ሀብታሙ አያሌው በወቅታዊ ጉዳይ ላይ ተናገረ
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குப்பத்தில் இருக்கும் ஒரு பெண்ணின் குமுறல் ஆண்கள் கண்டிப்பாக பார்க்கவும் | Tamil Cinema News Latest - Duration: 3:49. For more infomation >> குப்பத்தில் இருக்கும் ஒரு பெண்ணின் குமுறல் ஆண்கள் கண்டிப்பாக பார்க்கவும் | Tamil Cinema News Latest - Duration: 3:49.-------------------------------------------
Britons arrested for 'pornographic dancing' in Cambodia | news 24h - Duration: 17:50.'They were best mates who stuck together like glue': Friends mourn three teenagers killed after they were run over by 'out-of-control' Audi driver while they walked to a 16th birthday party
Approximately 100 distraught family and friends arrived at the scene where three schoolboys were mowed down by an out of control Audi. The three boys were named locally as Harry Rice, Josh Kennedy and George Wilkinson.
Crying teens and their parents were seen hugging each other by the roadside at the M4 junction 4 and laid dozens of flowers with notes and pictures.
At one stage the devastated schoolchildren filled the middle of the road and set off balloons to remember their colleagues. Alongside dozens of bouquets of flowers teens placed balloons, Arsenal memorabilia and lit candles at the scene.
Harry Rice, 16, (left) and George Wilkinson, 16, (right) were killed when a black Audi ploughed into them as they made their way to a 16th birthday party.
A picture of 17-year-old Josh Kennedy, who was named locally as the third victim of the fatal crash, was laid at the site of last nights collision .
Teens were reluctant to talk but left messages expressing sorrow and said Josh, we love and miss you so much. .
The three boys were last night making their way to a 16th birthday party when they were struck by the out-of-control vehicle.
Police were called to Shepiston Lane in Hayes, west London, at 8. 41pm last night following reports of the horror crash. Despite the efforts of paramedics, the three boys were pronounced dead at the scene.
Scroll down for video . Harrys devastated mother and sister paid tribute to him on Facebook by changing their profile pictures to photos of the smiling teenager (left and right).
Tributes were left to Josh Kennedy, pictured next to an Arsenal badge, as he was named locally as one of the crash victims .
Police arrested a 28-year-old man after the Audi (pictured) ploughed into the youngsters who were stood at a bus stop in Shepiston Lane, Hayes, west London .
A 28-year-old thought to have been in the Audi was arrested before being taking to hospital for treatment.
He is being questioned at a north London police station tonight and the Met have said they believe at least one other male travelling in the Audi fled the scene.
The second male has yet to be apprehended and investigators have not ruled out more passengers being in the car.
A police spokesperson said: Enquiries are ongoing to establish the full circumstances of the collision and the number of occupants in the vehicle involved.
Witnesses to the tragedy described seeing two boys attacking a man thought to have been travelling in the Audi before police arrived.
Harrys devastated mother and sister have today paid tribute to him on Facebook by changing their profile pictures to photos of the smiling teenager.
The youngsters friends have also been sharing messages of support to his mother Nicole Sales and his sister. . Friends and family members were this morning visiting the scene of the tragedy to pay tribute to the three boys.
A card read: My darling baby boi, my heart is broken. Love always Mum and Vinnie. . Other tributes left at the scene were dedicated to two boys named locally as Josh and George.
Another said: I thought I would never have to write this and I dont know what to write but I will always love and miss you millions.
Elsewhere, a card read To my bro, always together for ever, while a fourth said: To my darling baby boi my heart is broken, love mum, Vinnie.
More than 100 mourners descended on the scene clutching blue balloons and flowers to leave at the site this afternoon . More than 100 people are thought to have gathered at the accident spot after the three teenagers died last night .
Mourners were visibly upset as they made their way to the scene of the collision carrying floral tributes . Three Lucozade bottles were left at the scene of the crash next to the floral tributes.
Mourners were comforting one another this afternoon as they paid tribute to the teenagers. Many were seen attaching blue balloons to the railings of Cherry Lane Cemetery on Shepiston Lane.
