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Nations in Kenya urge quick execution of a key treaty protecting oceans


NAIROBI, Kenya — African and Commonwealth nations called Tuesday for a swift implementation of a landmark treaty protecting the high seas, warning that despite record commitments to marine conservation, much of the world’s ocean protection still exists only on paper.

The call to action was issued at the 11th Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, Kenya, the first time an African nation has hosted the major annual event, which focuses on addressing critical ocean issues, including climate change, biodiversity and pollution.

Hundreds of delegates from Africa, the United States, the European Union, and climate-vulnerable Caribbean and Pacific island nations are taking part in the conference, where leaders have sought to position Africa as a driving force in global ocean governance.

Former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said in his opening remarks at the Commonwealth Ocean Ministers’ Roundtable that the High Seas Treaty, which came into effect in January 2026 after ratification by 60 countries, marked a historic turning point by creating, for the first time, a legal mechanism to establish protected areas in international waters.

But he warned that progress remained too slow.

“We have 10% of the ocean under protection this year,” Kerry said. “That is worth marking. But only 3% is highly or fully protected, and the rest of the protections are, unfortunately, just lines on a map.”

Kerry said industrial fishing fleets continue to exploit the oceans, with some vessels operating thousands of miles from home and using massive nets that indiscriminately catch marine life.

“Ratify it if you haven’t, and move immediately to implementation,” he urged countries, noting that key decisions on the future of the treaty will be taken next year.

The treaty, formally known as the Agreement on Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction, aims to help countries achieve a global target of protecting 30% of the world’s land and oceans by 2030.

The Kenyan Cabinet secretary of maritime affairs, Hassan Joho, said governments must now shift from promises to tangible action.

“The purpose of this roundtable is not to restate ambition, but to convert such pledges into measurable results for our communities, our economies and our oceans,” Joho said.

Joho noted that since 2014, the One Ocean Conference has generated more than 2,900 pledges worth over $169 billion. The challenge, he said, is to turn them into effective management of marine ecosystems.

The Commonwealth’s 56 member states collectively account for 36% of the world’s ocean jurisdiction and nearly half of its coral reefs, giving the bloc a unique responsibility in protecting marine resources.

Africa, meanwhile, is increasingly setting itself as a leader in ocean conservation.

Kerry praised African countries for championing transboundary marine protection and pointed to commitments by eight Gulf of Guinea nations to sustainably manage all of their waters by 2030.

“A region long described as a victim of ocean exploitation is now choosing to lead instead,” he said.

The East African nation has adopted integrated coastal management plans, expanded marine protected areas and stepped up efforts to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing. Its 640-kilometer (400-mile) coastline and vast exclusive economic zone support fisheries, tourism and other sectors that sustain millions of livelihoods.

As negotiations continue in Mombasa, delegates say the coming months will be critical in determining whether the new treaty becomes a transformative tool for ocean conservation or another set of international promises that fail to materialize.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.



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German broadcaster removes TV intro after Elon Musk takes legal action


Robinson, a well-known British far-right activist, had shared protest plans on Musk’s social media platform X on 9 June, claiming that “the whole of the United Kingdom is hitting the streets tonight at 7pm following yet another invader attack on our people”. However, he has suggested it is a lie to say that he has called for riots.



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World Cup 2026: What do Thomas Tuchel’s England defensive picks mean for Trent Alexander-Arnold?


Tuchel’s decision to select a central defender in Chalobah, rather than a natural full-back replacement, is further proof Real Madrid’s Alexander-Arnold remains well out of the picture.

Alexander-Arnold’s fate seemed sealed as far back as August when Tuchel left him out of England’s squad for World Cup qualifiers against Andorra and Serbia.

This was after Tuchel even opted to pick Alexander-Arnold’s former Liverpool team-mate Curtis Jones, a central midfielder, ahead of him at right-back against Andorra in June.

Tuchel has made his concerns over Alexander-Arnold’s perceived defensive frailties clear, saying: “If he wants to have this impact in the English national team then he has to take the defensive part very, very seriously.

