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Inside Jeff Bezos’ $46m wedding with $6m spent on private jet security, $1.8m on wait staff, and $1.6m on roses alone

JEFF Bezos has dropped an incredible $46 million on his luxury Italian wedding, a source involved in the planning for the past seven months has exclusively told The U.S. Sun.

For a man worth an eye-watering $220 billion, such an extravagant cost is a mere drop in the Venetian Lagoon where the “wedding of the century” is taking place.

Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez kissing on a boat.
Shutterstock Editorial
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez leave the Aman hotel in Venice on Thursday[/caption]
Flowers being transported by boat in Venice.
Splash
Final preparations and heightened security measures were seen in Venice ahead of the wedding of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez[/caption]
The Arience superyacht in Venice, with St. Mark's Campanile in the background.
Reuters
The super yacht Arience owned by american investor Bill Miller is anchored in the lagoon ahead of the expected wedding of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez[/caption]

But the breakdown of cost to stage the 61 year-old’s marriage to Lauren Sanchez, 55, is still remarkable.

They exchanged vows in an amphitheater on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore, before enjoying a luxury banquet on the Venetian Island of San Giovanni Evangelista.

With the Amazon boss welcoming in a host of A-listers including Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga, Leonardo DiCaprio, Oprah Winfrey, Eva Longoria and Orlando Bloom, absolutely no expense has been spared.

The glitzy celebration, which started on Thursday and will rage until Monday, will be fueled by a whopping $2 million spent on the finest wines and champagne.

The insider said the event took “months of planning” with the couple wanting “everything done exactly their way.”

“This is the biggest wedding ever organized,” he told The U.S. Sun. “Not just because of the money spent, but also due to the extraordinary level of luxury and detail involved.”

To help everyone attend in style, uber-rich Bezos splurged a cool $9 million to reserve spots in the marina for anyone arriving by yacht, with another $6 million laid out to cover parking and security for private jets.

It promises to be one hell of a party, with 200 of the couple’s well-heeled friends waited on hand and foot.

“Jeff insisted on covering the cost,” continued the insider, “he wants everyone to feel fully taken care of, from arrival to departure.”

A staff of 150 waiters and waitresses was hired for four days, with the cost of service totaling approximately $1.8 million.

The culinary operation included 20 chefs, each paid $5,000 per day, adding up to $500,000.

They were supported by 40 sous chefs and assistants, paid $2,000 per day each, for an additional $400,000 over five days.

The U.S. Sun has been told the hiring process for staff was extremely competitive.

More than 1,500 candidates applied with only the best 150 waiters and waitresses chosen.

They were then trained to follow strict service protocols, including limiting interaction with guests while working. The compensation offered was significantly higher than the standard even for large-scale Italian weddings.

Bezos and Sanchez painstakingly chose some of the best chefs from Northern Italy and, per the source, approved every detail after a series of interviews and tastings.

Legendary entertainer Elton John will reportedly be performing alongside a group of Italian musicians—including harpists, cellists, pianists, and guitarists—who were brought in to create a curated “Venice experience.”

The U.S. Sun understands the performers have been instructed to follow a pre-approved playlist created by Sanchez and members of the couple’s inner circle.

The musical talent was flown in from France, Greece, Lebanon, and South America.

The dancers were also carefully chosen—over 2,000 people applied for the roles, and the final group includes professionals from top dance companies in New York, Paris, and Milan

Improvisation is not permitted. Each musician is being paid $10,000 for the six-day engagement, with total music costs exceeding $1.5 million.

Kylie Jenner arriving at a hotel in Venice.
AP
Kylie Jenner leaves a hotel ahead of the anticipated wedding celebrations of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez on Friday[/caption]
Kim and Khloe Kardashian leaving the Gritti Palace Hotel.
AFP
Kim Kardashian and Khloe Kardashian leave the Gritti Palace Hotel on the wedding day of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos with Lauren Sanchez on Friday[/caption]
Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump leaving a hotel.
AFP
US businessman Jared Kushner and his wife Ivanka Trump are also among the guests[/caption]
Usher and Tom Brady on a boat.
AP
Usher and Tom Brady also flew in for the celebration[/caption]

Entertainment also includes a series of themed dance performances. Fifty professional dancers—25 men and 25 women—were hired for six days of shows, receiving $12,000 each.

The performances, choreographed with Sanchez’s input, focus on themes of love, family, and success.

Several of the mini-shows will feature the couple’s children, and one performance will highlight Sanchez’s Latin heritage, during which she will participate in two salsa routines alongside the dancers.

The dancers’ costumes were custom-made by Italian designers at a cost of approximately $1 million.