A devastated pal said earlier: I spoke to one of the boys here last night, they both saw their mates in pieces on the floor. Eyewitnesses top the horror described seeing two boys attacking .
George and Josh were best mates and stuck together like glue, like Tweedledum and Tweedledee, a friend said. Pictured: Floral tributes at the scene.
A 28-year-old man who was inside the vehicle - a black Audi - has been arrested and was taken to a west London hospital for treatment.
Friends who visited the scene to leave flowers said she had spoken to one of the boys at the scene. Scores of mourners descended on Shepisten Road this afternoon to pay tribute to the boys.
Many were pictured clutching blue balloons and tying them to the fence railings of Cherry Lane Cemetery. A devastated pal said earlier: I spoke to one of the boys here last night, they both saw their mates in pieces on the floor.
George and Josh were best mates and stuck together like glue, like Tweedledum and Tweedledee. They were all lovely, lovely boys, the best boys you could meet. .
Police were called to Shepiston Lane in Hayes (pictured) at 8.41pm on Friday night following reports of a road traffic collision. Pictured: The scene of the tragedy this morning .
EYEWITNESS: IT WAS TERRIBLE, I WILL NEVER FORGET IT Witness Jake Webb, 18, pictured at the scene of the tragedy, described seeing two boys attacking a man said to be the driver of the Audi Eyewitnesses to the devastating crash said they say two boys punching and kicking a person suspected of being the driver of the Audi.
Amandeep Matharoo, 27, and Jake Webb, 18, drove up to the scene and stopped when they saw three people fighting in an Esso garage forecourt and were the first to ring 999. Amandeep said: I saw the boys fighting in the forecourt of the garage with an Asian guy on the floor, they were punching and kicking him, they told us he had killed their friend and said call the police.
We saw two of the boys on the floor and paramedics came within about two minutes and they lifted one of the boys arms and it just fell straight back to the floor.
The lads were shouting on the phone and saying three of our friends are dead, they were hysterical and in pieces. Jake Webb, 18, said: I saw two white boys punching and kicking an Asian man who was in his late 20s, I said stop and that I was going to call the police and they said he had hit our friends.
They had already started attacking him in a bush, he was walking away from the scene and they were pushing him.
A lone paramedic turned up first and the friends literally drained her ambulance of everything, the boys were trying to take everything out to help their friends. The boys were lying in the road, one was wearing a white jacket.
It was just terrible, I will never forget it. .
Members of the public are pictured laying tributes at the scene. One member of staff inside the Goals club, who claimed George was her cousin, said her uncle was devastated by the loss of his son.
Friends and family descended on the scene of the horror crash where the three teenage boys lost their lives .
Mourners gather next to floral tributes. Police have said that the incident is not being treated as terror related, and have urged anyone who may have witnessed the crash to come forward.
A floral tribute read: George Boy I love you so much. Heartbroken family members have laid flowers at the scene where three youngsters were killed by a motorist .
A third tribute said: My darling baby boi, my heart is broken. Love always Mum and Vinnie. Tributes have been left at the scene of last nights tragedy by friends and family of the three boys .
My friend here last night said an Asian passenger in the Audi ran away from the scene with a bag. I think they got him outside the Premiere Inn down the road. .
Roadside recovery firm security guard Tony Kitchin, 44, works next to where the lads were killed said the road was a death trap where lunatics often break the speed limit.
He said: Its a death trap and people who drive down this road are lunatics, Im surprised there havent been more accidents.
Police have said that the incident is not being treated as terror related, and have urged anyone who may have witnessed the crash to come forward. All of the next of kin of the deceased have been informed, the Met Police said.
A floral tribute that was placed at the scene of last nights collision this morning. Despite the efforts of paramedics, all three boys were pronounced dead at the scene. Pictured: The scene of the tragedy this morning .
Staff at the nearby Esso garage said a group of teenagers had been fighting at the entrance to the forecourt a few moments before the smash.
One cashier said the police had come to inspect CCTV footage of the brawl, but said he did not know if it was related to the crash. The police havent told us anything, he said.
He said teenagers didnt usually hang around in the area, which is just next to the M4, junction 4. The member of staff said the garages CCTV didnt stretch to the site of the collision.
