Entertainment
Sarah Ferguson struggles privately as Epstein scandal take emotional toll

Sarah Ferguson is said to be privately struggling despite showing a brave face in public following recent Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
The Duchess of York also recently underwent treatment for breast cancer in 2023 and was diagnosed with melanoma shortly after.
Ferguson had appeared more confident earlier this summer, even attending Royal Ascot with daughter Princess Beatrice.
However, renewed public scrutiny has taken a toll on her mental well-being, leaving her feeling “fragile” and overwhelmed.
A source shared that she’s been considering leaving Royal Lodge and stepping away from royal life altogether but is fearful of what the future might hold.
“She’s keeping up appearances, smiling for the cameras,” said the source. “But privately, she’s a wreck.”
“She talks about wanting to sell Royal Lodge, to just walk away, but she’s scared of what life looks like beyond it. She says she’s too old to reinvent herself again,” they added.
The insider further told Radar Online that Fergie is said to be relying heavily on her daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, who are also “deeply worried” about her mental health.
“They know how much stress this puts on her recovery,” the source said. “But Sarah’s a survivor. She always finds a way to keep smiling – even when she’s trapped in a storm.”
Meanwhile, Prince Andrew has renounced his Duke of York title amid growing calls for King Charles to take strict action against him.
Entertainment
Kate Cassidy’s friends voice concern over her behavior post Payne’s death

Kate Cassidy’s friends are reportedly worried about her following the “concerning” behavior after her boyfriend Liam Payne’s death.
After the One Direction alum’s tragic death back in October 2024, Cassidy’s pals were concerned as they “literally didn’t see her smile” for straight “three months” after the fatal fall of Payne from a hotel balcony that took away his life, via Daily Mail.
A close pal reported to the outlet, “There were months where I literally didn’t see her smile, and I was seeing her every day.”
The influencer even limited her social meets up and were totally living in solitary.
The source went on to explain, “It was so concerning. She didn’t even seem like herself. She canceled a lot of hangouts and just was almost a recluse.”
However, the close friend noted Cassidy is doing much better and she has started “hanging out with friends.”
The source even shared that she is even “open to dating again,” though “she’s not quite there yet.”
“There was a point where she was definitely not OK, but she’s getting better now,” the tattler said.
“She’s moving forward now. She knows it’s what he would have wanted,” the bird chirped.
For the unversed, Cassidy had been dating Payne for two years before his death at 31. The pair even spent quality time together in Argentina but she left two days earlier for her home in the U.S. before his passing.
Entertainment
‘The Diplomat’ star Keri Russell shares stance on Hollywood beauty trends

Keri Russell says she likes her look better amid industry’s plastic surgery craze.
The actress, 49, made the admission in a recent interview about season 3 of the Netflix’s political drama The Diplomat.
“I’m totally empathetic,” Russell said, reflecting on the pressures women face about looks, dress, and hair. “It’s such a weird thing being a woman. Everyone has an opinion about the way you look, the way you dress, the way your hair is.”
She said she enjoys portraying US Ambassador Kate Wyler, who reacts crankily and rudenly to superficial judgments. “I love it. I find it delightful,” Russell added.
The actress also noted that conversations about beauty extend beyond the screen. “Plastic surgery is having such a moment right now — men, women, 20-year-olds,” she told the magazine.
“We’re inundated with these movie stars. Even though they might be 50 or 60, they look amazing.”
She added, “I watch this show and I’m like, I do not look like that. I like the way I look on the show, and it’s amazing that I feel like that’s strange, but it is.”
Russell also highlighted a playful nod to her hair in season 3’s fourth episode. Her character snaps at her secret service double for commenting on her messy hair. “It’s not like I don’t wash it. I do. And I comb it,” the character said. “It’s a style. That style is: not looking like you spend hours [doing your hair].”
Season 3 of The Diplomat is now streaming on Netflix.
Entertainment
Pakistani smuggler jailed for 40 years after shipping ballistic missile parts from Iran