The visual presentation of the event was equally elaborate. Decor and setup costs totaled an estimated $4.5 million and included designer furniture, silk coverings for chairs and tables, custom cutlery, and artwork featuring portraits of Bezos and Sanchez.

Floral arrangements, consisting of roses in six different colors, added another $1.6 million to the budget.

A significant portion of the celebration’s expenses went toward wine and spirits, with selections curated to mark the couple’s birth years and personal milestones.

This included 50 bottles of 1964 Petrus Pomerol—the year Bezos was born—at a cost of $151,250, and 20 bottles of 1969 Giacomo Conterno Barolo, from the year of Sanchez’s birth, for $29,980.

They also ordered 20 magnums of 1961 Dom Pérignon, priced at $25,000 each, totaling $500,000. To accompany those, 20 six-liter bottles of 2003 Dom Pérignon Rosé were brought in at a cost of $399,160.

The couple purchased 500 bottles of 1996 Dom Pérignon Brut, one of the most highly regarded vintages of the champagne, for a total of $799,000. Spirits included 15 bottles of Louis XIII Cognac, costing $70,260, and 50 bottles of rare rum priced at $2,750 each, totaling $137,500.

 “I’ve never seen such a high-caliber selection served at a wedding—not even among other billionaires who’ve hosted events in Venice or elsewhere in Europe,” admitted the source who has been working on the wedding since December 2024.

“This is not only the wedding of the year—it’s arguably the biggest wedding of the century.

“They’ve set the bar extremely high.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if other billionaires now try to outdo it with even more extravagant weddings in the future.”

Aerial view of San Giorgio Maggiore island in Venice, Italy.
Reuters
A general view of San Giorgio Maggiore island on the second day of the wedding festivities of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez[/caption]
Jeff Bezos smiling and wearing sunglasses in a boat.
Splash
Jeff Bezos seen smiling ahead of his wedding day in Venice[/caption]
Woman reviewing a Venezia 2025 pamphlet amidst pink flowers.
Splash
Guests and staff were seen arriving at the airport in Venice, Italy, ahead of the highly anticipated wedding[/caption]

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My sexless marriage is pushing me into an affair with another woman – I didn’t sign up to be celibate

DEAR DEIDRE: MY wife’s total lack of interest in sex is pushing me into an affair with another woman.

I have tried talking to her about it, but she just told me to buy myself a male sex toy if I felt that frustrated.

I’ve tried everything to make her want me again. I didn’t sign up to be celibate, so is it wrong for me to look elsewhere for sexual fulfilment?

I’m 42 and my wife is 44. We’ve been married for 15 years and have three children.

We always had a healthy, regular sex life. But since our last child was born three years ago, there has not been any intimacy at all.

She says she has no desire for sex and thinks our only focus should be on the kids. When I try to be affectionate in bed, she pushes me away, turns over and goes to sleep.

The problem is, I still have a very high sex drive.

I think about sex all the time, so I feel constantly rejected and frustrated.

I don’t want a best friend and co-parent I live with. I want a wife and a lover.

I’d be willing to compromise and have sex even just once a week — as I’ve told her — but she won’t consider it.

I’ve never cheated on her and I don’t want to leave her for another woman.

But her refusal to have sex is making me start to think about straying.

When I mentioned this was where my brain was going, hoping it might push her into dealing with our problem, she just changed the subject.

Recently, I’ve been going online and talking to another woman.

She’s also in an unhappy relationship and has made it clear her sex drive almost certainly matches mine.

I’m now on the brink of arranging a time and a place to meet her.

I can’t stop fantasising about it. Would it be so wrong?

READ MORE FROM DEAR DEIDRE

DEAR DEIDRE

My husband has run off with my best pal… I’ve lost everything in one cruel blow

THANK YOU SAL

You helped me save my marriage after an office affair almost derailed my life

DEIDRE SAYS: Sexual intimacy is an important part of marriage. It’s unsurprising that your wife’s lack of desire is making you unhappy.

She may be content to “shut up shop”, but she seems to be in denial about the effect this is having on you. That’s unfair.

This doesn’t mean an affair is a good idea, or a solution. It will only cause many more problems.

It’s your wife you want. So before jumping into bed with someone else, ask her if she’d agree to counselling so you can talk openly and honestly and try to find ways to resolve this.

Contact Tavistock Relationships (tavistockrelationships.org) to make an appointment.

If she won’t agree to discuss this, then you need to think about whether your marriage has a future.

Get in touch with Deidre

Every problem gets a personal reply, usually within 24 hours weekdays.

Send an email to deardeidre@the-sun.co.uk

You can also send a private message on the DearDeidreOfficial Facebook page.