Investigators have said they are still trying to establish the sequence of events that led up to the collision, and whether there were any other occupants in the vehicle.
The road was closed while the incident was investigated, but the closure has since been lifted. The victims have yet to be formally identified, but are believed to be approximately 16 years old. Pictured: The scene of the tragedy this morning.
The road was closed while the incident was investigated, but the closure has since been lifted . Officers from the Mets Road and Transport Policing command have urged anyone who may have witnessed the crash to come forward.
I need anyone who saw what happened to contact police immediately. Did you see this Audi before the collision, or in the moments leading it up to it? .
I would urge you to speak to us to assist us with our investigation. Officers from the Mets Road and Transport Policing command have urged anyone who may have witnessed the crash to come forward.
Detective Jane Shaw, of the Serious Collision Investigation Unit, said: These are horrific circumstances that have resulted in three young people losing their live.
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காலைக்கடன் கழிக்க சென்ற பெண்களை அதிகாரிகள் செய்த அட்டூழியம் அடப்பாவிகளா | Tamil Cinema News Latest - Duration: 1:22. For more infomation >> காலைக்கடன் கழிக்க சென்ற பெண்களை அதிகாரிகள் செய்த அட்டூழியம் அடப்பாவிகளா | Tamil Cinema News Latest - Duration: 1:22.-------------------------------------------
Granny wows family rapping along to Jay-Z's '99 Problems | news 24h - Duration: 4:09.I've got 99 problems but my gran ain't one! Family is left in hysterics by grandmother rapping along to Jay-Z's famous song - complete with profanity-laden lyrics
Someone has 99 problems and a potty mouth grandma certainly seems to be one. A hilarious video shows a family sitting around their grandma while she listens to Jay-Zs 99 Problems on Saturday.
In the brief minute-long clip, the grandma sits next to one of her grandchildren and taps her leg along to the song, which is at its second verse.
You was doing 55 in a 54, she raps before waving her hands with so much gusto and swag that her family cant help but laugh along.
A hilarious video shows a family sitting around their grandma while she listens to Jay-Zs 99 Problems on Saturday.
You was doing 55 in a 54, she raps before waving her hands with so much gusto and swag that her family cant help but laugh along.
She then blurts I aint steppin out of s**t, before the cameraman shouts out Nanny in disbelief. Nannys hand bobbing soon turns into more vigorous body gyration as she nods along to the explicit lyrics.
And as she nears the chorus, the grandmother briefly fumbles through the lyric I got 99 problems, but a b***h aint one!. Her familys laughs intensify into full blown cackles as someone to the right of the cameraman slaps their legs.
Nanna repeats I got 99 problems, but a b***h aint one, while bopping to the beat. Nanny beats her own legs like a drum before sitting up and rocking back and forth while enjoying the chorus.
She repeats the line 99 problems, but a b***h aint one, leaving her family to laugh once again. Getting more and more impassioned, she continues her bopping.
And before the video ends, Nanny gets one last 99 problems, but a b***h aint one in before the kid says its done.
She looks to her grandson, who informs the group that the song is almost over and a small twinge of disappointment can almost be seen on her face.
And before the video ends, grandma gets one last 99 problems, but a b***h aint one in before the one of her grandchildren says its done.
Hopefully the only problem she runs into is finding out when her Social Security check will come in. It is unknown where in America this was filmed.
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Police called in as women 'invade' private members club | news 24h - Duration: 11:09.GIRL ABOUT TOWN: Police called after a woman is smuggled into Britain's oldest gentleman's club after being hidden in a luggage rack
The strangest invasion took place last week at White's, Britain's oldest gentlemen's club, when pranksters smuggled in a woman in a luggage trunk before being promptly ejected.
The police were called to the Piccadilly club, I can reveal, after BBC prankster Heydon Prowse, who infamously once tricked Theresa May's Downing Street staff, entered with two women and a fellow prankster, Nimrod Kamer.
They were not difficult to spot at the ties-must-be-worn establishment. One of the women wore an orange boiler suit while the other leapt out of the trunk, also not wearing a tie.