- US court sentences Pahlawan after conviction on five counts.
- Muhammad Pahlawan arrested by US security forces.
- Pahlawan’s crew say they were not aware of real plot.
LONDON: A weapons smuggler from Pakistan who used a fishing boat to ship ballistic missile parts from Iran to Houthi rebels in Yemen has been sentenced to 40 years in a US prison on five counts.
Muhammad Pahlawan was detained during a US military operation in the Arabian Sea in January 2024. Two US Navy Seals drowned in that operation, according to the US authorities.
Pahlawan’s crew, who were working as fishermen, according to the US case, testified they had been duped into taking part and were not aware of the real plot. At that time, Houthis had launched missile and drone attacks on Israel, claiming they were acting in support of Gazans.
The components found on Pahlawan’s boat were “some of the most sophisticated weapon systems that Iran proliferates to other terrorist groups”, US federal prosecutors said after his trial.
The 49-year-old was sentenced after being convicted on five counts, including terrorism offences and transporting weapons of mass destruction. He has been convicted on five counts, making a total of 480 months or 40 years.
The eight crew members who testified in court said they had no idea what was inside the large packages on board the boat, named the Yunus.
One crew member said that when he questioned Pahlawan about it, he was told to mind his own business.
Pahlawan referred to himself as a “walking dead person” in text message exchanges with his wife in Pakistan, sent in the days before the January 2024 voyage, which would get him arrested.
“Just pray that [we] come back safely,” said the message, used as evidence in court.
“Why do you talk like this, ‘may or may not come back’,” she asked him.
Pahlawan told her: “Such is the nature of the job, my dear, such is the nature of the job.”
His final words to her before sailing were: “Keep me in your prayers. May God take me there safely and bring me back safely, alright. Pray.”
The prosecution told the court that Pahlawan was paid 1,400 million rials (£25,200; $33,274), “part of a larger operation” funded and co-ordinated by two Iranian brothers, Yunus and Shahab Mir’kazei.
The US alleges the Mir’kazei brothers are affiliated with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
Pahlawan made two successful smuggling voyages before he was caught – one in October 2023, and a second two months later.
The dozen men he recruited to join him were all from Pakistan and had travelled across the border into Iran looking for work.
Before setting off on the December trip, the US court heard, the crew were tasked with loading large packages onto the boat in Chabahar on Iran’s south coast.
Then, after five or six days at sea, when they were close to the coast of Somalia, the crew described another boat pulling up next to them at night and them having to hand over the cargo.
Crew member Mehandi Hassan told the court there were about five men on the other boat, who spoke in a language he didn’t recognise.
Their next voyage, the following month, was expected to follow the same route. As before, it began in the small port of Konarak before sailing to Chabahar, where the crew were made to load heavy boxes on board.
The packages, the US Navy would later discover, contained Iranian-made ballistic missile parts, anti-ship cruise missile components and a warhead.
He worked with the brothers to prepare the boat for these smuggling voyages, received specific coordinates from them for the ship-to-ship transfers, and received multiple payments from them for his role in the smuggling operation.
US federal prosecutors said the components found on Pahlawan’s boat were “some of the most sophisticated weapon systems that Iran proliferates to other terrorist groups”.
On 5 June this year, Pahlawan was found guilty of conspiring to provide material support and resources to terrorists; providing material support to the Iranian Islamic Revolution Guard Corps’ weapons of mass destruction programme; conspiring to and transporting explosive devices to the Houthis, knowing these explosives would be used to cause harm; and threatening his crew.
“Pahlawan was not only a seasoned smuggler,” prosecutors said, “he knew what he was smuggling and its intended use.”
In a final plea to the court for leniency, Pahlawan’s lawyer wrote that life for Pahlawan’s wife had long been estranged from her family because of her marriage to him, and that since his arrest, her and her child’s lives had become “extremely difficult and harsh”.
“Since the jury verdict, Mr Pahlawan’s singular focus in their telephone conversations is the well-being of his family,” his attorney said. “He does not talk about himself or his fate. He cries with worry over what will become of his wife and child.”
The court ruled that his high sentence was “appropriate due to the nature and circumstances of the offence and the history and characteristics of the defendant”.
He was sentenced at the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
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