THANK YOU FOR…ADVICE ON LEAVING ALCOHOLIC HUBBY

DEAR DEIDRE: YEARS of being in an unhappy marriage with an alcoholic had left me depressed, lonely and with no hope for the future, so I wrote to you.

All I had in my life was work, but because I had to pay for everything, my salary was gone before I knew it.

My husband had driven all our friends away. We’d been married for 25 years. I’m 50 and he’s 53.

I tried talking to him about it, but he didn’t listen. He clearly had no interest in me, only in his bottles of wine.

As I blamed myself for being in this mess, I felt I couldn’t burden my family with my woes.

You were so sympathetic and understanding, reassuring me that the situation was not my fault. You advised me to see my GP and to reach out to my family and old friends, saying they would want to hear from me and that I needed human connections in order to change things.

You also sent me your support pack, Dealing With A Problem Drinker.

Finally, you gently suggested I might need to think about exiting my marriage.

I’ve started saving up so I can eventually leave, and I’ve joined some local groups to make friends.

Thank you, Deidre, for making me see I deserve better and have a future.

DEIDRE SAYS: I’m so glad you’re no longer resigned to a life of misery. I hope things continue to get better for you.

TEENAGE TROUBLES

DEAR DEIDRE: I HAVE a huge crush on a boy in the year above me at school.

I know I love him, but there are so many prettier girls in his class, I don’t think he’ll ever feel the same.

I’m 13 and he’s nearly 15. Sometimes, I tell myself he’s flirting with me but, really, I think he’s just being friendly.

I can’t talk to anyone about this. My friends would tease me. I think about him so much,

I can’t concentrate at school. What should I do?

DEIDRE SAYS: Crushes are very normal, so you have no need to feel embarrassed.

It’s best to get to know him as a friend and take things slowly. If you have common interests, perhaps you could casually suggest going to the cinema or grabbing a soft drink together.

My support pack, Learning To Love, will tell you more about developing a relationship.

TOXIC MOTHER HARMING MY KIDS LIKE SHE DID WITH ME

DEAR DEIDRE: IS it time for me to cut my toxic mother out of my life for good?

She has always bullied me and her behaviour is now affecting my kids, too.

Last time we visited, she kicked us out of her house!

I’m 38 and have three young children. My own childhood was miserable because she was so cruel.

She made me feel useless, stupid and ugly. My older sister, on the other hand, could do no wrong.

I left home at 16 because I couldn’t stand it any more, and I’ve been independent ever since. But I’ve tried to maintain a relationship with her.

I guess I’m always hoping she’ll see I’m a good person who has made a success of my life and start being kinder. I’m jealous of my friends who have good, loving relationships with their mums.

Last weekend, I took my children to visit her for her birthday. We made an effort to look nice and brought gifts.

Within a few hours, she was being nasty, making racist remarks – one of my kids is mixed race – and had my youngest in tears. When I finally stood up to her, she threw us out of her house, saying we were trash.

I’ve realised she is evil and will never change. I don’t want her to destroy my children’s self-esteem the way she destroyed mine.

Would it be wrong for me to break off contact for good?

DEIDRE SAYS: You’ve tried again and again to win your mother’s love and respect.

In return, she’s treated you – and now your kids – appallingly.

None of this is your fault. You’re a strong, capable woman, in spite of her.

Perhaps it’s time to accept she won’t change and that you’ll never have the relationship you crave.

Talking to a counsellor about this may help you to make a decision. My support pack, How Counselling Can Help, explains further.

Get more advice from Family Action (family-action.org.uk, 0808 802 6666).

SCAMMED BY LONG-DISTANCE GIRLFRIEND

DEAR DEIDRE: WHEN my long-distance internet girlfriend asks me for anything, I don’t seem to be able to say no to her.

I’m starting to think she might be scamming me.

I’m in my mid-40s, while she is 28 and lives in Poland. We’ve been talking online for six months and I’ve completely fallen for her.

She makes me feel so special because she really listens to me and tells me I’m clever and handsome.

I’ve been single for a long time, so I’m not used to that.

When she said she wanted to start a business but didn’t have the funds, I offered to send her cash. I’ve given her a lot more since then.

Even though she never asks directly, I find myself agreeing to help.

She has told me she can’t wait to see me so we can sleep together at last. She even describes what she will do to me when she arrives.

Now, she’s asked if I’ll book her a plane ticket to the UK so she can come over to stay.

I’m excited, but also worried I am being used and that she isn’t genuine.

What should I do?

DEIDRE SAYS: Follow your gut. If something is telling you this woman is manipulating you, then that’s likely to be the case.