Prowse was making a point about women being banned but, as one member pointed out, the Queen has famously dined there.
They were instantly asked by White's staff to leave and after they did Prowse was issued by the police with a community protection notice under anti-social behaviour laws.
The provocateurs aimed to cause maximum disruption at a time when all attention was on another men-only establishment - the now-notorious Presidents Club.
Prowse was making a point about women being banned but, as one member pointed out, the Queen has famously dined there.
It is, in fact, a favourite relaxation spot for senior Royals – Prince Charles held his stag night at White's and Princes William and Harry are also members.
One member tells me: 'These cheap tricksters were politely ejected, somewhat effortlessly from what I hear, and in a far more gentlemanly manner than they deserved after being asked to leave a private establishment to which they had not been invited.
The women were actress Jess-Luisa Flynn and documentary maker Gemma Perlin, who said of their abrupt exit: 'They seemed horrified to have their all-male safe-space infiltrated by a woman who isn't a waitress.
The women were actress Jess-Luisa Flynn and documentary maker Gemma Perlin, who said of their abrupt exit: 'They seemed horrified to have their all-male safe-space infiltrated by a woman who isn't a waitress.
White's declined to comment on Kamer's claims that security staff tried to wrestle camera phones from the intruders' hands.
What would former Prime Ministers including Robert Walpole, Robert Peel and David Cameron – all once White's members, though the latter resigned before he entered Downing Street – think of such a scene?.
You might have expected Lady Astor to be out celebrating after the sale of her company OKA for a cool £40 million.
But far from rewarding herself for 20 years of hard work with a fabulous party, she is instead putting herself through a brutal regime of fasting.
My spies spotted Annabel, who is Samantha Cameron's mother, at the Palace Merano and Espace Henri Chenot in Italy where celebrities pay £2,536 per week to be half starved and deprived of booze… in the name of health.
Lucian Freud's favourite muse Sue Tilley, below, is to star in a film about her life. Known as 'Big Sue', the one-time Job Centre worker met Freud in 1990 and became the subject of a series of nudes.
The most famous – Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, painted in 1995 – was sold to Roman Abramovich for £17 million in 2008. Extraordinarily, while billionaires fought for her portrait, Sue, 60, kept her admin job until she was made redundant in 2015.
Meghan Markle is facing her toughest test yet as she adjusts to life this side of the pond – learning to drive on London's loopy roads.
Prince Harry's fiancee is taking lessons near Kensington Palace in order to get a UK licence as her US version is only valid for a year.
She may also be getting to grips with a manual gearbox as – like most Americans – she probably doesn't 'drive stick'. .
The BBC's experienced World At One presenter Martha Kearney has been travelling to the Antarctic – and huffily reflecting on her future at Radio 4, I'm told.
The BBC's experienced World At One presenter Martha Kearney has been travelling to the Antarctic – and huffily reflecting on her future at Radio 4, I'm told.
Martha isn't yet ready to hand in her notice, and will return on Monday, but is feeling frozen out by the Corporation over a hoped-for move to the Today programme.
She was due to swap jobs with Today stalwart Sarah Montague but the plan has so far come to nothing. Martha couldn't have chosen a better holiday destination for cooling off!.
Although male BBC stars have been reported to be taking pay cuts of up to 30 per cent in the wake of the gender pay row, I can reveal that Today host Nick Robinson looks set to give up only a fraction of his £250,000-plus salary.
Nick's agent told me the BBC asked if he would be willing to take a cut, and he agreed. But they asked him to give up only one per cent, which has got his male colleagues grumbling.
John Humphrys is believed to have taken total cuts of up to £120,000, while TV news anchor Huw Edwards took a cut too. The BBC said: 'The final details are still being discussed.
You wont BELIEVE what they tell me. The red wine here is like drinking vinegar. There is pickled onion in every bottle.
I drank it once and woke up with a sign on my head saying Do Not Resuscitate. Paul O'Grady was not impressed by the free booze on offer at the National Television Awards last week – a bit rich given he picked up a Special Recognition award! You can never close the door on anything… except I am not transgender.
I won't be doing that. Elton John confirms that he is open minded about – almost – everything. The only time you'll hear me singing is in the shower.
