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Olivia Attwood takes a savage swipe at Liv Hawkins as best friend Ronnie Vint is dumped from Love Island
OLIVIA Attwood has taken a savage swipe at Liv Hawkins after she voted best mate Ronnie Vint to be dumped from the villa.
Ronnie and Harriett Blackmore were sent home – just missing out on the Love Island All Stars final – last night.



It came after axed Islanders returned to vote between them, Elma Pazar and Sammy Root and Catherine Agbaje and Omar Nyame.
Harriett ended up in an explosive clash with Liv, as she attempted to shade her and Ronnie’s romance.
Liv also claimed Grace Jackson is in it to win it and not genuine in her relationship with Luca Bish.
After Ronnie and Harriett were sent home, Love Island icon Olivia took to Instagram to have her say.
She wrote: “Call the police a CRIME has been committed.
“We are so bloody proud of you @ronnievint. The man you are – you had us laughing and crying all the way through.
“And @harriettblackmore – girl she ATE those expired Islanders upppp!
“Can’t wait to see you both soon.”
Way back at the start of this series of All Stars – before Harriett arrived as a bombshell – Liv claimed Ronnie sent her messages while he was still in a relationship with her.
And Olivia later addressed Liv’s claims, saying: “[Liv] was very engaged in the messaging back and forth.
“He wasn’t talking to himself and I think the picture of him holding Harriet’s hand, she photoshopped her face onto it and sent it back to him.”
Harriett backed Olivia’s comments during her clash with Liv last night.
She quipped: “The girl literally photoshopped her head onto mine and sent it to Ronnie and he still didn’t want you on the outside or in the villa…”

Ultra-rare Land Rover that starred in James Bond film with blistering 518bhp & enormous 5-litre engine goes to auction
A LAND Rover from a James Bond movie could be yours, and its a steal for petrol heads.
The Land Rover Defender 110 V8 featured in the 2021 release No Time to Die – Daniel Craig’s last outing as 007.



The eye-catching 4×4 features in a thrilling car chase across Norway as a fleet of Defenders try to track down Bond who is behind the wheel of a Toyota Land Cruiser.
And next month, a 2021 Land Rover Defender 110 V8 Bond Edition is set to go under the hammer to commemorate the motor’s role in the franchise’s 25th movie.
The vehicle is one of only 300 produced, and is manufactured in right-hand drive for UK based motorists.
The Defender is poised to fetch around £150,000 – a steal given its quality and association.
Its new owner will also enjoy 5.0-litre supercharged petrol engine which produces 518bhp, allowing it to clock a top speed of 149mph.
An all-black bodywork, 22-inch alloy wheels, and blue brake callipers all provide a classy and imposing aesthetic.
The interior boasts an infotainment systefitted with a custom start-up screen to commemorate Land Rover’s long-lasting relations with the Bond franchise.
And with a measly 384 miles on the clock, the squeaky clean motor will serve its new owner well for years to come.
Pricing is estimated between £129,000 and £150,000 and the motor will go to auction on March 1 with Historic Auctioneers.
“When filming began for Craig’s final outing in ‘No Time to Die’ in 2019, a spectacular and, for a Bond film, very muddy, chase sequence was scheduled for Norway featuring a trio of all-new Defenders with their 518bhp supercharged 5.0 litre petrol V8s,” the listing reads.
“However, due to demands for multiple cars and the fact that car production had only just begun, they weren’t quite ready.
“Shot later, with Aviemore in Scotland impersonating Norway, we were treated to the magnificent introduction of three airborne 110 Defenders finished menacingly in black.
“Whilst we naturally cheered for Bond, the Defenders’ speed and endurance were to be the best advert for the new car.
“We understand that just 15 examples were delivered to selected UK dealerships, after customers were carefully selected to place an order. This very special car was one of the ten examples supplied as a 110 to the UK, the other five being the 90.
“This ‘as new’ with little over delivery mileage example is collectors’ grade and being one of just 10 110 editions it is believed to be the lowest if not one of the lowest mileage examples in existence.
Aston Martin that featured alongside Pierce Brosnan for Bond film on sale – over 20 years on from blockbuster’s release