She’s much younger, has no money, lives in another country and probably sees you as a ticket to a better life.

That doesn’t mean she doesn’t genuinely like you, but her motivation may be clouded by finances.

Stop sending her money and offer to visit her instead. Her reaction is likely to reveal the truth.

My support pack, Love Online, has more information.

Read More »

How Greek island Lesbos stopped migrant invasion using controversial yet effective ‘pushback’ deterrent hailed by locals

AS the influx of illegal migrants to Britain’s shores shows no sign of abating, something very different is happening 2,000 miles away on the Greek island of Lesbos.

Here, just seven miles across the Mytilini Strait from Turkey, the number of crossings has shrunk, thanks to a controversial but extremely effective deterrent.

A sub-Saharan African migrant reacts on a beach in Lesbos, Greece, after arriving by boat from Turkey.
Alamy
An African migrant reacts with emotion after arriving on Lesbos in 2020[/caption]
A fisherman stands on his boat in a harbor.
Ian Whittaker
Fisherman Thanassis Marmarinos saw migrants’ bodies in the sea[/caption]
Kara Tepe refugee camp in Lesbos, Greece.
Ian Whittaker
Overflow for the old Moria ‘camp of shame’ on Lesbos[/caption]

At its peak ten years ago, up to 3,500 migrants a day landed on Lesbos, having made the perilous journey across the Aegean Sea in makeshift boats and cheap dinghies.

But now, thanks to Greece’s robust policy of “pushbacks” — intercepting the boats and returning them to Turkish waters — that number has plummeted to just 1,700 so far this year.

Aegean Boat Report, a Norwegian non-governmental organisation that monitors migrant flows in the area, says Turkey also regularly intercepts boats before they reach the Greek Islands and returns them to the mainland.

Campaigners have slammed the practice, claiming it is illegal, but locals say the crackdown has saved the scenic holiday retreat from economic disaster — and most importantly, it has saved lives.

Fisherman Thanassis Marmarinos recalls the horror of seeing the bodies of migrants in the sea before Greece’s hardline anti- immigration government was elected in 2019.

Floating corpses

He said: “It was extremely bad before, I can’t imagine it being any worse.

“Every day there were thousands of migrants crossing.

“For five months I couldn’t make any money because I would spend all my time trying to stop them drowning.

“People were asking for help and they were dying in the water, so I had no other option.

“I saw the corpses floating in the sea with my own eyes.

“In 2015 there was only one coastguard ship and they were overwhelmed, so I and four other fishermen did what we could to help save lives.

“The smugglers were charging about 2,000 euros per person for the 90-minute sailing to Lesbos.

“But to save money they were giving the migrants cheap, Chinese-made boats that had two sections to their engines — one full of fuel, the other full of water, so they would stop working halfway.”

In 2015, triggered by war and political unrest in the Middle East and Africa, the refugee crisis had one of its deadliest years for small-boat crossings.

A total of 805 people drowned as they tried to cross what is dubbed the Eastern Mediterranean corridor by Frontex, the European Union’s border and coastguard agency.

An incredible 800,000 landed in Greece the same year, 60 per cent of them reaching Lesbos, according to the UNHCR, the UN’s refugee agency.

Since then, Frontex has expanded hugely, from a small administrative office in Warsaw to the EU’s biggest agency, with 10,000 armed guards backed by helicopters, drones and ships and with an annual budget of more than a billion euros.

Another six billion euros has been paid to Turkey to boost border security, and unlike Britain’s £500million three-year deal with France, it has led to a sharp fall in people-smuggling.

Tourists relaxing on a pebble beach in Molyvos, Lesbos, Greece.
Ian Whittaker
Holidaymakers at Molyvos as tourism begins to recover[/caption]
Waiter standing near tables at an outdoor restaurant in Greece.
Ian Whittaker
Waiter Kristos Condeli backs ‘pushback’ policy[/caption] Map showing the distance between Turkey and Lesbos, Greece.

Last year 54,000 small-boat migrants reached the Greek Islands from Turkey, and as we reported last week, Frontex has recorded a further 29 per cent fall in irregular migration through its Eastern Mediterranean border in the first quarter of this year.

Fewer crossings have led to a fall in fatalities of more than 75 per cent since 2015, with 191 asylum seekers reported missing or dead in the same area last year.

This is despite the Greek government banning charities and individuals from helping small-boat migrants while they are at sea — another key difference from the UK, where 1,371 people crossing the Channel were rescued by the RNLI last year.

On Lesbos, new arrivals are not given a hotel room, and currently around 1,100 people are being housed in containers at the Closed Control Access Centre on the north east coast, where the provisions are basic.