I wouldn't want to put the world through the pain of hearing me sing Beyoncé's Lemonade – it's my favourite song. Actress Katie Holmes, right, Tom Cruise's ex-wife, tells me she won't be launching a pop career any time soon.
I don't use a mobile phone and I live perfectly well without one. Though I do have one just for paying for parking bays.
I turn it off as soon as I've paid. Technophobe Joanna Lumley admits she's reluctantly adapted to modern pay-and-display methods. My sense of smell is so good I could detect flooding in my house.
No one believed me until one day water suddenly burst through the ceiling! Perfume-maker Jo Malone proves she has a nose for household crises.
I would like to make an album in 2018, fingers crossed! That's not what it's called, but it could be! The indefatigable Paul McCartney reveals that he is working on some new material.
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[단독] 셀럽파이브, '엠카'도 출격 "인기폭발→본격 활동" - News 24H - Duration: 2:47. For more infomation >> [단독] 셀럽파이브, '엠카'도 출격 "인기폭발→본격 활동" - News 24H - Duration: 2:47.-------------------------------------------
இந்த கொடூமைய என்னனு சொல்றது நீங்களே பாருங்க புரியும் | Tamil Cinema News Latest Seithigal - Duration: 1:36. For more infomation >> இந்த கொடூமைய என்னனு சொல்றது நீங்களே பாருங்க புரியும் | Tamil Cinema News Latest Seithigal - Duration: 1:36.-------------------------------------------
Samantha Brick on her 30-year, £65,000 peroxide habit | news 24h - Duration: 20:02.Never bland, forever blonde: Writer Samantha Brick on why her 30-year, £65,000 peroxide habit has been worth every penny
Samantha Brick reveals her 30-year commitment to blonde hair. Catching my reflection in the salon mirror, I pause to admire my freshly washed and blow-dried hair. My fringe falls just above my eyebrows.
Layers of soft bouncing curls frame my face just so. The crown is gently but deliberately backcombed to give the impression of height, of body, of volume. And every strand of it is blonde.
The first thing anyone ever remarks about me – before noticing my height, my green eyes, my pale skin – is that I am a blonde.
Yet my hair isn't really this colour. The dark brown eyebrows instantly give away my true roots: British mouse.
My bathroom shelves groan under the weight of products I've bought over the years in an effort to preserve the colour and the condition of my hair. Being blonde isn't for the low-maintenance, free-spirited type of woman I sometimes wish I was.
In between the expensive monthly colour appointments there is the almost daily effort necessary to prevent my hair from breaking or – heavens! – going a brassy shade of orange.
That is why, in my weaponry, I have an array of shampoos, conditioners, scalp masks, shine-guarantee lotions and protective potions specifically designed for chemically achieved blonde hair. .
In my dressing room there is a wide range of hats. Swimming caps for my favourite sport – chlorine is the number-one enemy of blonde hair.
A fortnight in the sun and endless laps in a pool can result in a greenish tinge that the chlorine, at war with the peroxide, creates.
Then there are the numerous straw fedoras put to work in the summer months to fend off the unforgiving UV rays, which can render coloured hair brittle. During winter I take stock of my colour.
Sunny climes and sun-kissed hair go hand in hand, but when the clocks go back, the fire is lit and candlelight takes over in the evening, I put myself through the same tortuous appraisal.
Is the colour too bright? Does it clash with the Aran jumpers and Scandi sweaters I wear in the frosty temperatures of the Dordogne? Fog and freezing winters dominate from November until March in the southwest area of France that I've called home for the past decade.
Yet my pause for reflection is different this time, for it has dawned on me that when I celebrate my birthday next month, I will have been dyeing my hair for exactly 30 years. Achieving my blonde ambition at 17.
It hasn't been blonde continually over the past three decades, you understand. Every five years or so I have meddled with it, foolishly trying to take it back to its authentic colour – whatever that is.
But I have inevitably always reverted to blonde. Whenever I look at photographs of my father when he was my age, I scrutinise his hair wondering if that would be my colour too.