“Because when we are talking, especially about qualifying football, and then tournament football, the one defensive error, the one moment where you are not 100% awake, can be decisive. It can be the moment where you pack your suitcases and go home.”

Packing his suitcase early for a flight back to England is not on Tuchel’s agenda – so one of the country’s most naturally gifted footballers is overlooked again.

Alexander-Arnold was not included in Tuchel’s 35-man squad for friendlies against Uruguay and Japan in March, missing out again when the coach needed to seek reinforcements.

Tuchel instead picked Arsenal’s Ben White, who has not been a regular at club level and had been in self-imposed England exile since the Qatar World Cup in 2022.

Alexander-Arnold did make Tuchel’s provisional 55-man World Cup squad, although that could hardly be called a ringing endorsement.

It is in sharp contrast to the faith placed in Alexander-Arnold by Lee Carsley, England’s Under-21 coach who bridged the gap between Southgate’s departure and Tuchel’s appointment.

Carsley even used Alexander-Arnold at left-back in a 3-1 Nations League win at Finland in October 2024, crowning his performance with a superb free-kick.

Alexander-Arnold started four games out of six under Carsley but none of Tuchel’s 14 – those facts speak for themselves.

As a head coach who fixates on squad togetherness, was there a worry that having such a high-profile player on the margins might lead Alexander-Arnold to provide an unintentional distraction and focus of attention?

Alexander-Arnold’s latest rejection appears to be further evidence there is no way back for him with England as long as Tuchel is in charge.



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Jalen Brunson’s curious moment with cop during Knicks celebration: ‘Don’t push him’


One uncomfortable moment involving Rick and Jalen Brunson and a Texas deputy sheriff after Game 5 of the NBA Finals in San Antonio has begun making the rounds on social media as the Knicks celebrate their historic championship.

In the video, Jalen greets and poses for a photo with a man as a Bexar County deputy sheriff approaches the scene behind them.

The deputy sheriff then appears to push Jalen, seemingly indicating to him that he must get out of the way.


Jalen Brunson and Rick Brunson smiling with the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy.
Jalen Brunson #11 and Assistant Coach Rick Brunson smiles with the Larry O’Brien Championship Trophy after the game against the San Antonio Spurs during Game 6 of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 13, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

Jalen turned to the deputy sheriff, appearing annoyed and responding before his father Rick — an assistant coach with the Knicks — came in and said, “Don’t push him.”

In the background of the video, viewers can see a woman respond to the deputy sheriff, seemingly saying “He’s the Finals MVP.”

The moment came amidst in-arena celebrations of the Knicks’ first championship in 53 years.

They clinched their third title in franchise history — and first in 53 years — on Saturday with a 94-90 win over the Spurs at Frost Bank Center.

Brunson received the Bill Russell Trophy for Finals MVP shortly after putting up 45 points in a heroic closeout game performance.


Jalen Brunson celebrating the Knicks championship.
Jalen Brunson celebrating the Knicks championship with an officer nearby. NBA_NewYork/X

The win sent New York into a celebratory frenzy as the city watched the Knicks celebrate over a thousand miles away in Texas before flying back home late that night.

Rick Brunson, now an assistant coach with the Knicks, is a former player himself, having spent parts of three seasons in New York from 1999-2001.

The elder Brunson was a part of the last Knicks team to make the Finals in 1999. That year, coincidentally, the Spurs defeated the Knicks in five games for their first title in franchise history.





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Bungee instructors seen being booked for homicide of student thrown 130 feet without a rope



Three bungee jumping instructors who threw a student to her death off a bridge without a rope have been pictured being booked in Brazil for homicide.

Maicon Fernandes Cintra, 42, Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, 32, and Vitor de Freitas Gonçalves, 27, were filmed being led into custody in Limeira, São Paulo State, after they were arrested in connection with the death of 21-year-old Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas on Saturday.

All three kept their heads bent and their heads up as they were led into the police station, with Cintra and Egroff later seen in mugshots.