Sometimes when refugees reach here, they catch them, put them on a boat and drop them in the middle of the ocean on a life raft.

Joaquin O’Ryan

This is in contrast to two years ago, when up to 5,000 people had their claims processed there, while 20,000 were held in the island’s old Moria “camp of shame” before it was destroyed by fire in 2020.

Fisherman Thanassis, 72, is one of the many islanders who believe that the election of the hardline New Democracy party in 2019, when Kyriakos Mitsotakis became Greece’s Prime Minister, was a turning point.

He said: “Everything changed when New Democracy was elected and they started sending the migrants back to Turkey.

“After that it became a bad deal to pay to cross to Greece, because you would end up back where you started.”

When The Sun visited this week, there was not a single sea arrival on Lesbos, despite the Aegean being perfectly calm.

Key to the change has been the decision to redesignate Turkey as a “safe third country” for asylum-seekers.

But charities insist the pushbacks are illegal, and Frontex is currently investigating alleged human rights violations by the Greek coastguard.

Portrait of a man wearing a white Europe Cares t-shirt.
Ian Whittaker
Aid worker Joaquin O’Ryan of humanitarian group Europe Cares[/caption]
Hellenic Coast Guard vessel docked in Mytilene, Lesbos.
Ian Whittaker
A Greek coastguard vessel based at Lesbos[/caption]

A statement by Aegean Boat Report said: “Systematic human rights violations at the Greek sea border have been ongoing for over five years.

“Almost 100,000 people have been illegally and violently removed from Greek territory and pushed back towards Turkey, over 1,000 people have been killed in these illegal operations.”

Joaquin O’Ryan, of humanitarian group Europe Cares, which provides meals and activities for people living in the CCAC camp, said: “These pushbacks are illegal but it’s a systemic process — they are not being carried out by just one person — so they can do whatever they want, basically.

“Sometimes when refugees reach here [Lesbos], they catch them, put them on a boat and drop them in the middle of the ocean on a life raft.”

The Lesbos coastguard now has around half a dozen frigates, some supplied by Frontex, and most of the islanders we spoke to support the tough action being taken by the authorities.

Waiter Kristos Condeli, 60, said: “Tourism was completely destroyed for a few years after 2015.

“The cruise ships stopped coming here because they didn’t want passengers to see corpses floating in the sea.

“There were thousands of migrants coming here and some of them resorted to stealing to survive.

“It got to the point that it was no longer safe to leave your bag in your car as someone would smash the window and steal it.

‘UK could learn a lot’

“With no tourists, there was very little work for waiters.

“I had to relocate to Corfu to make a living and I’ve only recently been able to move back.

“The number of migrants crossing is down significantly in recent years and it’s all thanks to the coastguard and Frontex, who are doing a fantastic job.

“The UK could learn a lot from the things done here.”

Receptionist Maria Dimitriou works at the island’s Molyvos Hotel.

She fears the migrant problem has been pushed further south to Crete, where 6,500 migrants from Libya in North Africa have landed in the last six months.

She said: “Before the crisis started, we had one of our best years for tourism.

“The hotels were full of visitors from Denmark, Norway, Holland, Belgium and the UK.

“When the migrants first started coming, the tourists said they wanted to help them.

“But the next year no one came back.

“I can only guess that they were put off by all the TV reports and they didn’t want to risk seeing a dead body when they were on holiday.

“The drop in numbers almost destroyed the tourism industry in Lesbos.

“If it wasn’t for weekend visitors from Turkey, this island would already be dead.

“In 2015 the refugees were everywhere.

“We felt sorry for the people from Syria, who were escaping a genuine war zone.

“After that, they were from everywhere and tell me, how can you be called a refugee when you are from Pakistan?

“The tourism industry is getting back to normal now and this hotel is close to full capacity for the next few months.

“But everyone is worried that, given what is happening in Iran and Palestine, the situation might get worse again.”

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Migrant hotel kingpins who pocketed millions paid for by YOU ‘flee UK after their £2billion’ contract was axed

TWO migrant hotels kingpins have disappeared after their £2billion contract was axed.

Kebab shop owner Safwan Adam, 38, and sushi shop boss Bassam Gilini, 38, made tens of millions from the Home Office through their firm Stay Belvedere Hotels Limited (SBHL).

Portrait of Safwan Adam.
Kebab shop owner Safwan Adam, pictured, and Bassam Gilini, made tens of millions from the Home Office
bae
Portrait of Bas Gill.
Gilini raked in the cash through Stay Belvedere Hotels Limited
Facebook

It was announced in March that the firm — which operates 51 sites — was being removed as a government contractor when its deal ends in September next year.