I take great satisfaction in the fact that he didn't go grey until his 50s. My dark roots that push through every few weeks are testimony to the fact that I have yet to develop those telltale wispy silver strands.
The pause for reflection is even more pertinent because, in rural France, many village salons don't offer colour as an option on their list of services, let alone have the competence to do it expertly.
That's why – once again – I ask myself why on earth did I reject the colour I was born with? So many of us do, but I wonder if it was a good idea.
Not least because I estimate I've easily spent somewhere in the region of £50,000 on salon visits and plane fares during my three decades of hair high-maintenance.
Yes, when I met my current husband and moved to France in 2007, I travelled back and forth to the UK for hair appointments for the first two years.
I can add another £5,000 for all those 20 per cent tips and easily notch up an extra £10,000 on the products and appliances I've been seduced into buying along the way.
While many might tut and be tempted to lecture me about all the useful things I could have done with that money, I must point out that I'm in good company.
The Sally Salon Services 2017 Beautiful Britain report (which polls thousands of hair and beauty professionals across the UK) found that in 2016 the average annual spend on hair treatments among women was £994.
Any debate is futile. I consider the £65,000 that I have spent to be a good investment. Having hair that looks good makes me feel good about myself. I like who I am and always have done.
Until I reached 17, however, I, like most of the British population, lived under the visibility radar thanks to my hair colour. In winter it was an uninspiring, nothingy shade of mouse brown.
In summer, if I was lucky, the sun (or the lemon juice I squeezed on to my tresses) would reward me with a few golden streaks.
Princess Diana, Debbie Harry and Olivia Newton-John were the iconic blondes of my teenage years. Life, it seemed, was more glamorous for the fair of hair.
As a working-class teenager growing up in a Birmingham suburb, I needed all the help I could get.
Perhaps what clinched it for me was the Timotei shampoo advert of the 1980s, which featured a beautiful young woman with long, silky blonde hair. I wanted to be her.
My first attempt at going blonde was at 17. My teenage self pursued the 'I know best' policy and consulted no one before hitting the bottle.
In front of my bedroom mirror I generously applied Sun In, a diluted peroxide spray – and waited.
It was a disaster. My hair acquired an awful orange hue. I looked less like the flaxen-haired girl in the shampoo ad and more like Ronald McDonald. My mother was horrified.
Generously, she paid for it to be corrected. The only option then was highlights.
The punishment – for that's what it was – was having a rubber skullcap yanked over my head and wisps of hair pulled through with something like a crochet hook before being coloured with foul-smelling chemicals.
It was painful, it took ages, and yet I put myself through this procedure every three months. Enjoying the attention in my early 20s.
Curiously, though, after I'd got over the initial humiliation and the colour had faded from brassy blonde to the champagne hue I'd originally hoped for; I discovered to my delight that it did indeed make a difference.
Society views you differently when you have lighter-coloured hair. I was offered seats on public transport, ushered to the front of the queue at nightclubs and became teacher's pet at both college and university.
As I moved into my 20s, life continued to be rosy. Eventually I graduated from the cheap deals at the various salon training schools near my university in Central London.
Once I was earning a salary as a TV researcher, I was able to upgrade to a fully fledged salon and trained hairdressers. And then, before I knew it, the quarter-life birthday arrived.
Celebrating my 25th, it occurred to me that it was time for me to be more 'serious', so I attempted to revert to my original hair colour.
But while it seemed appropriate in wintry London, once the cherry blossom began to appear on my West London street and the dark nights receded, my desire to go blonde again grew.
My non-blonde hair was ordinary; it was bland, it wasn't me.
Not wishing to upset the hairdresser I'd been seeing for the past couple of years – who in fairness said I wouldn't like it – I found another salon and went back to being blonde.
Trying out a more serious shade at 25 and then going back to platinum in my late 20s.
Throughout my late 20s and early 30s I went to a salon specialising in environmentally friendly colour maintenance. The vegetable dyes were doubtless kind to my hair, yet the hefty three-figure bill wasn't so kind to my credit card.
It didn't matter a jot, though. By now I had the glamorous title of Head of Entertainment at Sky One, and the salary to maintain a fabulous blonde mane. .
