OK! Magazine UK – 26 August 2019

(Ben Green) #1

36


GORDON’SMINIME


C


hef GORDONRAMSAY and his four-month-old
son Oscarlook like two peas in a pod in a sweet
snap of them chilling in bed (left).
Looking wide-eyed and alert, the tot shares his dad’s
tufty bed head and crinkly faced expression in the
adorable picture, which was captioned: ‘Monday mornings
with dad.’ No wonder the tot’s Instagram page, which is
run by his big sister Tilly, 17, has over 116,000 followers.
The 53 year old and his wife Tana, 44, welcomed
Oscar (below right) in April and they are also parents to
aspiring chef Tilly, Megan, 21, and twins Jack and Holly,
19 (below). Gordon, whose new food adventure series
Uncharted kicks off on September 6, has been vocal
about how he won’t give his kids special treatment –
including not employing them in his restaurants.
‘I’m firm, I’m fair and I will give you everything I’ve
got to get you to the very top. And that’s it, no bulls***.
It’s like not employing the kids. I don’t want the staff
thinking, f*** it’s Ramsay’s kid, we can’t tell them off.’
We wonder if Oscar will inherit his dad’s potty
mouth, too?!

JADEADMITSANOREXIA


NEARLYKILLEDHER


S


inger JADETHIRLWALLhas revealed the anorexia she
suffered as a teenager was so severe that doctors told
her she might die.
The Little Mix star (far right), 26, battled the condition
for five years, right up until her audition for The X Factor
in 2011 (right), saying it was triggered by ‘a culmination of
a lot of stuff’ including bullying and the death of a relative
when she was 13.
Opening up on a BBC podcast, Jade revealed: ‘In my
head, I felt so down and depressed about everything that
was going on in my life, I really just wanted to sort of waste
away.’ She added: ‘I was at hospital and the doctors told
me that I would die if I kept doing it. To hear somebody
say that to you is actually quite scary and I started to realise
how damaging it was for my family.’
The star – who split from her boyfriend
of three years JEDELLIOT (right) last month


  • recalled how anorexia gave her a sense of
    control, calling it an ‘angel on my shoulder’.
    ‘It wasn’t until I had therapy that I
    realised anorexia was actually the devil
    on my shoulder, that it wasn’t my friend. I
    really struggled to understand that at first,
    because I was so isolated and didn’t talk
    to anyone.
    ‘I’d got so used to hearing that voice
    telling me: “Don’t eat that,” or: “Don’t
    look in the mirror. You’re still ugly, you
    still have a long way to go.” It took a long
    time to realise that voice wasn’t good for
    me any more.’


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