The pair had already taken at least £47.4million in dividends from the business between April 2021 and September 2022 — in the only public accounts currently available.

It is believed they may have now left the UK.

Neighbours at Mr Gilini’s £2million home in Chigwell, Essex, said they had not seen him around for “some time”.

Meanwhile a relative of Mr Adam in Wanstead, East London, said he was “not in the country”.

But a source close to the company last night insisted the directors had not moved from the UK and continue to work from the country.

The Home Office has refused The Sun’s Freedom of Information Act request to explain why the deal was scrapped.

Border security and asylum minister Angela Eagle had told a select committee earlier this month that there had been “non-performance-related issues” with SBHL.

The TaxPayers’ Alliance said: “The Home Office’s refusal to be transparent, even after a parliamentary committee raised serious concerns is unacceptable.”

Neither director has replied to requests for comment.

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RTE 2FM star in floods of tears following Joe Duffy’s final Liveline show as he cries ‘I’m in bits’

AN RTE 2FM star has been left in tears after listening to Joe Duffy’s final Liveline show.

Emotions ran high as the legendary host bid a final farewell to beloved listeners earlier today.

Close-up of a man looking sad while listening to Joe Duffy's final Liveline.
Instagram
Carl Mullan was left in floods of tears after Joe Duffy’s final show[/caption]
Man grimacing while holding a glass of whiskey.
Instagram
Carl shared a clip of his reaction on Instagram[/caption]

The emotional programme was filled with friends, fans and unforgettable past callers sharing their fond memories and praising Joe for being the “voice of the people”.

And Joe chose to keep his farewell statement simple as he subtly signed off telling listeners: “Goodbye from studio one and remember 51551 wash your hands.

“Love you all. It’s been a privilege. Slán go fóill.”

Radio star, Carl Mullan, was among thousands of devastated fans listening in on the iconic broadcaster’s last words on air.

The 2FM host took to Instagram to share a clip of his emotional reaction to Duffy‘s farewell.

In the video, the Dubliner’s lip quivered as he listened to Joe’s final statement.

The dad-of-three held onto a whiskey glass as tears ran down his face.

Carl dramatically shook his hands which made the ice in the glass clink.

He then lifted the whiskey and walked into the next room with a shocked look on his face as the tears continued to fall.

The TV star exclaimed: “What the f*** are we going to do without you Joe!”

Carl captioned his clip: “Ah lads I’m in bits after that. WE LOVE YA JOE.”

Saddened fans all reacted to Carl’s clip with similar emotion.

Maggie wrote: “Ah a legend in his lifetime on Liveline, he will be missed.”

‘BIG SHOES TO FILL’

Tina said: “Couldn’t listen, heartbroken.”

Bruce joked: “Big shoes to fill there Carl HA.”

Amanda remarked: “So emotional, he will be so missed. We love you Joe.”

While Lorna added: “I was the same Carl, tears were flowing.”

And Suzanne commented: “He’s a legend.”

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Leicester face battle to find a manager to replace Ruud van Nistelrooy amid points deduction fears

LEICESTER face a battle to convince their top managerial targets to take on the chaos gripping the crisis-hit club.

The Foxes finally parted company with manager Ruud van Nistelrooy on Friday — 33 days after the end of the season — and a whopping 68 days since relegation was confirmed against Liverpool with five games remaining.­

Ruud van Nistelrooy, Leicester City manager.
Ruud van Nistelrooy left Leicester City this week
Leicester City players looking dejected after conceding a goal.
Getty
The Foxes were relegated back to the Championship after just one season[/caption]
Sean Dyche, Everton manager.
Getty
Sean Dyche has been linked with the Leicester job[/caption]

Sean Dyche and Sheffield Wednesday’s departing boss Danny Rohl have emerged as the front-runners to replace the Dutchman following his marathon period as a dead-man walking.

Former Wolves boss Gary O’Neil and ex-Middlesbrough manager Michael Carrick are also on Leicester’s radar.

However, club chiefs will find it tough to persuade any potential candidate to accept what increasingly appears to be a poisoned chalice.

The Foxes seem to be in freefall and have a potential points deduction hanging over them in the Championship as Prem bosses charged them with breaching strict Profit and Sustainability Rules.

Meanwhile, the club’s main backers, King Power, have been plunged into a financial crisis and are feared to be on the brink of collapse after running up eye-watering losses of £450million.

Legendary striker Jamie Vardy quit the East Midlands outfit this summer to cut the last ties with the club’s 5,000-1 title-winning team which famously lifted Premier League trophy in 2016.

Wilfred Ndidi, 28, is expected to follow him out of the door, with Everton and Manchester United looking to sign the powerful midfielder.