After all, who thinks about the price when you are regularly complimented on how you look?.
On my way home after a visit to a Notting Hill salon, with my swishy blonde hair bouncing around me, a chap spontaneously handed me a bunch of flowers.
Men often claim that they aren't attracted to blondes; I'm not so sure about that!. When I married my first husband at 32, the best thing about the day was my hair.
A friend recently confessed that she'd kept a picture of me on my wedding day (folding over the groom part) because I looked so great.
Once married, though, I assumed that I should tone it down a bit. My life was at a stage where I was cocooning. While once I loved to turn heads, as a married woman I put my vows first instead.
Toning it down as a married 30-something.
Yet when I divorced two years later, one of the first things I did was revert to being a blonde. I spent a year living in Los Angeles running my own TV company, and had to find a hairdresser fast.
As I interviewed them over the phone, at the top of my list was that they must not turn me orange (by leaving the colour on for too long).
Neither would I stand for khaki blonde – when too much brown is woven though the golden strands. Fortunately, trusting a Californian colourist was easier than I imagined.
As my rather jaded hairdresser noted, 'Sam, 95 per cent of the women in Hollywood are blonde. Why would I not know what I am doing?'.
My blonde hair got me through a difficult time when, in my mid-30s, my television company folded.
My mother insisted I should continue to have my hair coloured and, as frivolous as it might sound, for a mood lift it absolutely did the trick. Holding out for a French hairdresser in my early 40s.
This is the reason why, when you find a good hairdresser, by golly you stick with them.
When I moved to France and accepted that I couldn't rely on a colourist from another country for ever, I was permanently on the hunt for the Gallic version of my favoured UK salon.
Every time I saw a woman with beautiful blonde hair, I would stop and ask her which salon she used.
So when I finally found a good hairdresser (and her daughter) in a nearby village, who understood what I needed, it was a godsend. Admittedly, for the first year it was trial and error.
However, if it went wrong, they always corrected it. The owner would even open the salon on her day off when I had to fly back to London for broadcasting commitments at short notice and needed my hair to look good.
Last year, though, I received daunting news: the 60-something owner announced, 'I've got something to tell you, Sam, you're not going to like it!' She had decided to retire and her daughter was moving away; the salon was closing.
That's why I recently found myself pondering whether I should go back to my natural colour. .
But who am I kidding? Even though I am creeping ever closer to 50, I've managed to find another hairdresser. I could have cried with joy when I spotted that she was a blonde too. Restored to flaxen fabulousness today.
Yes, all those hours spent in the chair, the flights, the inane chitchat, the blissful head massages while having the colorant washed off have been worth every minute and every penny as an investment in my appearance for my career, my love life and my place in the world.
I am a blonde and I always will be.
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Daughters of tycoon in Kenyan court to clear their names | news 24h - Duration: 11:01.Our brother is framing us for the murder of our father: Daughters of property tycoon make glamorous appearance in Kenyan court to clear their names over his death
With their glossy waist-length hair, pristine make-up and vertiginous heels, the glamorous sisters looked like they were dressed for the catwalk rather than a hot, dusty and fly-blown courtroom.
Even the legal files Helen and Alexandra Veevers carried alongside their designer handbags as they sashayed into court were hot pink. But behind their polished smiles lay a steely determination.
The sisters, from Rochdale, returned to Mombasa, Kenya, last week for the latest chapter in an extraordinary legal battle to clear their name over the death of their father, millionaire property developer Harry Veevers.
The case has been compared with the 1987 film White Mischief. With their glossy waist-length hair, pristine make-up and vertiginous heels, the Helen (right) and Alexandra (left) Veevers looked like they were dressed for the catwalk rather than a hot, dusty courtroom.
Sensationally accused by their half-brothers Richard and Philip Veevers of poisoning their father to get their hands on his £7 million fortune amid claims of lies, corruption and fraud, the two-day hearing was the hottest show in town.
Kenyan scientists claimed to have found traces of the insecticide cyhalothrin after exhuming Mr Veeverss body, at the brothers instigation, 11 months after his death.
But on Wednesday, a British toxicologist told the inquest that a re-analysis of soil and soft-tissue samples, using a highly sensitive technique, had found no such trace of the toxic compound.