The suspects were pictured being led into custody in handcuffs in Limeira, Brazil.

The three remain in pre-trial detention after they were charged with homicide after admitting to investigators they “blacked out” and couldn’t remember who was supposed to attach the safety line to the student before she plunged to her death off Skeleton Bridge.

They were seen in a sickening, now-viral video holding de Freitas, an aspiring physical education teacher, above their heads before hurling her head-first off the 130-foot bridge without attaching the rope first.

Maicon Fernandes Cintra, 42. Police handout
Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff, 32. Police handout

Two of the three allegedly tried to flee the scene before being tracked down by a military helicopter in a nearby wooded area, according to local media reports.

An attorney for the three instructors said that none of them had a clear ideas as to who was in charge, or who was responsible for attaching the safety line.

Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, 21, died after being thrown off a bridge during an illegal bungee jump. Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas / Instagram

“I spoke with them, and they were all responsible for the inspection. First, they put on a kind of vest, and then the rope,” their attorney told Brazilian news outlet Metropoles.

“There were more than 30 people on the bridge, including the young woman’s boyfriend. The death was a tragic incident. They [companies linked to the prisoners] have been organizing this type of event for more than six years,” he continued.

The three allegedly appeared in the video hurling de Freitas off the 130-foot bridge.

A further three suspects who also worked at the jump center were taken into custody initially but later released without charge.

Egoroff has been pictured on Instagram during a previous jump, holding a child.

Egeroff was also pictured taking part in jumps holding a child. Luis Felipe Feliciano Egoroff/Instagram

He regularly posted on social media, sharing the dangerous antics from Skeleton Bridge, an abandoned railway viaduct from where he allegedly ran an illegal rope-jumping company.

No date has been given for when the trio will next appear in court, after they were denied bond due to fears they would try to escape again.



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Sarah Jessica Parker nods to Carrie Bradshaw in Fendi handbag campaign



Sarah Jessica Parker is the new face of Fendi’s Baguette bag campaign. fendi/Instagram

Sarah Jessica Parker has landed the campaign of Carrie Bradshaw’s dreams.

The actress who once stepped into her on-screen counterpart’s (many) shoes on HBO’s “Sex and the City,” is now the face of Fendi’s new Baguette campaign.

In the video and image shared by the brand on Instagram, Parker wears a green utility-style jumpsuit, clutching a beaded zebra-printed version of the iconic style.

The brand shared both a still photo as well as video of the actress in a campaign that would make Carrie Bradshaw proud. fendi/Instagram
Parker, as well as the other celebs tapped for the campaign, were allowed to choose their favorite of the new styles to pose with however they felt moved to. fendi/Instagram

Aside from her massive collection of Manolo Blahnik heels, the fictional Carried Bradshaw popularized the early-aughts Fendi shoulder bag.

“This isn’t a bag, it’s a Baguette,” she famously exclaimed when a thief tried to take her purse during Season 3.

The design was so core to Bradshaw’s life that the purple sequined style made a return in “And Just Like That.”

And the slogan has stuck, with Parker using it as the tagline in the campaign.

“This isn’t a bag, it’s a Baguette,” Bradshaw said during the long-running series “Sex and the City.” HBO
And the famous purple sequined style made a return in HBO’s “And Just Like That.” GC Images

Creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri is putting the nineties classic front and center this year, with Emma D’Arcy, Jessica Alba, Iris Law and more also starring in their own shots, per a press release from the brand.

Photographed by Bibi Borthwick, each celeb was directed to choose a design that “best represents them, at least in that moment,” per the release, with Parker picking up the wild style.

Carrie Bradshaw would surely approve.





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Today’s greatest threat to academic freedom is . . . academia



Academic freedom has no greater enemy today than the American Association of University Professors.

With millions of dollars in backing from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the AAUP recently set up a “Center for the Defense of Academic Freedom” that’s as accurately named the Ministry of Truth in George Orwell’s “1984.”