No fewer than EIGHT players have entered the final year of their contracts, while Van Nistelrooy banished Harry Winks and Jannik Vestergaard for refusing to stay one night a week in Leicester.

Wolverhampton Wanderers head coach Gary O'Neil.
AP
Former Wolves boss Gary O’Neil has been linked with taking over at the King Power Stadium[/caption]
Photo of Michael Carrick clapping.
PA
Manchester United legend Michael Carrick is also on the Foxes’ radar after leaving Middlesbrough last month[/caption]

CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS

With little cash available to patch up a wafer-thin squad already low on confidence following relegation, the new boss may also struggle to convince potential targets to join.

It is a bleak prospect for Leicester chiefs — club chairman Aiyawatt ‘Top’  Srivaddhanaprabha and beleaguered director of football Jon Rudkin — as they try to find 48-year-old Van Nistelrooy’s replacement.

Title-winner Marc Albrighton fears for his former club, whose players return for pre-season training on Monday.

The 35-year-old former wideman told SunSport: “Most clubs are prepared for the worst now.

“They sack their manager in the morning and by the afternoon they’ve got someone else in charge.

“But it will be hard for Leicester to get someone in with a potential points deduction hanging over the club.

“Any new manager will be conscious of that and won’t want to commit until they know what they’re dealing with.

Marc Albrighton of Leicester City kissing the Emirates FA Cup trophy.
Getty
Title-winner Marc Albrighton exclusively opened up about his fears to SunSport[/caption]

“The fans will be expecting an early appointment, given the length of time the board must have known Ruud was going.

“But I wouldn’t be too hasty with a new appointment.

“I’d be really thorough because they MUST get this appointment right.

“They obviously went through two major managerial changes last season, and they won’t want to go through that again.

“They’ll want a manager who is hopefully going to be there for quite a while. So I wouldn’t be rushing too much into it if I was them.”

Leicester City players celebrating with the Championship trophy.
Getty
Jamie Vardy and Albrighton won the Premier League, FA Cup and Championship together at Leciester[/caption]

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I always had thin hair until I started using Ordinary’s serum & I noticed new growth in a month – it’s thicker & softer

MANY people want to get thick, luscious locks, but it can be hard to know which product is best for you.

One woman shared how she’d had thin hair her “whole life”, but noticed huge growth and thickness with one product from The Ordinary.

Bottle of The Ordinary Multi-Peptide Serum for Hair Density.
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Beauty lovers have been leaving five-star reviews on The Ordinary’s Multi-Peptide Serum for Hair Density[/caption]
Person's head showing thin hair.
One woman shared a shot of her ‘thin hair’ before using the product
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Top view of person's head showing reddish-brown hair.
After a few months, she claims she had thicker hair from the serum
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She used their Multi-Peptide Serum for Hair Density, which costs £20.80, but has numerous five star reviews.

The product is a “concentrated leave-in formula” which is designed to support your scalp and leave you with “thicker, denser, fuller-looking hair.”

The formula includes “peptide technologies alongside a series of plant-based extracts.”

All you need to do is massage a few drops onto your clean, dry scalp once daily, ideally at bedtime – and there’s no need to wash off.

One person who loved its effects, left a five-star review on the product page and shared striking before and after photos.

She explained: “I have always had thin hair my whole life – and the last 5 years it has thinned even more from stress and health issues. 

“I decided to try this. 

“It was easy to add into my routine at night – and I first noticed that my hair was so much more clean and healthy! 

“It wasn’t as greasy as it usually could be on day 2 or 3 with no hair wash and it also had a softer and smoother texture, which was amazing after having dyed my hair so many times.”

As well as using The Ordinary’s serum, she also combined it with a glycolic acid treatment two to three times a week to exfoliate her scalp and add moisture to her hair.

She continued: “The change in my hair health was amazing – I had pretty hair! 

“I noticed new growth a month or two after starting and was thrilled. 

“After six months, my hair had become thicker and more healthy and soft and luscious. 

“I love this product and highly recommend it, along with the glycolic acid for increasing your hair density.”

Another person joked that it was a “remedy for us Gollums.”

They shared: “This product is a game changer, truly. I can’t recommend it enough.”

And a third commented: “I would definitely recommend this product to anyone struggling with hair density, but stay more consistent than I did and you’ll see a big change!”

Rush hair expert reveals how to repair damaged hair

TINA Farey, Editorial director at Rush Hair, shares her advice…

HOW TO RESTORE DAMAGED HAIR

Whilst you can’t fully reserve the effects of damaged hair, you can stop the problem from growing. 