By Jacob Jaffa
A VINTAGE Aston Martin that featured alongside Pierce Brosnan for a beloved Bond film is up for sale 20 years on from the blockbuster’s release.
The car was actually owned by the manufacturer’s chairman himself and bears some special Bond-themed touches.
Chief among these is the chassis number, with the firm specially awarding the 007 digits to the motor.
A 2001 Vanquish model, it is practically identical to the stunt car used in the film Die Another Day.
The film followed Brosnan’s Bond as he thwarted a plan to allow a Communist takeover of South Korea.
In one of its most enduring scenes, Her Majesty’s superspy chases down villain Gustav Graves across the frozen landscape of an Icelandic glacier using the Vantage.
While this car wasn’t actually used on set, it did accompany Brosnan back in the real world as a press car for a number of promotional shoots and events.
Perhaps the most unique feature, though, is the fact that it comes complete with replicas of the weapons installed by MI6 boffin Q in the film.
The front grille features several ports for red-tipped missiles while the bonnet houses retractable machine guns (all fake of course).
Photos accompanying the listing on AutoTrader show that the car comes with its original registration, as well as a special 007 logo number plate.
It remains in pristine condition and has only done 53,700 miles since new.
Many of those were under the stewardship of Dr Urich Bez, the former Aston Martin chairman and original owner of the car.
The silver body work looks to have barely a smudge on it, while the chestnut leather-trimmed interior appears pretty much brand new.
Under the bonnet, it carries Aston’s iconic V12 engine, laying down over 500 horsepower and a top speed of around 190mph.
The listing states: “This is a great opportunity to buy a car with a fascinating history.
“Originally delivered to Dr. Urich Bez from new and then subsequently used as a press car and featured in various magazine articles with Pierce Brosnan as well as several Die Another Day Bond photo shoots.
“The car will come serviced and with 12 months MOT, HPI clear and no accident damage.”
However, thanks to the amazing history it does, as you might imagine, come at quite the price.
The former Bond motor is advertised at £99,950.
“Priced competitively with the new OCTA and V8 Land Rover 110’s on the market, this represents not only a well-priced ‘new car’ but also a fantastic Bond or Land Rover collector example. Full details can still be found online here with Land Rover.
“A rare opportunity to own what is a fantastic car, with a fantastic engine and produced in such numbers it will surely be a very collectable example of an appreciating asset.”
It comes after an Aston Martin DB5 was put up for sale for an eye-watering £3.3 million.
The rare 2021 Continuation Goldfinger model is one of just 25 models ever made.
The motor which is not currently street legal has an abundance of gizmos like those used by 007 on the silver screen.
It has just 30 miles on the clock and is equipped with 4.0-litres inline six with triple SU carburetors.
The DB5 is kitted out with two imitation Browning 30 caliber machine guns hidden behind the indicator lamps.

I was on Come Dine with Me – strict show bosses confiscated our booze after catching us drinking in secret
A CONTESTANT on Come Dine With Me reveals how strict show bosses confiscated their booze after catching them secret drinking during the show.
Plymouth based, support worker Lea Dobson loved her time on the cooking show but explained that lots of things were cut from the show because the contestants were drunk.



Slain McGough Davey, Lea Dobson, Jazza Fandango, Katie Coates and Stephen Connolly appeared on Come Dine With Me as part of the programme’s 20th anniversary.
Lea who loved being on the show revealed exclusively to The Sun that she didn’t realise how strict the bosses were before she took part in the show.
Lea explained: “We didn’t realize that we were gonna get monitored on what we were drinking.
“It’s like they try and encourage you to have, like, a glass of alcohol with a meal but not much more.
“And, obviously, like, everyone from down my area, we do like to drink and have fun.
“So we were a bit like, oh, this this is shit, we want to drink a bit more than that.
“So we were like were having a look around the house and and we literally found a bottle of his moonshine, and we stole it.
“When we found the moonshine, we just all started swigging it.
Lee explained that they tried to be sneaky so that the producers didn’t see how much they were drinking.
“We’re trying to be sneaky and hiding it under the dinner table and passing it between us.
Lea laughed: “Every time one of them left, we were having more swigs.
“And then they actually caught me doing it and confiscated the bottle from me.
But the producers didn’t hide it too well because the hilarious Lea found it again.
“They hid it in a little food bag but as soon as he left the room, I just took it again, and we just pretty much necked the whole bottle.
In her final interview, Lea admitted that she could feel the room swaying around herself and that her speech was slurring.
She added: “On the last night of the show, which is Katie’s night, she served us shots.
“They said to us you’re not really supposed to drink spirits and, Katie told them that there’s only one shot in each drink.
“But there wasn’t and I didn’t realize until after I had drunk it, that there were about seven shots instead of one in each.
“And I drunk Slain’s too who was sat next to me as well.
“So I’m sat there drinking both of them thinking, god, I’m feeling a little bit wavy already.”
The self confessed fitness fanatic concluded by saying that she’s made friends for life and that being on the show was a great experience.
“You see other people crying on shows like Love Island and you think that’s dramatic as they have only known each other a few days.
“But you don’t realise how quickly the bond forms on reality shows.
“We spent so much time with each other off camera and have become very close to each other.”
Come Dine With Me airs on Channel 4.
‘Beat the hell out of people’ – Ronaldo reveals cult hero Real Madrid team-mate was ‘very bad’ before turning to poker
BRAZILIAN icon Ronaldo has revealed his worst ever team-mate.
The former Real Madrid, Barcelona, AC Milan and Inter superstar played with some of the world’s finest players.