Instead of defending academic freedom, the director of the AAUP’s center wants to stamp out some of the last vestiges of viewpoint diversity on today’s campuses.

In the face of overwhelming hostility from hiring committees — and often outright, illegal discrimination — conservative academics and even old-fashioned liberals have been forced to find positions outside of regular departments in new “civics centers” on campuses across the country, places like the University of Florida’s Hamilton School for Classical and Civic Education.

Even a tenured Harvard professor at the top of his field, like the Renaissance historian James Hankins, has found the progressive-dominated academic mainstream of today so intolerant that he’s moved to the Hamilton School, where his students will be judged on their merit as scholars, not on the color of their skin or their politics.

Yet instead of championing fairness and intellectual diversity, the director of the AAUP’s center is looking for ways to attack institutions like the Hamilton School.

“Like, naming and shaming and discrediting and undermining the legitimacy,” said the director, Issac Kamola, in a recording obtained by the Manhattan Institute’s John Sailer. 

“I would love to strategically map who these f–ers are, and figure out what the weaknesses are, and design a research agenda that just goes through them and tries to knock them out,” Kamola continued.

There’s big money behind the decades-long push to drive America’s colleges and universities to the political left — the Mellon Foundation, which provided the seed money for Kamola’s organization, has an endowment of nearly $8 billion.

Indeed, according to Tyler Austin Harper in The Atlantic, “the foundation’s virtual monopoly on humanities funding means that it has the power to remake entire fields according to its desires.”

And since 2018, Harper reported, “Mellon has embraced an understanding of the humanities that is much more utilitarian, and far more political” than before.

Sailer believes AAUP’s targeting of civics centers is part of a broader campaign.

In his bombshell City Journal report revealing Kamola’s remarks and AAUP’s mischief, Sailer notes, “CDAF appears to be part of a larger but covert ‘rapid response’ project funded by Mellon.”

He quotes Kamola burbling about “a budget that looks like it may be something like $10 million to create a new organization that would do rapid response.”

The academic establishment is fighting back against all attempts by states and the federal government to restore sanity and fairness — including equality under law — to our campuses.

The AAUP sees itself as an aristocracy: untouchable, unaccountable and entitled to living off other people’s labor.

Yet that’s not enough — the mere existence of alternative academic institutions like the Hamilton Center is intolerable.

“Academic freedom” for these AAUP apparatchiks means the freedom to impose absolute conformity.

And thanks to the Mellon Foundation, they think they have money to do it.

The state of higher education today shows just what Mellon’s millions are worth.

While academic standards have slid to the point where students can’t even read complete books, recitations of ideology are crowding out serious discussions of ideas — and the very institutions that ought to champion academic freedom instead turn it inside out.

The AAUP should be ashamed, but Americans can’t wait for an organization like this to reform itself.

Our institutions of higher education receive billions of taxpayer dollars, whether in the form of federal grants or through state governments.

They should have academic freedom, but not freedom from accountability to the law and to the mission of education itself.

Civics centers have been an attempt to restore something of the original character of our colleges and universities, but it turns out these centers won’t be left alone by the progressive bureaucracies that surround them or the activist academics who want to destroy them.

If the director of AAUP’s Center for the Defense of Academic Freedom is bent upon “increasing the political costs and decreasing the legitimacy of these centers,” it’s time for stronger remedies than building gated communities of traditional scholarship within what is in effect a one-party state.

The only way to protect civics centers, as well as viewpoint diversity and academic freedom itself, is to continue the efforts President Donald Trump has begun to hold higher ed to account.

Just as freedom on the street doesn’t mean criminals’ freedom to mug and murder, academic freedom doesn’t mean the freedom to end everyone else’s freedom to teach and learn.

Daniel McCarthy is the editor of Modern Age: A Conservative Review.



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GLP-1s put $5B in plus size clothing at risk: report



Anti-fat jabs are throwing fashion a new curve

A staggering $5 billion in clothing inventory is at risk of going to waste thanks to fashionistas melting away their waists on GLP-1 drugs, per alarming new reports.  