Depending on the condition of your hair, I’d recommend getting a trim every six to eight weeks – this will prevent any split ends from travelling further up the hair shaft, which weakens the hair’s overall structure and leads to more breakage. 

Even just an inch of the ends will completely transform the appearance of your hair – trust me.

When it comes to products to help restore damaged hair, Goldwell’s Rich Repair Treatment Mask is a firm favourite – strengthening damaged locks to be healthy and shiny once again.

HOW TO PREVENT DAMAGE

My number one tip is to always use a heat protectant – even if you’re only blow-drying your hair.

Consistent heat styling without one will leave your hair open to heat damage.

I’d also recommend refraining from over-washing your hair as this can strip the hair of its natural oils – nobody wants a dry and irritated scalp! 

And finally, swap your sleek, slick back for a hair down day! 

They may be in fashion at the moment, but over time all that tension on your strands from being pulled will wreak havoc on your hair follicles – this could lead to thinning and bald spots in areas where the hair is constantly pulled.

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Top CEO stabbed to death at his luxury mansion during house party as boy, 15, charged with murder

A TOP CEO was stabbed to death in a horror knife attack during a party packed with teenagers at his luxury mansion – before police arrested a 15-year-old boy.

Australian entrepreneur Greg Josephson was hosting a large gathering of 30 or so teens at his home in Brisbane at the time of the deadly stabbing, cops said.

Photo of Greg Josephson and a woman.
Greg Josephson (L), CEO of Universal Stores, was stabbed to death in Australia
House where Greg Josephson was stabbed.
9 news
He was attacked at his luxury mansion in Clayfield, Brisbane[/caption]
Nighttime photo of a crime scene with police cars and officers.
9 news
Police arrested a 15-year-old and charged the teen with murder[/caption]

The businessman, 58, was the co-founder of youth clothing company Universal Store, which he and his brother Michael created in 1999.

Josephson knew the alleged killer before the two got into an altercation around 8:15pm on Thursday, Queensland police said.

The 15-year-old allegedly used a household item to carry out the attack.

Queensland Police Acting Assistant Commissioner Rhys Wildman said: “There was some sort of altercation that resulted in this 58-year-old male tragically losing his life.

“It’s not a case of carrying knives, it’s unfortunately allotted in a home.”

Police rushed to the house in Clayfield, Australia, and found the CEO critically wounded.

He was later pronounced dead at the scene.

Cops immediately launched a manhunt and were able to locate the teenager two blocks south of Josephson’s home.

The child was charged with murder after being questioned and is currently being held without bail.

Police detective Craig Williams said: “I can confirm that there was a party under way at the house with a number of young persons.”

He explained that most of the teens were completely unaware of the horrifying attack when it happened.

“It was a confusing situation,” Williams added.

A number of teenagers who were at the home during when the knife attack took place are now speaking with police.

Universal Store specializes in trend-led clothing for men and women, with its target audience age being 15 to 34, according to their website.

His company was sold to a consortium of private equity investors in 2018 for $100million.

Josephson had been chief executive of Josephson Holdings Pty Ltd. since 2018, according to his LinkedIn.

He appeared to have kept a relatively low public profile.

Universal Store announced Josephson’s death in a heartbreaking statement.

They said: “We wanted to share the sad news that Greg Josephson, who founded our company and played a significant role until 2018, has recently passed away.

“Our sincere thoughts and condolences are with his family at this very sad time.”

The tragic boss had bought the six-bed, six-bath “five-star” mansion back in 2016 for $1.25million.

The three-storey pad, tucked away in Brisbane’s upmarket Clayfield suburb, was transformed in 2022, according to 7News.

The home is now estimated to be worth a whopping $3.2million.

Josephson had recently listed the luxury property on the market as he planned to move his family north to Noosa.

Horrified neighbors were left in shock after hearing about the high-profile killing.

Some said the party was very quiet before the fatal attack.

One neighbor told the Courier Mail: “It was extremely quiet, I wouldn’t have even known there was a party going on last night.”

Greg Josephson, CEO of Universal Stores.
Linkedin
He co-founded a clothing store with his brother in 1999[/caption]

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Miss Supranational 2025: Meet 3 Women Of Filipino Heritage In The Competition

In the Miss Supranational 2025 pageant, the candidates of Filipino heritage are going to compete. MISS SUPRANATIONAL 2025 – Meet the three beauties of the Poland-based pageant of Filipino heritage in its 16th edition. The culmination of the 16th edition of the Poland-based Miss Supranational pageant will be on June 27 (28 in Manila). It ... Read more

The post Miss Supranational 2025: Meet 3 Women Of Filipino Heritage In The Competition appeared first on PhilNews.

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