From Ronaldinho and Kaka at international level, to the likes of Zinedine Zidane and David Beckham in club football – Ronaldo performed alongside an All-Star cast.
Chatting to another former superstar team-mate in Romario, however, Ronaldo revealed that Everton cult hero Thomas Gravesen wasn’t quite so good.
The Dane became a hugely popular figure at Goodison Park for his committed, tough-tackling displays.
But following his £2.5million switch to Real Madrid, his skills didn’t quite translate as he attempted to replace Claude Makelele at the Bernabeu.
Discussing Gravesen, who aged 49 has now earned a reported £100million fortune and played poker professionally Las Vegas, Ronaldo said when asked to name his worst-ever team-mate: “There are a lot of them.
“There was one at Real Madrid who was a joke… Gravesen.
“He was a Danish midfielder. He was a really cool guy, good guy.
“A little while ago he won a $50million (£40m) poker tournament or something.
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“But in football he was very bad, he scored and he beat the hell out of people.”
Dubbed “Mad Dog”, Gravesen reportedly got into a bust up with team-mate Robinho during his time in Spain.
He went on to last 18 months at Real Madrid, joining Celtic in 2006 after 49 appearances and no trophies.
After a season in Scotland, he re-joined Everton on loan, finishing his football career in 2008.
After several successful investments, Gravesen packed up and moved to Las Vegas.
He had several high-profile neighbours in his star-studded Sin City private community, including the likes of Nicolas Cage and tennis legends Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf.
He is now said to have returned to Denmark following eight years in Vegas.

I’ve lost 6 relatives & defied death when bombs missed my home by inches… my life aged 10 in Gaza’s playground of horror
SHE’S a 10-year-old internet sensation with more than a million fans on Instagram.
From chocolate cake to lentil soup and homemade bread, Renad Attallah creates recipes with the most basic of ingredients.


But watching the chatty youngster, who dreams of opening her own restaurant, it’s hard to imagine how she gets her videos out at all – because her backdrop is the concrete rubble of war-torn Gaza.
Renad is one of around 94,000 children whose playground has become a sea of devastated buildings and bomb sites.
As Israel wages war against Hamas after the October 7 attacks – which claimed the lives of 1200 innocent people – children in Gaza face unimaginable horror, living cheek by jowl in apartments and tents as missiles fly in the skies above.
Renad features in a new BBC2 documentary, Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone, which tells the story of the conflict through the eyes of children.
As politicians try to find solutions to hold on to the current delicate ceasefire, Renad along with 13-year-old Abdullah and 11-year-old Zakaria tell how they have coped with the war – witnessing bombs and death as well as losing family.
Renad, who lives in the designated safe zone, told The Sun: “From my wider family more than six people have been killed, babies, parents and older relatives.
“I made a video with one of my family but didn’t post it after they were killed in the north.
“One of the most terrifying moments was when a neighbour’s house was bombed at 2am and some of the displaced people were injured.
“I am scared, with all the news around the ceasefire, that it might not hold and war will return.”
When the war began, Renad was already living in the area which Israel determined a safe zone but dozens of displaced relatives began arriving and, at one point, 300 people were living in the family’s four floor home.
Renad, who has to rely on parcels of food aid to make her traditional Gazan recipes, said: “I had some engagement with school online and that’s how I understood my friends were alive.
“It’s been hard because one day we went three days without enough water but everyone around me was living the same way, facing the same things.
“Whenever I feel stressed or worried I cook and if I am afraid I look at the positive comments I get on social media and it makes me feel better.”
At one point in the film, which follows the kids shortly after the start of war, Renad gives a nervous giggle as she tells how a bomb went off close to her without going off – only for a second to land nearby which detonated it.


As the months roll on, viewers see Renad become hardened to the terrors of the conflict when explosions go off and she says: “We’re not afraid. We’re used to it.
“At the start of the war, even in daytime, every bomb terrified me (but now), not even in the middle of the night am I scared.
“We all think about the war, how we will survive each day and get through it.
“You have to find something to distract you from the constant pressure and I love creating food content.”
‘Hiding in the ground’
The documentary is narrated by 13-year-old Abdullah whose opening line is: “Have you ever wondered what you’d do if your world was destroyed?”
It shows thousands of Gazans fleeing their homes at the beginning of the war, carrying bags and children in their arms, mattresses on their heads and one woman even drags her small son behind her in a shopping basket.
Another shouts ‘May God curse you Sinwar”, in reference to the Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, the architect of the attack on Israel.
A toothless man tells the cameraman: “They’ve (Israel) killed our children, killed our women while Sinwar is hiding under the ground.”