As the A-list likes of singer Meghan Trainor and Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model Brooks Nader lead the charge in getting lean via Type 2 diabetes injectables, such as Ozempic and Wegovy, Zepbound and Mounjaro, everyday guys and gals are steadily following suit. 

Weight loss medications are leaving over $5 billion of plus-size inventory at risk of going to waste as folks on GLP-1s are avoiding and returning clothes in sizes large, extra large and bigger, according to new data. Andrey Popov – stock.adobe.com

But as the pounds disappear, thanks to the magic of the medications, the demand for clothes in smaller sizes has increased, causing a massive surge in clothing returns and leaving plus-size fashion retailers, like Destination XL and Torrid, in dangerous downturns. 

“The acceleration of GLP-1 usage is sending shock waves through retail demand planning,” researchers for Impact Analytics, a retail and AI-innovation consultancy, revealed in a June 2026 study provided to The Post. 

“If current GLP-1 adoption trends continue (and all expectations indicate it will accelerate further),” continued the insiders, “more than 400 million apparel units annually could be misaligned by 2027, representing approximately $5 billion in retail capital and margin leakage.” 

The societal shift towards slenderizing is triggering an ever greater shift in shopping trends, nationwide. 

The popularity of fat-zapping jabs like Ozempic has greatly affected shopping and sizing trends from coast-to-coast. Kateryna – stock.adobe.com

Roughly 12% of Americans are on a GLP-1 for weight and health management support, with New York City residents — approximately 75% of Big Apple ladies — leading the country in non-diabetic GLP-1 prescriptions, according to the data. 

And as the thin-is-in craze skyrockets, the demand for clothes in sizes large (L), extra large (XL) and beyond are taking a steep nosedive.  

Sales in apparel size XL and bigger experienced a 9% drop between 2024 and 2025, per Impact Analytics, which examined data across multiple retailers to highlight a generalized directional swing in size preferences. 

Women and men on anti-obesity meds have detailed the drastic changes they’ve had to make to their wardrobes after experiencing rapid weight loss. Mark Adams – stock.adobe.com

The investigators previously revealed that sales in women’s tops sizes extra small (XS) and small (S) rose from 34% to 39% between 2022 to 2024, while tops marked L and XL dropped from 33% to 31% during the same time period.

Menswear underwent a change over the two years, too, with sales in larger-sized tops shrinking from 33% to 30%, and pants dwindling from 40% to 38%. 

The insiders warn retailers that filling their racks and shelves with bigger clothes in 2026 and 2027 could cause “two years of distortion” — meaning stores could become overrun and overstocked with pieces in sizes that are no longer in style. 

Women’s bottoms, such as jeans and slacks, saw an increase in returns, jumping from 12.3% to 15.2% in recent years. fusssergei – stock.adobe.com

Returns and exchanges of larger garb, owing to the prevalence of bulge-blasting shots, are also wreaking havoc on the industry. 

Newly slim women, such as Dina Pattelli, a 40-something married mother from Staten Island, who shed 140 pounds in two years with anti-obesity meds, previously told The Post that rapid physique changes forced her to make massive changes to her wardrobe — including schlepping back and forth to the shops to return gear that didn’t fit her trim frame. 

She’s not alone. 

Zoe, a mom documenting her weight loss journey online, proudly wrote, “Losing weight is all fun until you have to send all the new clothes back you ordered because you ain’t the [bigger] size you thought you was,” in the caption of a viral vid

An equally delighted diva, known across the internet as “Ms. Smith,” who’s lost over 100 pounds with the help of a GLP-1, filmed herself carrying a load of clothes in size 4XL into Target, captioning the clip, “I often forget that I don’t wear 4X anymore. I return clothes a lot nowadays.”

It’s a dream come true for folks keen on zapping flab, but a nightmare for brands, boutiques and chains, everywhere. 

Retailers have suffered a surge in returns over the past few years, according to the data. Women’s bottoms, such as jeans and slacks, saw an increase in returns between 2022 and 2024, jumping from 12.3% to 15.2%. 

