat side by side and leaned their foreheads towards each other. The baby’s legs could be seen peeking through in between them.

She captioned the post: “My t swift october,” and gained almost 700,000 likes in two hours. Fans were in awe over the happy couple, with one writing: “Jake and you and the sweet baby girl.”

Another added: “You’re so thriving i love this for you.”

The news came after Millie and Jake, who is the son of Jon Bon Jovi, got married in 2024 following their engagement in 2023. They confirmed that they had tied the knot in separate posts on the platform in October following speculation.

Alongside photos from their wedding, Jake wrote in a post at the time: “Forever and always, your husband.”

Whilst Millie wrote, beside a series of photos from the nuptials, in the caption of her post: “Forever and always, your wife.”

Millie previously opened up about her desire to become a parent. Speaking on the SmartLess podcast in March, she said she hopes for a “big family” and even mentioned adoption.

She said: “Jake knows how important it is to me [to have a child].” She talked about balancing having a family with her career.

Millie said on the podcast: “Of course, I want to focus on really establishing myself as an actor and as a producer, but I also find it’s so important to start a family, for me, personally.” Millie then commented: “Like, it’s a huge thing.”

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James to miss start of NBA season with sciatica

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LeBron James has been ruled out for up to four weeks and will miss the start of the NBA season with sciatica, Los Angeles Lakers have confirmed.

James, 40, signed a new contract with the Lakers in June and is set to become the first player to play across 23 separate NBA seasons.

Sciatica is a pain in the sciatic nerve that goes down the lower back and through the leg.

James has not taken part in pre-season and missed the defeats against the Golden State Warriors and the Phoenix Suns earlier this month because of the glute nerve irritation.

The American is expected to be sidelined for all five of the Lakers’ games in October, including the season-opener against Golden State.

His tally of 1,562 regular-season appearances is just 50 short of breaking former Boston Celtics star Robert Parish’s NBA record.

The four-time NBA champion featured in 70 of the Lakers’ 82 games last term and played on 71 occasions in the year before.

Last season, James averaged 24.4 points, 8.2 assists and 7.8 rebounds per game and finished sixth in Most Valuable Player vote.

Related topics

  • Basketball

James to miss start of NBA season with sciatica

Getty Images

LeBron James has been ruled out for up to four weeks and will miss the start of the NBA season with sciatica, Los Angeles Lakers have confirmed.

James, 40, signed a new contract with the Lakers in June and is set to become the first player to play across 23 separate NBA seasons.

Sciatica is a pain in the sciatic nerve that goes down the lower back and through the leg.

James has not taken part in pre-season and missed the defeats against the Golden State Warriors and the Phoenix Suns earlier this month because of the glute nerve irritation.

The American is expected to be sidelined for all five of the Lakers’ games in October, including the season-opener against Golden State.

His tally of 1,562 regular-season appearances is just 50 short of breaking former Boston Celtics star Robert Parish’s NBA record.

The four-time NBA champion featured in 70 of the Lakers’ 82 games last term and played on 71 occasions in the year before.

Last season, James averaged 24.4 points, 8.2 assists and 7.8 rebounds per game and finished sixth in Most Valuable Player vote.

Related topics

  • Basketball