Dr Alexander Allan, who worked for the Home Office for 20 years, said via video-link that he felt there were issues with the Kenyan analysis – and was forced to look on bemused as a brief but noisy spat ensued between the sisters and Richard Veevers in court.
An earlier hearing had to be halted when the sisters shouted at a witness. Alexandra Veevers gestures during her testimony during the inquest into how her father Harry Veevers died back in 2013, at the Mombasa Law Courts, Kenya.
Helen Veevers (pictured) was also sensationally accused by her half-brothers Richard and Philip Veevers of poisoning their father to get their hands on his £7 million fortune.
Kenyan scientists claimed to have found traces of the insecticide cyhalothrin after exhuming the body of Mr Veevers (pictured). Tempers in the case, it seems, are running as high as the stakes.
Present at the inquest is senior assistant director of public prosecutions, Alexander Muteti. If the presiding magistrate in the case concludes that Mr Veevers died unlawfully, Mr Muteti could begin a murder investigation against Helen and Alexandra.
But if it is found that Harry died of natural causes, he will to decide whether the brothers should be investigated for fraud and attempting to pervert the course of justice.
Outside court, a weary Mr Muteti said: Many accusations are flying around the courtroom. Ive never seen anything like it..
Mr Veevers made his fortune building properties in Rochdale and Mombasa, where he lived in retirement until his death from a heart attack in February 2013, aged 64.
Richard and Philip, his sons from his first marriage, had his body exhumed 11 months later, claiming foul play. A Kenyan government scientist – working for the Veevers brothers – said he found traces of poison.
Richard Veevers with his father Harry Veevers on Richards wedding day. Richard is now in a bitter court battle with his half sisters over the death of Harry and inheritance.
Alexandra, 28, has told the court she saw Richard and Philip in the mortuary with their fathers body, wearing Latex gloves and holding some sort of instrument.
Helen, 30, added that, although her father did not leave a will, it was known throughout the family that there was a letter in a safety deposit box at Barclays Bank in Mombasa to be opened in the event of his death.
But Alexandra, 28, has told the court she saw Richard and Philip in the mortuary with their fathers body, wearing Latex gloves and holding some sort of instrument. She has insisted that her father was the love of my life.
Meanwhile, Helen described the moment she called Richard to break the news of their fathers death. I could tell the news made him happy, she said.
He said hed been waiting for this day. He said we could start by sharing the contents of my fathers UK bank account, which had £500,000 in it. It prompted a heated exchange – one of many – between the assembled lawyers.
Helen, 30, added that, although her father did not leave a will, it was known throughout the family that there was a letter in a safety deposit box at Barclays Bank in Mombasa to be opened in the event of his death.
Harrys brother Chris, who had been granted access, found the box empty. Harrys brother Chris, who had been granted access, found the box empty.
Helen told the court she believed the letter might have disinherited Richard, but that Richard had done a deal with a bank employee to get rid of the letter.
Helen told the court she believed the letter might have disinherited Richard, but that Richard had done a deal with a bank employee to get rid of the letter. The employee will give evidence later.
My uncle Chris told me all about it, Helen told the court. They took the safety deposit box from the bank and found nothing in it.
He agreed with me that my father was very shrewd with money and would never have paid for a bank box that was empty..
She added: My uncle warned me that Richard was trying to set us up, accusing us of poisoning my father to get his money. He said, You girls need to be careful. .
As Helen was cross-examined by Richards lawyer, things became heated as she demanded he stop twisting my words.
Standing with her hand on her hip, Helen shouted: Shut up! No amount of gentle coaxing by her own lawyer could encourage her to calm down.
The siblings are currently staying with their mother – Azra Parvin Din, 70 – in adjacent six-bedroom homes in a luxury gated development built by their father.
Outside court, Helen told The Mail on Sunday: The whole neighbourhood can hear Richard shouting at us whenever our paths cross, and calling us murderers.
Its horrible for us and our mum, but we are going to see this through. We want to have our dad reburied with dignity. My father would have hated all this. But he would have wanted us to go on fighting..
The inquest resumes this week.
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