The experts deem returns the “lagging financial signal” of 2026, noting that clothes sizes XL and above, including tops and bottoms made for both genders, experienced an uptick in returns over the past year. 

“These returns do more than create operational friction; they distort demand signals, increase reverse logistics costs, and push inventory back into the system outside its optimal selling window,” wrote the authorities. “Sales may still look stable on the surface, but margin pressure quietly builds underneath.”

“By the time size imbalance is clearly visible in aged inventory or markdown performance, returns have often been signaling the misalignment for several seasons,” they added. “The data was there early; it just required interpreting returns not as noise, but as a leading indicator of size-curve change.”

To avoid losing billions, the experts encourage retailers to recalibrate their inventory based on new GLP-1 sizing trends rather than outdated methods and metrics. Liubomir – stock.adobe.com

But all hope for the fashion biz is not lost — even with billions on the line — the researcher assured, urging industry executives to reset their distribution strategies in ‘26 and ‘27 to account for the impact of GLP-1s. 

Instead of stocking up on sizes based on outdated demands, retailers could be more prudent by sizing down to minimize substantial losses. 

“The financial exposure is measured in billions and threatens to continue expansion. The demand reset must be addressed before the financial risks compound further,” the pros insisted. 

“The $5+ billion question is whether planning systems will reset before the next buy cycle locks in yesterday’s obsolete assumptions.” 





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Jones Road Bright Skin Illuminating Drops are like a ‘vacation in a bottle’


Did the Goldilocks of highlighters just drop?

While everyone loves a subtle glow (especially during the summer), finding the perfect illuminating product can be a challenge. Some are way too glittery or gritty, while others vanish quickly.

Of course, one doesn’t become a makeup legend like Bobbi Brown without knowing a few tricks of the trade — which is why her latest Jones Road launch combines shimmer with skin care.

Today, the brand debuts Bright Skin Illuminating Drops, and like molten metals bottled, the hydrating, soft sheen is just right.

Six bottles of Jones Road Bright Skin Illuminating Drops in varying shades, from light to dark.
Jones Road

Made with aloe vera, glycerin, fruit extracts and more, the formula keeps skin hydrated while imparting a subtly gorgeous glow.

There’s a full range of six shades for any complexion, and it can be used in so many ways: on the eyes, the collarbone, even the Cupid’s bow.

“This is my vacation in a bottle. Three drops and I look like I just got off a plane from somewhere warm,” Brown told Page Six Style.


Smiling woman holding a Jones Road illuminating drops bottle and dropper.
Jones Road’s latest launch delivers a lit-from-within glow. Jones Road

Highlighter is typically applied to the high parts of cheeks, right where years of smiling in the sun cause little crinkles. Often, a powder or metallic highlighter will exacerbate skin texture there.

But Bright Skin Illuminating Drops go on like serum and keep skin smooth all day. Replacing the brand’s Shimmer Face Oil, the new drops are dewy and hydrating rather than oily — and layer beautifully with the brand’s best-selling Miracle Balm.

The cosmetics magnate is a makeup artist at heart, so it’s no wonder veteran supermodels like Paulina Porizkova, Cindy Crawford and Christie Brinkley love her line.


Hand holding two bottles of Jones Road skin tint, one in pink and one in gold, with the pink tint swatched on the wrist.
I swatched the Rose Gold and Champagne shades on my arm. Erica Radol

I tried the Rose Gold and Champagne shades, and you can see the sheer wash of illumination they provide on my arm. Both colors are buildable; I layered them a little heavier here, but I just use a few drops during the daytime.

They have already become a part of my makeup rotation — even on days I’m not wearing much — to breathe life into my skin without looking like I tried.

If you’re looking for a modern summer-in-a-bottle glow, you know where to find it.