Teenager Abdullah, an eloquent, intelligent boy who was educated at an English-speaking school, describes how getting water “is a very hard task”, saying: “Everything has changed.
“I was in the best school in Gaza, a British school in the north…now I’m living here (in the safe zone) in a tent.”
Abdullah tells how the safe zone was hit by a massive bomb in the Israeli battle against Hamas terrorists.
He said: “I was sleeping and heard the bombing and we got covered in dirt. The smell was horrible. The camp was filled with tents, they got buried underground.
“It’s indescribable, 19 people were killed. When we saw body parts we couldn’t speak and felt sick. They (Israel) said it was a secret room for Hamas.”
Hospital bombing
The film also features eleven-year-old Zakaria who tends to the wounded and dying at Shuhada al-Aqsa hospital.
He is seen escorting badly injured, bloodied patients from the back of ambulances after leaving his home to help.
Zakaria says: “When I hear the ambulance sound I get people out of the way and I tell them there is a very serious injury.
“I help transport the dead, the injured, the kids. I love helping people. I’m not scared.”
Zakaria is looked after by hospital paramedic Said, who took the youngster under his wing as he refused to go home.
When the hospital was bombed in October last year as the Israeli air force targeted a Hamas command centre, killing five and injuring at least 70, Said was one of the few paramedics who remained behind to help despite evacuation orders.



He said: “Headphones (music ) are the most important things that help me escape the war, the hospital gloom, the bombings, the dead and the injured.
“Zakaria loves the hospital more than anything else. He works tirelessly, he pushes a stretcher at least eight times a day.
“I sometimes forget he is just a child, it’s weird.”
The documentary is one of the few that records daily life for Gazans after Israel banned international press from visiting the country without the military.
Co-producers Jamie Roberts and Yousef Hammash, who comes from Gaza, directed two local cameramen inside the war zone over nine months to make the unique documentary inside the humanitarian safe zone.
Yousef told The Sun: “I left Gaza a few weeks before we started the film and the biggest challenge we faced was the logistics and how to deal with daily communication issues.
“We wanted to make a film on the ground that felt real, something that wasn’t recorded on phones, but shot properly.”
Hostage hell
Hamas terrorists dragged more than 250 Israeli hostages back across the border during their October 7 attack.
Three of those returned in a ceasefire deal told of being chained, gagged and burned by the terrorists.
Footage of Eli Sharabi, Or Levy and Ohad Ben Ami showed them looking gaunt upon their release.
Innocent civilians taken captive are also reportedly being hung by their feet and starved.
US President Donald Trump described Sharabi, 52, Levy, 34, and Ami, 56, as looking like “holocaust survivors” when they were finally freed after more than a year.
The trio said they had been forced to go without food and were often only given a single rotten pitta to share and were only allowed to relieve themselves twice a day at specific times.
Israel’s health ministry said they were suffering from “severe malnutrition” and had lost significant body weight.
They were also cruelly interrogated by Hamas fighters, who burned them with a white-hot, unidentified object.
Yousef said it was important to tell the story of war through the lens of kids because half of Gaza’s population are children.
He said: “They are one hundred percent in survival mode, their window of thinking is limited and they live just for today.
“The children are subjected to continuous trauma and there were things we left out of the documentary because they were too graphic.
“It’s been like living in a horror movie for these children for the past 16 months, yet life goes on for them. Renad makes her content, Zakaria goes to the beach when he can. They are extremely resilient and brave.”

Mark Selby reveals heartwarming first purchase with £100k Welsh Snooker Open prize money
SNOOKER star Mark Selby has revealed what he plans to spend part of his £100,000 Welsh Open prize money on.
Selby, 41, beat Stephen Maguire 9-6 to win his second Welsh Open title on Sunday.

With the score at 6-6 in the final session, the Jester from Leicester managed to seize control and take the final three frames to secure the victory.
In doing so, Selby also took home the huge £100,000 jackpot.
And he vowed to spend some of the money on a new Kindle for his daughter, Sofia.
Selby’s wife, Vikki, and daughter were both in attendance at Venue Cymru for the event.
After the match, he said: “The red I missed she (Sofia) probably would have potted that as well. I’ll get one [a Kindle] if she wants.
“The clearance Stephen made, it was ridiculous, one of the best clearances I have seen. But it didn’t surprise me.”
Speaking to BBC Sport, he also explained: “Obviously I’m delighted.
“It’s great to see Stephen back in finals, four years is way too long, he’s a class act and I’m one of his biggest fans.
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“This week I won a lot of key frames when I’ve been 40 or 50 points behind, that’s been the difference.”
Meanwhile, Maguire said: “I had a good week, I’ve enjoyed myself, and I have just come up short in the end.
“There’s nothing you can do when he’s potting all the balls, all credit to Mark.”