Why Trust Page Six Style Shopping

This article was written by Erica Radol, Page Six Commerce Reporter. From identifying the top anti-aging skincare secrets the stars trust to dishing on the latest fashion collabs to finding a great deal on all of the above, Erica has a knack for reporting on – and even testing – Hollywood’s bestselling fashion and beauty products. Before joining Page Six in 2025, she wrote about entertainment, lifestyle and shopping trends for Us Weekly, The Daily Beast, Entertainment Tonight, Well+Good and Hearst.




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Lauren Silverman recalls getting pregnant with Simon Cowell’s baby while married



Lauren Silverman got candid about getting pregnant with Simon Cowell’s baby while she was married to her now-ex-husband.

The socialite referred to her 2013 pregnancy with her now-12-year-old son, Eric, as “one of the hardest times of my life” during Tuesday’s episode of the “Happy Mum” podcast.

“There are so many emotions that went with that, because it was the end of my marriage, obviously,” she said, alluding to her first husband, Andrew Silverman.

Lauren Silverman opened up about getting pregnant with Simon Cowell’s baby while she was married. (Seen above: Silverman and Cowell with their son). laurenmichellecowell/Instagram
On Tuesday’s episode of the “Happy Mum” podcast, the socialite (seen above) called her pregnancy with her now-12-year-old son, Eric, as “one of the hardest times of my life.” happymumhq/Instagram

“It was one of the hardest times of my life, because — I don’t want to say regretful, because I don’t regret anything — do I wish it had happened a different way?” Lauren, 48, said. “Of course I do.”

“But I think everything happens for a reason,” she continued.

“It was just one of those moments where I knew it was right and that was what I wanted and that Simon was the person I wanted to spend my life with. And so, however we got there, I just believed that it was meant to be.”

“There are so many emotions that went with that, because it was the end of my marriage, obviously,” she said, referring to her now-ex-husband, Andrew Silverman. (Seen above: the exes in 2012). / SplashNews.com
“It was one of the hardest times of my life, because — I don’t want to say regretful, because I don’t regret anything — do I wish it had happened a different way,” Lauren (seen above with Cowell) added. laurenmichellecowell/Instagram

Lauren and Cowell sparked affair rumors in 2012, but the latter’s lawyer denied the allegations, calling them “false” and “reckless,” per People.

However, the following year, news broke that the couple was expecting their first child together, with an insider telling the outlet that Lauren was “unhappy in her marriage” with Andrew.

The entrepreneur and Andrew filed for divorce shortly after 10 years of marriage when the pregnancy was revealed, and the latter released a statement, saying that he was focused on prioritizing their now-20-year-old son, Adam.

“When I got divorced … it wasn’t a great situation at all. It was terrible,” Lauren said on Tuesday’s podcast. “I feel really proud to say that … we are many years past that point. My ex and I, we do have a very nice relationship.” 

The businesswoman (seen here in 2014) stated that “everything happens for a reason.” Getty Images
Lauren and the “American Idol” alum (seen here in 2013) first sparked romance rumors in 2012. FilmMagic

She continued, “As much as I wish I could go back and take away the hurt and take away the pain that it caused for my ex-husband and for Adam … it happened.”

Lauren recalled how she was in “fight or flight mode” due to the media frenzy surrounding her pregnancy, admitting she “was just trying not to fall apart.”

“Everywhere I went … it was just the way that people would look at me,” she said. “I was on the cover of every magazine and there were news stories about it …  it was just awful.”

“I felt like, ‘OK, this has happened. I’m a big girl. I’ve got to suck it up and get on with it. And whatever’s coming at me, I deserve it, I’ll take it and I’ll just keep my head down.’ And that’s what I did for a really long time.”

The following year, Lauren (seen above with Eric in 2024) confirmed her pregnancy. David Fisher / Shutterstock
She gave birth in February 2013. (Seen here: Lauren, Cowell and Eric). @broadimage / SplashNews.com

Cowell and Lauren welcomed their son in February 2014.

Lauren emotionally shared how the “American Idol” alum’s life “completely changed” shortly after.

The TV personality proposed to Lauren in December 2021. They have yet to confirm whether they are already married.



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